Compilation of international news items related to large-scale human identification: DVI, missing persons,unidentified bodies & mass graves
Pages
▼
Sunday, 7 April 2013
Alicante's missing children - in search of the truth
The search for truth continues in the Alicante region for up to eighty families who are still embroiled in the case of ‘the stolen children.’
Originating from the 30 year period between the fifties and the eighties there are still about 80 families in the province seeking clarification on suspected stolen babies, children that are alleged to have died at, or within 24 hours of, their birth, which many relatives now suspect were the subject of illegal adoption.
One case that is currently making the headlines is that of the ilicitana María José Picó who has been immersed in a quest to find her twin sister for about two years. “It is a commitment that will never end” she says "despite the many obstacles put in front of her, until she has the answers that she needs.”
The story of this search goes back to March 28, 1962, when the mother of Maria Jose, Francisca Robles, went into labour. She was taken to Alicante General Hospital, says Maria Jose.
"A nurse told my father and grandmother that two girls had been born and everything had gone very well, however neither was allowed to see the children.”
The mother was transferred to a room where she was left alone for three days, apart from visiting hours. The children were brought in from time to time but for the most part they were kept in another room. Sometime later a nurse came into the room and told the mother that one of the children was ill. “At about 4 am on the following morning the nurse came back again and told my mother that my sister had died,” said Maria Jose.
The next day, the hospital priest went to visit the mother of Maria Jose to ask about the girls, and was furious when he was told that one had died. "He was asked to baptize her before burial, but my sister did not even have a name," laments Maria.
From then on everything was rushed. Hospital staff told the father to go buy a small coffin to bury the dead twin and bring it back to the hospital. The hospital then sealed the coffin and sent the father to the Alicante cemetery where they said that staff were urgently waiting to bury the child.
The family, who all lived in Elche, did not understand why the girl had to be buried in Alicante, but were told that it was mandatory that the body went to the cemetery closest to the hospital. The father, who is now 82 years old, still remembers the area where he deposited the coffin, and is still wondering why he was not allowed to open it to confirm that it held the body of his daughter.
Interestingly, the death certificate does not include the name of the doctor who confirmed the child’s passing. As such the family has always had it’s doubts. María followed a myriad of bureaucratic red tape as she took the case to la Fiscalía de Menores (the Juvenile Prosecutor). This eventually culminated with the burial plot being formally identified and the exhumation on the remains of a baby girl taking place.
But just last week, fourteen months after the exhumation, María was hit with the bombshell that the DNA of her parents does not match that of the remains found in the grave and as such she is now carefully considering her next step.
She said that she is now trying to find out if her sister is alive and living under another name and with another family. Currently, la Fiscalía de Menores is responsible for investigating fourteen cases of missing children in the province, although more are expected to arrive in the coming weeks. The , prosecutors currently awaits DNA results from the National Toxicology Institute in seven of the cases.
As a result of the investigations the Association of Victims of stolen children and illegal adoptions in Alicante (AVA) was formed. The organization provides support to those families who find themselves in a similar situation.
They provide information and assistance to those like Maria who have started a crusade to find out if their relatives are still alive. They do this through the courts, through burial records and even through social networks. They also provide advice on how to initiate a complaint or request an exhumation. Currently there are about 80 families in the province seeking clarification on suspected stolen babies.
But the AVA also warns that the circumstances surrounding burials and exhumations varied enormously during the period in question, particularly where a child was buried in a coffin within a public grave.
Here the task of identifying the remains becomes much more complicated, since there could well be the existence of several babies within the same small plot, many of whom will have been buried in biodegradable coffins which could now prevent the recognition of specific DNA traces.
Between 1950 and 1980 estimates put the total number of children that are thought to have been illegally adopted at around 300,000. This was done through a network of Catholic Church-run children's homes and private hospitals would take newborn infants, typically from young, impoverished single mothers, who were told that their baby had died.
The women were usually known to have supported the Republican cause during the Spanish Civil war. It was seen at the time as an effective way of inflicting a lasting punishment on those who had backed the wrong side. The children were then placed in the care of families who had supported the new regime, at the same time preventing the appearance of a new generation of "reds."
Sunday 7 April 2013
http://www.theleader.info/article/38476/spain/national/alicantes-missing-children-in-search-of-the-truth/
Angola: Rains claim nine lives in Luanda, 4 missing
At least nine dead and four people missing is the provisional assessment of the consequences of rain that fell Saturday morning on the city of Luanda and surroundings.
ANGOP learned today, Sunday, from the deputy governor for technical area of the Provincial Government of Luanda, António Resende, in the urban district of Ingombota, that among the victims are adults and children, following collapsing of houses.
The deaths and missing were registered in the urban districts of Samba and Kilamba Kiaxi, Luanda district. It is known that teams specializing in shipwrecks of the National Civil Protection and Fire (SNPCB) are continuing their search today in order to locate the bodies of the missing.
However, during its reporting round ANGOP found the collapse of homes of Boavista mountain (Ingombota) and the flood of other beachfront house, near the port of Luanda.
Sunday 7 April 2013
http://www.portalangop.co.ao/motix/en_us/noticias/sociedade/2013/3/14/Rains-claim-nine-lives-Luanda,e9f05a8e-b295-4706-8539-182b253f9ffe.html
Mass burial likely for Benin accident victims
Victims of the accident that occurred at Ugbogui along Benin-Lagos road on Friday might be given a mass burial if their identities can not be ascertained. Many of them were burnt to ashes.
The luxurious bus they were travelling in was engulfed in fire after a tanker that was hit by a trailer carrying cement exploded and only three passengers managed to escape with severe burns. Witnesses said the luxurious bus was filled with passengers.
The remains of the victims have been deposited at the University of Benin Teaching Hospital mortuary while it was gathered that the police authorities were waiting for directives from Abuja on what to do with corpses.
State Police Commissioner, Folusho Adebanjo said relatives have started showing up to collect corpses of their love ones.
He said time would be given for relatives to identify corpses and added that the manifest showed that 36 persons died in the fire.
An official of the FRSC said they would soon remove the vehicles from the highway to ease traffic movement.
Owners of the shops, vehicles and motor-cycles affected by the fire have demanded for compensation from owners of the tanker that caused the fire.
A mechanic said three Toyota Camry cars kept at his workshop were consumed in the fire.
Florence Olufemi said she lost 50 kegs of palm oil to the inferno while One Mrs. Dupe Abiola, a restaurateur, said everything in her shop were burnt.
Sunday 7 April 2013
http://thenationonlineng.net/new/news-update/mass-burial-likely-for-benin-accident-victims/
Nigeria: How poisoned cows sparked killings, arson on uphill villages
Like a little bush fire turned into a ravaging inferno, the discovery of two dead Fulani cows,allegedly poisoned in Zankan, an uphill village in Fadan Atakad Chiefdom, Kaura Local Government Area of Kaduna State, ignited a bloodbath in Atakad villages in Kaduna and Plateau States in the past three weeks.
Alhaji Ibrahim S Abdullahi, Kaduna State Chairman of Miyeti Allah Kautal Hori Socio-Cultural Association – Fulani umbrella body – told Sunday Vanguard that the Fulani considers the cow as the equivalent of cash deposit in bank, and would do anything to take vengeance anytime his cow is hurt.
The national body of Miyeti Allah Kautal Hori Socio-Cultural Association was headed by the deposed Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Ibrahim Dasuki.
Members of the House of Representatives from Southern Kaduna wore forlorn looks last Wednesday when they visited one of the refugee camps holding some 10,000 Atakad refugees displaced from the violence and assured them of help and justice, while asking for calm.
The Atakad people live on lush plains and fertile valleys served by perennial stream high up the Atakar hills, that form part of the Kagoro mountains linking the Jos plateau.Unlike most southern Kaduna people, the Atakad are known to take dry season farming seriously, thus making them relatively prosperous among other tribal groupings of the area.
Also rich in fodder for grazing, Fulani nomads find the Atakad hills very attractive, and there had been cordial symbiotic relationship between the two groups as long as some of the oldest Atakad elders could recall to Sunday Vanguard, until the last three weeks.
On Monday, the Chairman of Kaura LGA, Mr Kumai L J Badung spoke to Sunday Vanguard at the refugee camp of Fadan Atakad on how the incident started. Said Badung:”There was a young man, Aboi Stephen (21), in Mafan, who had been complaining that some cattle had been grazing on his dry season farm. I was told that the cattle destroyed a good portion of the farm, and that there was no end in sight to the destruction.
”About two weeks ago, two Fulani cows were found dead, allegedly of poisoning. The owner of the cows was said to have publicly warned Aboi of the grave consequences of his action. I don’t know if it was Aboi that poisoned the cows, or even if they died of poisoning. ”Then one day, Aboi was found missing. A search by the villages found his corpse.
He had deep machete cuts all over his body, and his throat was slit.”Upon that discovery, women and children mobilised to the palace of the chief of Atakar, Tobias Nkom-Wada, and accused him of inviting the Fulani into Atakar land in the first place. They vandalised the palace.
The chief is now living in his personal house in Tachire, around here. ”On seeing what the women and children did, the Fulani started moving out en masse to their kins in Kanawuri areas of Plateau State, which also has some number of Atakar speaking villages.”On their way, they shot a young man that same day in Kanawuri area.
That pitched them against the Atakar in Plateau State and they fought for days. The fighting led to the burning of some Atakar villages. The affected ones had to move to this local government, where we opened the first refugee camp for them at Mifi. But we have closed it and merged it with the other two because it was vulnerable.
”When the army moved in last week, the Fulanis left Kanawuri in Plateau State back to this place with their arms.”Last Saturday, by 3pm they attacked Mafan, Zalang, Taliki and Zangkan villages up those hills, while able bodied men had gone to the farms or the market.
They went on unchallenged till Sunday morning. When the army arrived the scene on Sunday morning, the officer in charge told me that they counted 19 bodies. All the houses in the villages had been burnt.”They made no arrest, because the attackers had left before the came.”Right now, soldiers have escorted some men back to the villages to bury the dead.”We have not less than 5,000 refugees now, and that is a huge challenge to us.
The governor of Kaduna State, Alh. Muktar Ramalan, has done very much and is still doing more to help”.But events later revealed that the casualty was higher than the one given by the Council Chairman, when the House of Reps members came to find out what transpired.
The chief of Atakad chiefdom, Chief Tobais Nkom_Wada, while receiving the lawmakers, led by Hon Godfrey Gaya (Jaba/Zangon Kataf Federal Constituency), corroborated the story of Badung, but added that the death toll had shot to 28, the four villages left in ruins with the Fulani fully occupying them as their captured territory.”We gave 28 bodies mass burial, with the victims being mostly women and children.
The Fulani have fully taken over the villages. No one can enter,” he said. ”Now, the rains have started. Some have lost family members and are living as refugees. Yet they cannot go back and farm, after their entire food crops have been burnt. Next year will be terrible.”I am pleading with government to send securitymen so that we can go back and start our lives all over again.”As Christians, I call on my people to forgive, and keep living in peace with the Fulani like we have ever done ever since”.
The National President, Atakad Community Development Association, Mr. Ishaya Kudien told the visitors that the refugee figure had increased.”We heard the refugee was given as 5,000. That is far below the truth. As at yesterday, we have about 100, 000 refugees from the violence. Many are living with relations, some are staying with family friends, and some have relocated, more have joined the camps,” he said.
”There may be outbreak of epidemic, because everyday we take dozens of children for emergency treatment because of poor hygiene and feeding here.”We need relief materials and we want to go back home. We will always forgive, but we want government to help us get back our villages from the Fulani”.
Other members of the House of Reps from southern Kaduna were: Hon. Gideon L. Gwani (Kaura Federal Constituency), Hon. Adams Jagaba Adams (Kachia/Kagarko Constituency), Hon. Simon Arabo (Kauru Federal Constituency) and Hon. Shehu N. Garba ( Jema’a/Sanga Constituency).Meanwhile, Kaduna State Chairman of Miyeti Allah Kautal Hori Socio-Cultura Association, Abdullahi, spoke to Sunday Vanguard on behalf of the Fulani.”I was told that the corpse of a mentally deranged man was found in a bush in one of the Atakad villages. The Atakad youth attack the Fulani, and burnt their huts.
They even burnt the palace of their chief, who is peace loving man.”I am told that 20 Fulani were killed, and that the Fulani cannot go to the hills to bury their dead.”Let me tell you something that many people don’t know about us the Fulani. We don’t have bank accounts.
The cattle you see the Fulani with, represent his bank account. Therefore, if you hurt any of his cows, he can go to the end of the world and hide the remaining cows, then he will surely come back for vengeance.”But, we don’t want such crisis.
The Atakad and the Fulani have lived for decades and have even inter-married. It is sad that this is happening. I am still making more findings, and I will let you know next time”.
Sunday 7 April 2013
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/04/fulani-atakar-war-how-poisoned-cows-sparked-killings-arson-on-uphill-villages/
Sri Lanka to probe mass grave with more than 150 dead
Sri Lanka is setting up a presidential commission to investigate a mass grave with the remains of more than 150 people, an official spokesman said on Sunday.
Two reports submitted to a court last week said that the human remains, in the town of Matale 142 km (88 miles) north of the capital, dated back to the period 1986-1989 when Sri Lanka faced a Marxist insurrection.
"The president has decided to appoint a presidential commission to inquire into the mass grave. This will be apart from the ongoing police inquiry," Mohan Samaranayake, President Mahinda Rajapaksa's spokesman, told Reuters.
The decision to set up commission comes five months after the mass grave was found at a building site near a hospital.
Ajith Jayasena, the judicial medical officer at the hospital, said the excavation was still going on and there may be more remains in the grave.
Marxist rebels of the Janatha Vimukthi Peremuna (JVP), or People's Liberation Front, launched the second phase of an insurrection in the late 1980s after the first one in 1971.
The security forces responded ruthlessly and many rebels were killed or disappeared. The JVP later transformed itself from a rebel group into a political party.
Sunday 7 April 2013
http://news.yahoo.com/sri-lanka-probe-mass-grave-more-150-dead-145207026.html
Thane building collapse: Nine victims yet to be identified
Nine bodies, recovered from the debris of the unauthorised building in Shil Phata area in the district, which crashed on Thursday killing 74 people, are yet to be identified. Officials said four bodies were at the Civil Hospital here, while five were at CSM Civic Hospital in Kalwa. All other bodies have been identified.
Meanwhile, bodies of 11 labourers hailing from Malda in West Bengal, who were among the victims, were flown back to their home state on Saturday night. Many of the victims were construction workers from Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and West Bengal.
The seven-storey unauthorised building at Shil Phata in Mumbra in the district had come down crashing in a heap on Thursday evening, in the worst tragedy of its kind in Maharashtra, which left 72 people dead so far.
Sunday 7 April 2013
http://ibnlive.in.com/news/thane-building-collapse-nine-victims-yet-to-be-identified/383776-3-237.html
Nigeria: 36 bodies recovered from Benin-Ore road accident:
Rescue operation by officials of the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC), the Police and Edo State Fire Service continued yesterday at the scene of Friday multiple accident that claimed several lives at Ugbogui along the Benin- Ore-Lagos expressway.
Speaking to Sunday Sun, Edo Sector Commander of the FRSC, Mr. Kenneth Nwagbe said that one more body was recovered at the point where the vehicles collided and was taken to the University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH) mortuary. He said 36 bodies have been recovered from the scene adding that from the manifest of the Luxury bus involved in the accident, a total of 36 people died in the accident.
Mr. Nwangbe revealed that relatives of some of the dead victims have identified them. He advised motorists to put their vehicles in good order mindful that the rainy season has set in. On whether the FRSC was considering mass burial for victims who could not be identified, Mr. Nwangbe said: “That has a process. We will follow due process. We are not the only agency on ground; the Police are also on ground and are involved.” Another official of the FRSC who spoke on condition of anonymity said: “Our duty is to clear the debris on the road and arrange to take the bodies to the mortuary. It is the duty of the Police to arrange for mass burial.”
Speaking on the rescue operation, Edo State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Folusho Adebanjo who led policemen to the scene, stated that the traffic situation of the road was okay. “We have been able to remove the Luxury bus; it remains the tanker. We suspect there is PMS. The last time we tried to remove it, there was fire. We are waiting for officials of the Fire Service”, he said.
The accident occurred when a trailer carrying cement reportedly had a burst tyre and rammed into a fuel tanker that in turn, hit a luxury bus conveying passengers from Lagos to Enugu. Consequently, the tanker exploded and burnt most of the passengers beyond recognition, while only three persons were rescued. Natives count losses Many natives of Ugbogui community, scene of the fire incident that resulted from the multiple accidents on Friday, suffered loses.
“I lost everything I worked for to the disaster. I sell foods and drinks here (pointing to her burnt shop). I was outside the shop when the accident occurred. Inside the shops were two large deep freezers that I used to cool the drinks. “ Apart from that, there were at least 10 crates of mineral, cartoons of beer, plastic chairs and other items. I cannot quantify what I lost to this inferno but all that I live on is gone.
I just don’t know where to start but I thank God that I’m still alive. I thought the world had come to an end”, said Madam Dupe Abiola, a food and drinks seller. For Florence Olufemi, a palm oil seller, when the accident occurred, she thought the world had come to an end. “I just heard a gboom sound from nowhere and I saw people running to different directions. Inside my store, I had 50 kegs of 50-litre palm oil that I was planning to sell soon.
I also had plantain and bananas inside of the shop. Now, everything is gone and I don’t even know where to start again”, she said. Jimoh Olaniyi, mechanic and car spare parts seller lost his entire shop.
“In our shop here, we lost no less than five cars. Personally, it is a huge loss for me because apart from my shop, I also lost my Gulf car to the inferno. All the tools in this shop were burnt and I am sure they are now useless. I pray that somebody will just come to our assistance,” he said.
Sunday 7 April 2013
http://www.osundefender.org/?p=97240