Compilation of international news items related to large-scale human identification: DVI, missing persons,unidentified bodies & mass graves
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Tuesday, 30 April 2013
Savar building collapse: confusion over missing estimates
The Savar tragedy rolls onto a week but there is no definitive statistics of how many are missing, raising doubts over how many corpses are buried under the pile of rubble at the Rana Plaza collapse site.
Thousands were still crowding the site holding pictures of dear ones for identification.
Number of those remaining missing could have been easily calculated had a list of employees at the five factories inside Rana Plaza been obtained.
However, the Army said they had sought for the list from the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA), but did not get it.
The nine-storey commercial building had five readymade garment factories inside it. BGMEA says there were over 3,000 people working there.
The factories were running when the building crumbled in a heap on Apr 24. Allegations were raised that the employees were forced into work even though huge cracks appreared on the wall the previous day.
Rescuers use trained dogs on Tuesday to find dead bodies from the heaps of debris of a high-rise building that collapses in Savar on Apr 24.
After the collapse, Fire Service and Civil Defence officials said there were about 3,500 workers inside when the building came down.
On the other hand, workers put the number at more than 4,500.
At a press conference on Tuesday afternoon, Maj Gen Chowdhury Hassan Suhrawardy, Bangladesh Army’s 9th Infantry Division GOC in charge of rescue operations, said they heard the number was 3,200.
Many had not joined work since it was a shutdown on that day, he said.
When asked how many were still missing, he avoided a direct answer and said, “You can estimate how many.”
According to him, 2,437 were rescued and 385 bodies were pulled out until Tuesday afternoon. The ratio of survivors and dead is 8:1.
If his information is to be taken, then the number of those unaccounted for is around 400.
However, police at Adhar Chandra School ground had put the figure of missing at around 1,300. The number was hung up at the notice board there.
“We do not agree with the list,” Maj Gen Suhrawardy said.
Shariful Islam worked at a garment factory on the seventh floor of the building over the past three years. He told bdnews24.com that some 900 workers were working on that floor on the fateful day.
Sabuj Mia who was working on the third floor said that some 800 workers were working there that day.
A factory official, Nazmur Rashid Faruk, who was rescued alive from the concrete rubbles of the fourth floor three days after the disaster, said some 1,000 workers were working on that floor when the huge structure caved in.
Mehadi Hasan, who was injured in the collapse and rescued from the sixth floor, said that over 1,000 workers used to work on that floor and most of them were at work during the dreadful incident.
He said garment machinery and accessories were being set up on the ninth floor that morning and that he saw over 50 workers working on the floor.
Other survivors said some 700 workers were working on the fifth floor. Another worker, Monnaf Khan, said that 800 workers used to work on the eighth floor.
“Since the factory manager dilly-dallies if any worker doesn’t work in the last leg of the month, all of the workers came to their respective factories with the hope of getting paid in time though a countrywide shutdown was called on that day,” he explained.
Since the hope for pulling up the trapped people alive from the concrete rubbles faded seven days on, their relatives are now staying at local Adhar Chandra School ground and giving the list of their missing near ones hoping to find their bodies to do the last rites.
Sub-Inspector Firoz Alam told bdnews24.com at the school ground on Monday that the number of missing people could come down later if anyone was traced out later and since the names of the missing people was enlisted more than once in some cases.
The civilians who took part in the rescue operation said that decomposed corpses remained sandwiched under concrete slabs in the inaccessible corners of the bottom floors.
Yunus Khan of Savar’s Sabujbagh who was looking for his nephew Arifur Rahman told bdnews24.com: “I entered the collapsed building and saw many bodies in its north-eastern corner. But the heavy machines are being used in the front and back side of the collapsed structure instead of using those there.”
Equipment like cranes were not pressed in service on the first day of the disaster in a bid to rescue the trapped people alive. The second phase of the salvage operation involving heavy machinery was launched on the fifth day.
Nine more bodies were retrieved from the debris on Tuesday.
The recovered corpses are kept on the Adhar Chandra High School ground, which is next to Enam Medical College and Hospital.
Those who could not be identified are being taken to the morgues in Dhaka Medical College Hospital and Mitford Hospital.
Maj Gen Suhrawardy said 333 dead bodies have been handed over to families. There are 52 unidentified bodies of the victim in the morgue, he added.
Almost all who were still waiting to find their loved ones on Tuesday, the seventh day of the collapse, in front of Rana Plaza and Adhar Chandra High School said they had been running to see if the ones they are seeking were among the dead or the injured being treated at hospitals.
But those who were anxiously waiting for their loved ones believe they were still trapped under the debris.
There are many who have given ip hopes of ever seeing their loved ones again. Now all they want is to at least find their dead bodies and return home.
They staged a protest near Savar Bus Stand on Monday. They stopped the trucks that were taking the debris to dump into the river to check if there were bodies inside.
Maj Gen Suhrawardy acknowledged in the press brief that many had their suspicions that “we may be dumping bodies along with the debris. Some have obstructed the trucks on debris”.
“Can this be expected from the rescuers who risked their own lives to save so many victims?” he said with a tinge of anger in his tone.
When asked about the number of people who are still missing, he said it would have helped to estimate the number for the missing if they had a list of how many people who used to work in the building.
“But we did not receive any list. The BGMEA President was asked to provide the list urgently. He said he is ‘working to provide the list’.”
No computers that may have data on the employees were recovered, he said.
All the owners of the garment factory have been arrested. When asked if the detained owners were asked about the number of the employees, Maj Gen Suhrawardy said, “They are not in our custody.”
He requested the members of the press to not assume a number for those who are dead or missing until authorities receive a list of workers for the five factories.
Lists for the injured and the dead specific to districts will be released soon, he added.
The Army official said foreigners were happy with the rescue effort on Sunday.
About government’s refusal to offers by the foreigners to aid the rescue operation, he said, “It would have taken more than 72 hours for the tools to reach here, considering the time of their proposal.”
Tuesday 30 April 2013
http://bdnews24.com/bangladesh/2013/04/30/mismatch-over-the-missing
Update: Two North Korean sailors from missing ship turn up dead in Japanese waters
The bodies of two North Korean sailors from the missing cargo ship Taegakbong turned up in separate locations in Japan, almost four months after the ship went missing in late December. The ship went adrift when engine failure caused its navigation systems and steering controls to be disabled.
The first partially decomposed body was found on Saturday in Itoigawa, Niigata Prefecture. He still had a North Korean loyalty badge and $290 in U.S. currency in his possession.
The second one was discovered on Sunday near Japan’s Oga Peninsula. He was clutching a metal tube with photos of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Un, which they think was taken from the ship’s bridge, believing it will protect him or maybe just out of loyalty to their presidents.
24 crew members escaped aboard a life raft last December, and it is still not known if the rest of the crew escaped or were rescued by North Korean authorities. Also unknown is the fate of the ship and its cargo, although it is publicly listed as “under repair” on North Korea’s west coast.
It isn’t the first time that the bodies of North Korean sailors have washed up on Japanese shores. Last December, three bodies in a partially capsized boat were discovered by the Japanese Coast Guard off the coast of central Japan.
Previously, another boat with a dead body was discovered near Sado Island and another boat with Korean markings and five deceased bodies of fishermen turned up in Japanese waters. Unless you’re a conspiracy theorist or a horror movie aficionado, none of these incidents seem to be in any way related.
Tuesday 30 April 2013
http://japandailypress.com/two-north-korean-sailors-from-missing-ship-turn-up-dead-in-japanese-waters-3027986
2 more bodies found from Savar rubbles
With the latest recovery, nine bodies have so far been unearthed since the rescuers started using heavy machinery.
Savar police SI Saiful Islam said the bodies were recovered at around 9:30pm. He identified the deceased as ‘Hasina’ and ‘Ainul’ from identity cards found on them.
Apart from them, two other injured had also succumbed to their injuries in hospital on Monday taking the death toll to 388.
Hydraulic cranes and Bulldozers are being used to clear the wreckage on the back side of the collapsed building. Rescuers said they had seen several bodies there. Efforts are underway to recover them.
Meanwhile, thousands of people are waiting for their loved ones. They have staged agitation as they have not yet found the bodies even six days after the disaster.
Bangladesh Army, leading the rescue, said they were drilling cautiously to save anyone who might be still alive under the wreckage.
Bodies recovered from the site are being taken to local Adhar Chandra High School grounds where thousands had been staying overnight to claim the bodies of their loved ones to perform the last rites.
Tuesday 30 April 2013
http://bdnews24.com/bangladesh/2013/04/30/2-more-bodies-found-from-savar-rubbles
Unclaimed bodies to be buried on Tuesday
Twenty nine unidentified bodies that were retrieved from the debris of collapsed Rana Plaza will be buried on Tuesday at Jurain graveyard. Their DNA samples have been collected.
The bodies were kept at the morgue of Dhaka Medical College and Hospital (DMCH) for identification.
Dhaka district Additional Magistrate Abul Fazal Mir told bdnews24.com that the unclaimed bodies were handed over to Anjuman-e-Mafidul Islam, a charitable Islamic welfare organisation, on Monday afternoon, five days after the country’s worst-ever industrial disaster.
Of the 29 unidentified people, 26 are women and three are men.
He said that DNA samples were collected from the bodies so that their identity can be confirmed through tests if anyone claims them later.
Lecturer of the Forensic Department at Dhaka Medical College (DMC) Sohel Mahmud told bdnews24.com that they collected the teeth of the victims as DNA samples to match the samples of any claimant.
Executive Director of the century-old charity Anjuman-e-Mufidul Islam Abul Kashem said that the last rites would be completed at the Jurain graveyard on Tuesday.
In November last year, bodies of 52 unclaimed workers, charred in a devastating fire at Tazreen Fashions in Ashulia, were also buried at Jurain graveyard in the capital after conducting their DNA tests.
Meanwhile, the death toll in Savar tragedy climbed to 381 even as rescuers comprising firefighters, untrained local volunteers and army men have started removing massive piles of rubbles with heavy machinery five days after the structure collapsed.
Most of the victims were garment workers. The building housed five readymade garment factories that employed nearly 5000 workers. Apart from that 300 shops were also based there.
There are some unclaimed bodies still lying at Sir Salimullah Medical College and Hospital mortuary.
After their recovery from the debris, the bodies were first taken to makeshift mortuary at local Adhar Chandra School playground for identification.
After identification the bodies were handed over to their relatives while the unclaimed bodies were sent to DMCH and Sir Salimullah Medical College.
Tuesday 30 April 2013
http://bdnews24.com/bangladesh/2013/04/29/unclaimed-bodies-to-be-buried-on-tuesday
Migrant smugglers abandon boatloads of people at sea, according to Mexican Officials
The Mexican navy says it has detected a disturbing trend of migrant smugglers abandoning boatloads of people at sea off the coast of Baja California.
The Navy says that each month it has been finding an average of 10 to 12 boats, with a total of about out 150 migrants. It doesn't say when the discoveries began.
The Navy said Monday the boats' captains abandoned the vessels aboard other craft, telling migrants the motors had broken down and they would be back.
The smugglers then left the migrants adrift, often in overcrowded boats without food or radios, putting their lives at risk.
A video released by the navy shows sailors approaching several vessels, some in choppy waters, to rescue ragged-looking passengers.
Tuesday 30 April 2013
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/29/migrant-smugglers-abandon_n_3179397.html
Seven killed in US cargo plane crash at Afghan base
A US civilian cargo plane has crashed at Bagram airbase in Afghanistan, killing its seven crew, officials say.
The plane came down shortly after take-off and crashed within the boundaries of the huge US-run airbase, said a Nato spokesperson at the base.
The Taliban claimed responsibility for the crash, but their involvement was denied by Nato.
Bagram, near the Afghan capital Kabul, is the largest military base for US troops in Afghanistan.
Witnesses said the plane reached an altitude of some 400m (1,312ft) before suddenly "falling out of the sky", Bagram's district governor, Abdul Shukor, told Reuters news agency.
The crash was confirmed by the plane's owners, National Air Cargo.
"We did lose all seven crew members," said a spokeswoman for the Florida-based firm.
The Taliban was quick to claim responsibility, telling the Pakistan-based Afghan Islam Press they shot down the plane.
But Nato's International Security Assistance Force (Isaf) said there were no reports of militant activity in or around the base at the time of the crash.
No cause for the crash has been given - Nato said it is being investigated.
The crash comes two days after four military personnel were killed in a crash in the southern Afghan province of Zabul, which officials said was also not due to military activity.
Tuesday 30 April 2013
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-22347199