Compilation of international news items related to large-scale human identification: DVI, missing persons,unidentified bodies & mass graves
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Friday, 19 April 2013
Update: 9 victims identified in West explosion, official death toll climbs to 14
Two days after the fertilizer facility exploded in a blinding fireball, authorities announced that they had recovered 14 bodies, confirming for the first time an exact number of people killed. Grieving families quickly started planning burials.
At least three of those who perished in Wednesday's blast were firefighters, according to family members. The dead included Uptmor and Joey Pustejovsky, the city secretary who doubled as a member of the West Volunteer Fire Department, as well as a captain of the Dallas Fire Department who was off-duty at the time but responded to the fire to help.
The explosion was strong enough to register as a small earthquake and could be heard for many miles across the Texas prairie. It demolished nearly everything for several blocks around the plant. More than 200 people were hurt.
Texas Department of Public Safety Sgt. Jason Reyes said he could not confirm how many first-responders had been killed. Efforts to search devastated buildings in a four-block radius around the blast site continued Friday.
Texas Sen. John Cornyn told television station WFAA that search-and-rescue workers had a list of several dozen people who are unaccounted for and were checking that list against those people who are still hospitalized, staying with relatives or evacuated because their homes were destroyed.
"So, hopefully that number will come way down, hopefully to zero," Cornyn said.
Friday 19 April 2013
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/crews-seek-survivors-bodies-texas-blast-18994785#.UXG_wadzA34
Waco Siege 20th Anniversary And 18 Years Since Oklahoma City Bombing
The Boston marathon bombing and the massive explosion at a fertiliser plant in Waco, Texas, have made this week a particularly grim one for America.
Unfortunately, US domestic terrorism and the town of Waco are no strangers to the news.
In the early hours of a Texan Monday morning 20 years ago today a 51-day stand off between the FBI and a heavily armed Messianic cult came to an end.
Federal agents (ATF) raided the compound Feb. 28, 1993, trying to arrest sect leader David Koresh for stockpiling illegal weapons. But the group had been tipped off about the raid and a shootout ensued. Four agents and six Davidians were killed.
David Koresh, formerly known as Vernon Wayne Howell, was the leader of the cult, an offshoot of a Protestant sect known as the Branch Davidians.
Koresh had changed his name in honour of two biblical kings and convinced his followers he was to lead the second coming in the forthcoming Apocalypse he had prophesied.
He also convinced the male members to observe a life of celibacy while he had sexual relations with their wives in order to establish a "House of David".
The Branch Davidians lived in a compound in the Texan town of Waco. They came to the attention of the Alcohol, Firearms and Tabacco (AFT) department who believed they were stockpiling weapons and making methamphetamine.
A siege now ensued led by the FBI. Despite using sleep deprivation techniques, cutting power to the compound and shooting holes in their water tower, the occupants refused to leave.
During this period a 24-year-old Gulf War veteran called Timothy McVeigh visited the compound. He would come to the attention of the world in devastating style two years later.
The decision to force entry was made, ostensibly for the welfare of the children who were inside, on 19 April.
Tear gas was pumped into the compound followed by heavily armed FBI agents and armoured vehicles.
Around noon three fires had broken out which quickly spread through the compound's buildings suffocating and burning all those inside, including Koresh.
The actual sequence of events is still disputed. Doubt remains over who fired the first shots and whether the fires were deliberate or could have been prevented.
The ensuing gunfight and blazes that resulted, 76 people died including 28 children.
Twenty-three of the dead were British.
After the siege had ended McVeigh returned to the scene in Waco. Incensed by what he saw as federal suppression of US citizens he decided to take revenge.
Along with another conspirator, Terry Nichols, McVeigh constructed a massive 3.2-tonne truck bomb.
On the second anniversary of the Waco siege, 19 April 1995, the bomb was detonated outside the Alfred P Murrah Federal Building which housed a number of government agencies.
It also had a creche and among the 168 people killed in the blast including were 19 children under the age of 6.
McVeigh was executed in 2001 for what was the worst incident of terrorism on US soil until 9/11. Nichols was sentenced to life in prison.
Friday 19 April 2013
http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/us/article/Davidian-survivors-mark-20th-anniversary-of-siege-4447019.php
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2013/04/19/waco-siege-oklahoma-bomb_n_3114649.html?utm_hp_ref=uk?ncid=GEP#slide=2352998
10 killed, over 40 injured in Pakistan accident
At least 10 people were killed and 46 others injured Friday when their bus overturned in Pakistan's eastern province of Punjab, a media report said.
The over-speeding bus overturned when one of its tyres burst in Hasilpur area of Bahawalpur city, Xinhua reported citing Urdu TV channel ARY.
The bus with over 70 people on board was on its way to Multan.
The injured were taken to a hospital where several of them were said to be in critical condition.
Friday 19 April 2013
http://in.news.yahoo.com/10-killed-over-40-injured-pakistan-accident-142434608.html
Death toll in Indonesia boat sinking climbs to 18
The death toll from a boat accident in the Indonesian part of Borneo island rose to 18 on Friday with five people still missing, a provincial governor said.
The boat carrying workers from a plywood company sank on Wednesday after being hit by a huge wave as it travelled across the Mahakam River in East Kalimantan province.
Provincial governor Awang Faroek Ishak said a total of 18 bodies had now been pulled from the water, up from a death toll of three on Thursday.
"Twenty-one people have been rescued, and we will continue to search for the five passengers still missing," Ishak said in a statement.
There had been conflicting reports about the numbers on the boat, but the governor said it was now confirmed it had been carrying 44.
Disaster agency official Wahyu Didit said none of the bodies recovered were wearing life jackets.
Boat accidents are common in Indonesia, where vessels have a poor safety record and the population of 240 million is scattered over a vast archipelago of more than 17,000 islands.
Friday 19 April 2013
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/afp/130419/death-toll-indonesia-boat-sinking-climbs-18
Official: 12 Bodies Recovered After Texas Blast
The bodies of 12 people have been recovered after an enormous Texas fertilizer plant explosion that demolished surrounding neighborhoods for blocks and left more about 200 other people injured, authorities said Friday.
Texas Department of Public Safety Sgt. Jason Reyes said it was "with a heavy heart" that he confirmed 12 bodies had been pulled from the area of the plant explosion.
Even before investigators released a confirmed number of fatalities, the names of the dead were becoming known in the town of 2,800 and a small group of firefighters and other first responders who may have rushed toward the plant to battle a pre-explosion blaze was believed to be among them.
Reyes said he could not confirm Friday how many of those killed were first responders.
The mourning already had begun at a church service at St. Mary of the Assumption Catholic Church the previous night.
"We know everyone that was there first, in the beginning," said Christina Rodarte, 46, who has lived in West for 27 years. "There's no words for it. It is a small community, and everyone knows the first responders, because anytime there's anything going on, the fire department is right there, all volunteer."
One victim Rodarte knew and whose name was released was Kenny Harris, a 52-year-old captain in the Dallas Fire Department who lived south of West. He was off duty at the time but responded to the fire to help, according to a statement from the city of Dallas.
Authorities spent much of the day after Wednesday night's blast searching the town for survivors. Reyes said those search and rescue efforts continued early Friday.
Friday 19 April 2013
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/crews-seek-survivors-bodies-texas-blast-18994785
Libya: Progress on Missing Persons investigations assessed
The President of the General National Congress Muhammad Maqrif met with the Director-General of the International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP) Kathryne Bomberger in Tripoli this afternoon to discuss the progress of the Commission’s operations in Libya.
Four months ago, Bomberger and the then Minister for Martyrs and the Missing, Naser Jibril Hamed, signed a cooperation agreement to help process the cases of those who went missing during the 42-year Qaddafi regime and the revolution as well as those who have gone missing since.
As part of that agreement, the ICMP is helping set up a Libyan Identification Center (LIC) to work on cases of missing persons. According to an ICMP statement at the time: “The LIC will allow for the development of a DNA laboratory system, starting with a facility to collect and store biological samples for DNA identity testing and possibly culminating in the creation of a high throughput DNA laboratory. The LIC would also enable Libyan authorities to coordinate the domestic process, as well as international assistance.”
Part of Bomberger’s current visit is to try and deal with some of the problems facing the Commission in its work in Libya. To that end, she will meet in the next couple of days with the present Minister of Martyrs and the Missing, Ali Gadour, and the chairman of Congress’ Medical Committee, Omar Al-Obeidi.
Friday 19 April 2013
http://www.libyaherald.com/2013/04/18/progress-on-missing-persons-investigations-assessed/
Search continues in rubble of Texas fertilizer blast
Emergency teams went house to house through mounds of debris Thursday searching for bodies and possible survivors of the earthquake-like blast at a fertilizer company Wednesday night, which sent a ball of fire and burning embers into nearby homes.
State investigators would not confirm the number of deaths from the explosion at the West Fertilizer Co., in this small town 20 miles north of Waco. As many as 160 others were injured. Initial reports put the count as high as 15, and later estimates provided to the mayor's office put the toll at more than 30.
But in an interview with USA TODAY late Thursday, West Mayor Tommy Muska said revised estimates put the death toll closer to about 15 people, including 10 first responders.
Muska said the dead include five members of the West Volunteer Fire Department who were trying to put out a still-unexplained blaze, four EMS workers and an off-duty Dallas firefighter who pitched in. Not all the bodies have been recovered but all are assumed dead.
Two volunteers who showed up to help fight the blaze are also missing and presumed dead, he said.
The remaining fatalities include fertilizer company workers and residents in several devastated blocks of this north-central Texas agricultural town about 80 miles south of Dallas.
"It's just a tragic, tragic incident," Muska said.
Between 50 and and 75 homes and buildings — including an apartment complex, the junior high school and a nursing home — were destroyed or seriously damaged.
"The apartment complex looks like it was the site of a bombing, the kind you see in Baghdad," Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott said at an afternoon news briefing. "It's utterly destroyed."
He also said railroad tracks to the west of the blast site were fused together and a playground was obliterated.
The blast, which rocked the ground with the force of a magnitude-2.1 earthquake, could be felt as far as 45 miles away.
"We risk our lives everyday. Those firefighters knew what they were going into," Waco police Sgt. William Patrick Swanton said. "They went in there to save lives, and that's what they did. A few of them lost their lives in doing so."
Officials said there was no initial indication that the blast was anything but an industrial accident, although agents from the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were on the scene investigating, along with the U.S. Chemical Safety Board.
The facility, which receives fertilizer by rail and distributes it to local farmers, declared in a risk-management plan filed with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in 2011 that it did not have sprinklers or other fire-safety measures in place because it was not handling flammable materials, the Associated Press reported.
Last summer, records show, the company paid a $5,250 fine and took "corrective actions" after the U.S. Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration found safety violations, including not having a security plan to transport flammable anhydrous ammonia and not properly labeling the tanks.
The state requires that all facilities handling anhydrous ammonia to have sprinklers and other safety measures, a top official with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality told AP.
The commission last inspected the West Fertilizer facility in 2006, another agency official said. Records also show that the last time the federal Occupational Health and Safety Administration visited the business was in 1985, when an inspector fined it $30 fine for a serious violation in storing anhydrous ammonia.
As a storm front moved through the area Thursday morning, teams were carefully sifting through the charred remains of the explosion for survivors, looking under beds, inside collapsed closets, and rummaging through debris for any sign of life.
Swanton said that it was a good sign that emergency teams were still in a "search and rescue" mode because it indicated that they still hoped to find more survivors.
"A lot of tedious, meticulous searching," he said. "They want to make sure they don't miss anyone."
Texas Gov. Rick Perry called the devastating explosion "truly a nightmare scenario" for the small farming community. He declared a state of emergency for McLennan County and dispatched National Guard troops.
The governor also said that President Obama called him from Air Force One en route to Boston to offer federal aid.
Earlier, Mayor Muska told reporters that his town of 2,800 people needs "your prayers."
Officials said it did not appear that the town was threatened by chemical fumes from the plant, which was still smoldering hours after the explosion.
Emergency teams had responded to a fire call at the plant at 7:29 p.m. CT. The explosion erupted 24 minutes later, as the firefighters, police and paramedics were battling the blaze and attempting to evacuate nearby residents.
"They were responding to the scene and were actively fighting the fire at the time the explosion occurred," Swanton said.
First responders to the West Rest Haven Nursing home removed 133 residents, many in wheelchairs, from the rubble.
Jimmy Girad, 27, a builder, was in his home about 7 miles from the blast site when the explosion rattled windows and scared his two young sons. His initial thought: a training jet from a nearby military base must have crashed nearby. Then he saw smoke coming from the fertilizer depot and began getting calls from family members. He hopped in his truck and sped off toward the smoke to help.
He arrived at the West Rest Haven Nursing Home and began wheeling elderly residents there away from the blast site, he said. Nearby, relatives' homes had collapsed roofs and there were piles of charred rubble where friends' homes once stood. The destruction and chaos reminded him of the devastation he witnessed while volunteering on the Gulf Coast in the wake of Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
"It's hard to take it all in, that this happened here," Girad said.
He said the depot had been there so long that no one thought it could inflict so much damage.
"It never crossed my mind something like that could happen," Girad said.
Bill and Polly Killough had just sat down to watch TV when the explosion roared into their living room. The front door blew in and the windows exploded at the same time, followed by the roof collapsing and a thunderous boom, Polly Killough, 64, said.
Her first thought was: tornado. But after clawing out from under the debris and stepping outside, she saw no thunderclouds or storm.
"What the hell just happened?" she asked.
Around her, neighbors homes were stripped of siding, their roofs caved in and doors and windows blown in. The scene reminded her of TV images she'd seen from Iraq.
"Now I know what soldiers go through when they go through an [improvised explosive device]," she said. "In an instant, just total destruction."
In one video, posted on YouTube, a young girl, Khloey Hurtt, is taping the fire from about 300 yards away while sitting in a truck with her father, Derrick. The force of the blast knocks them both backward.
In the video, Khloey can be heard pleading with her father, "Please get out of here, please get out of here, Dad, please get out of here. I can't hear anything."
Derrick Hurtt later told NBC's Today show, "I'm pretty sure it lifted the truck off the ground. It just blew me over on top of her. It all happened so quick that things just kind of went black for a moment."
"The injuries that we are seeing are very serious,'' said Glenn Robinson, CEO of Hillcrest Baptist Medical Center. "There are a number of patients that will be going to surgery. ... It's a very, very unfortunate situation.''
Robinson said that 10 or 12 of the injured were in critical condition. Two people were in surgery as he spoke and two more were awaiting surgery, he said.
Robinson said an unknown number of people with minor injuries were being treated at a triage center set up by emergency medical personnel at a high school football field.
Swanton, who was one of the first officers on the scene, said the chaos and devastation was staggering.
"I've been policing for 32 years and seen some pretty rough stuff in that time," he said. "I've never seen anything of this magnitude."
The blast and ball of fire reduced a middle school to rubble and seriously damaged least 50 houses. A 50-unit apartment building looked like a "skeleton," according to one state trooper. Some structures as far away as a half-mile were destroyed.
Julie Zahirniako said she and her son, Anthony, had been playing at a school playground near the fertilizer plant when the explosion occurred. She was walking the track, he was kicking a football.
The blast threw her son 4 feet in the air, breaking his ribs. She said she saw people running from the nursing home and the roof of the school lifted into the sky.
"Hit the ground, hit the ground," Zahirniako heard a neighbor yell.
"The fire was so high," she said. "It was just as loud as it could be. The ground and everything was shaking."
The West Independent School District announced that it will be closed until Monday, when students will resume classes on the high school and middle school campus in Connally, about 10 miles from the blast zone. Other nearby districts are providing supplies, furniture, personnel and other needs for the displaced students.
Texas Trooper D.L. Wilson said the damage was comparable to the destruction caused by the April 19, 1995, bomb blast that destroyed the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City.
Muska, who is a firefighter as well as mayor, urged residents to stay indoors as protection from the possibility of chemical fumes in the area.
Wilson said half the town had been evacuated due to damage or the threat posed by the fumes.
"When that north wind changes, we might have to evacuate the other side of town,'' Wilson said.
There were no immediate details on the number of people who work at the facility, which was cited by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality in 2006 for failing to obtain or to qualify for a permit, the Associated Press reported. The agency acted after receiving a complaint in June of that year of a strong ammonia smell.
In 2001, an explosion at a chemical plant killed 31 people and injured more than 2,000 in Toulouse, France. The blast occurred in a hangar containing 300 tons of ammonium nitrate, which can be used for both fertilizer and explosives. The explosion came 10 days after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the U.S., and raised fears at the time it was linked. A 2006 report blamed the blast on negligence.
Friday 19 April 2013
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/04/18/waco-texas-plant-explosion/2092769/