Wednesday, 28 August 2013

ICMP calls on Bosnia to implement law on missing persons


To mark the occasion of August 30, the International Day for Missing Persons, a press conference was held on Wednesday at the Sarajevo War Theater.

Coordinator of the Department of Justice and Civil Society at the International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP) Matthew Holliday said that the ICMP honored 40,000 people as missing in the former Yugoslavia conflict.

"In Bosnia, where about 30,000 people disappeared, the remains of more than 70 percent of missing persons have been idenified after a hard labouring process,“ Holliday said, adding that there are still about 9,000 missing persons in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

He reminded Bosnian authorities that even the Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina had confirmed that certain aspects of the Law on Missing Persons have not been implemented.

This year began the process of reassessing the 11 ossuaries in the country. Holliday said that these audits are very important to ensure that all the remains of missing persons will be identified.

He also stressed the importance of governments in the Balkans creating a list of missing persons in the region.

"ICMP urges Bosnian authorities to join other governments in the region in the process of creating a regional list of missing persons as a result of the conflict in the '90s in the former Yugoslavia," said Holliday.

He concluded his speech by calling on the Bosnian government to sign a declaration by the ICMP to demonstrate their willingness to participate in resolving the issue of missing persons.

Wednesday 28 August 2013

http://www.worldbulletin.net/?aType=haber&ArticleID=116310

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Western Balkans: Authorities must support families of missing persons


Two decades after the Balkan conflicts, almost 12,000 people are still missing. Lina Milner is the ICRC’s regional coordinator for the missing persons issue in the Western Balkans. On the occasion of the International Day of the Disappeared, she talks about what the ICRC is doing to help the families of those who went missing and calls on the authorities to act rapidly to give them the answers they need.

In the 22 years since the Balkan conflicts started, almost 35,000 people have been reported to the ICRC as missing. The fate and whereabouts of some 23,000 people are now known, but the families of over 11,800 people are still waiting for answers. Most of those cases relate to the conflict in Bosnia-Herzegovina, with over 7,800 still unaccounted for. For Croatia and Kosovo, the figures are approximately 2,200 and 1,700 people respectively.

Over the years, a number of measures have been taken, such as:

- the collection and processing of tracing requests;
- the consolidation of missing persons lists in public books of missing persons;
- appeals to people to report the disappearance of relatives;
- the setting up of mechanisms that enable the authorities to honour the families’ right to know what has happened to their relatives;
- supporting the establishment of family associations;
- obtaining the support of the international community.

The ICRC regularly reminds the authorities that they bear the principal responsibility for providing the families with answers. We also raise awareness of challenges and possible solutions.

In the last 12 months, only 800 cases have been resolved in the entire region, almost exclusively through exhumations at known gravesites. The authorities do acknowledge the importance of the issue and they have committed themselves to helping the families. But progress is far too slow. They must do much more to eliminate obstacles and to ensure that the families’ right to know what happened to their relatives is respected.

The main obstacle is that we don’t know what happened to the people who are still missing. In particular, we don’t know where the dead are buried. There must be more gravesites, in addition to the ones that have already been discovered. The authorities in each context must find out where these gravesites are, and they must share this information. They need to be looking through their archives, and asking the intelligence services, ministries, the armed forces, the judiciary, etc. They should also be consulting former commanders who were in charge of specific areas when people disappeared.

And then there are the legal and forensic obstacles. In Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo in particular, the authorities are lagging behind in the implementation of existing laws on missing persons and their families. They also have limited capacity to recover, analyse, and identify human remains, including unidentified sets of remains still lying in morgues. The authorities need to implement existing legislation, develop the necessary forensic capacity, allocate the necessary resources and formulate a comprehensive strategy for dealing with unidentified remains.

Thousands of families living in the region and elsewhere face the anguish of not knowing what has happened to a missing relative. Behind each and every missing person there is a family. These families have to deal not only with years of uncertainty but also with the loss of the family breadwinner and with isolation, stigmatization and other psychosocial and administrative problems.

What helps them deal with the situation is hope, the hope that they will receive an answer. The ICRC and its Red Cross partners have been supporting them. Everything we do, we do for the families, with the aim of ensuring respect for their right to know.

On the International Day of the Disappeared, we call upon the authorities of the region to give these families their unreserved and unconditional support, and to take rapid, concrete steps to end their pain.

Wednesday 28 August 2013

http://www.icrc.org/eng/resources/documents/interview/2013/08-28-disappeared-missing-western-balkans-milner.htm

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Cebu ferry disaster death toll reaches 91


The number of fatalities from the collision of a passenger ship and a cargo vessel in Cebu waters last Aug. 16 reached 91 Wednesday evening, state-run Philippines News Agency reported.

Citing figures from the Philippine Coast Guard, the PNA said at least 91 bodies had been recovered as of 6:30 p.m.

With this, only 43 remained missing while 733 people had been rescued, the PNA report quoted the Coast Guard as saying.

The victims were from the MV Saint Thomas Aquinas 1, which sank after colliding with the cargo vessel MV Sulpicio Express 7.

Wednesday 28 August 2013

http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/324026/news/nation/cebu-ferry-disaster-death-toll-reaches-91

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Floods in Laos kill 20, damage rice crops


Flash floods and heavy monsoon rains have battered Laos, killing at least 20 people, washing away roads and damaging crops, a U.N. official said on Wednesday.

Rains along with typhoons that grazed Laos in June and July have affected about 116,000 people in seven of 17 provinces, leaving many without access to clean water, and damaged 14,000 hectares (5,400 sq miles) of rice, the United Nations said.

"We've had near-misses from typhoons in the north of the country and received the rains that came with them," Glenn Dodge, head of the U.N. Resident Coordinator's office in Laos, told Reuters by telephone from Vientiane.

The United Nations warned last year that the country of 6.4 million could face more natural disasters due to climate change and needed to be better prepared.

Isolated for decades, Laos has become one of Asia's fastest-growing economies thanks to a mining and hydro-power boom.

The landlocked Communist country is constructing a $3.5 billion Chinese-backed hydropower dam -- the first of 11 planned for the lower Mekong river -- despite concerns raised by environmentalists.

Wednesday 28 August 2013

http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/08/28/us-laos-floods-idUSBRE97R0BB20130828

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Mexican officials identify bodies of all 12 kidnap victims


Mexican authorities have confirmed that 12 bodies pulled from a mass grave last week belong to young people kidnapped from a Mexico City bar in May, an official said.

A 13th body was recovered from the grave outside the capital but officials have not indicated whom it might be.

Seven young men and five women ranging between 16 and 34 years of age were reported missing in the days after the group went to the bar in the Zona Rosa district on 26 May.

Surveillance footage showed some of them being led to cars outside the after-hours bar.

There was no obvious sign of force on the surveillance footage. The men who took them away were not masked and did not seem to be carrying weapons.

There was no trace of the missing people until their bodies were discovered in a grave covered with lime, cement and asbestos on the outskirts of Mexico City.

An official from the federal attorney general's office said the bodies were identified through DNA testing and other means.

The office said in a statement that the remains were handed over to the city prosecutors, who are leading the investigation.

But some relatives of the victims said they were shown clothing found at the grave but that they did not belong to their loved ones.

"The clothes they showed us don't belong to any of the kids," Leticia Ponce, mother of 16-year-old Jerzy Ortiz, told AFP.

The families refused to take the bodies because they first want independent forensic experts from Argentina to examine the remains.

The brazen mass killing has tarnished the capital's image as an oasis from the drug-related murders and kidnappings that have plagued the country in recent years.

More than 70,000 people have been killed in drug violence since 2006.

Official figures say 26,000 people have gone missing across Mexico since December 2006, when the army was deployed to fight crime gangs.

Amnesty International has accused the Mexican government was not doing enough to investigate the disappearances of thousands of people.

Wednesday 28 August 2013

http://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/a/-/breaking/18690441/mexican-officials-identify-bodies-of-12-kidnap-victims/

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-23840046

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31 victims of Aquinas sinking still unidentified


With the bodies already in an advanced state of decomposition, identifying the remaining cadavers from the ill-fated MV St. Thomas Aquinas will have to be done through DNA cross matching.

Twelve days after the Aug. 16 sinking of the ship off the coast of Talisay City, 31 bodies have yet to be identified.

Of the 81 bodies recovered, 51 have been identified by the forensics team of the police.

Of those identified, 48 have been released to their families after completing paperwork needed to authenticate the identity of the victims.

Dr. Expidito Medalla, head of the Regional Epidemiology and Surveillance Unit – 7 of the Department of Health, said the process is tedious but necessary.

“The best way is to have DNA (testing) but we are asking for relatives to be patient since it takes time,” he added.

“We encouraged the siblings or parents of the victims to undergo DNA test in order to match their genes exactly,” he added.

DNA samples will be sent to Camp Crame where DNA matching will be conducted.

Dr. Rene Cam, medico-legal officer of the National Bureau of Investigation in Central Visayas (NBI-7), yesterday said that aside from the lengthy DNA process – which could take about a month, it is also expensive.

Half a million pesos is usually needed for 50 DNA samples.

But he promised that results of DNA testing is 99.99 percent accurate in identifying decomposed bodies.

Wednesday 28 August 2013

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/476213/31-victims-of-aquinas-sinking-still-unidentified

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Death toll in Mexico migrant train wreck rises to 9


The death toll in the derailment of a cargo train carrying migrants in southern Mexico rose to nine after authorities found three bodies inside a freight car, officials said Tuesday.

The train known as “The Beast,” which carries Central American migrants who pay smugglers to sit atop freight cars, careened off the track in a swampy and remote area of Tabasco state on Sunday.

The train was believed to be carrying upwards of 250 migrants as it traveled slowly along a river before eight of 12 wagons packed with scrap metal flipped to their side. Authorities used cranes to lift the cars.

Search teams continue combing the wreckage of the freight train that derailed over the weekend in the southeastern Mexican state of Tabasco "to rule out the existence of more victims of the accident," while the bodies of the six Honduran migrants killed in the derailment are being repatriated, the National Migration Institute, or INM, said Tuesday.

A Federal Police plane is scheduled to fly the remains of the dead migrants Tuesday from the airport in Villahermosa, the capital of Tabasco, to the Honduran city of San Pedro Sula.

Ruben Gomez Aguilar, 27; Felix Ponce Aguizon, 58; Gerardo Antonio Sandoval Diaz, 23; Jose Manuel Guerrero Sabillan, 20; Darlin Adriel Valle Banegas, 19; and Rufino Aguilar Ferrera, 22, were killed when the freight train known as "La Bestia" (The Beast) derailed on Sunday, the INM said in a statement.

Central American migrants headed for the United States ride on top of the freight train, with hundreds of people sometimes clinging to the train's cars.

A delegation of Foreign Relations Secretariat officials, Federal Police officers and INM officials accompanied the bodies to Honduras.

Luis Felipe Puente, Mexico’s national civil protection coordinator, later said on Twitter that three more bodies were discovered.

Although the federal transport ministry is investigating the accident and said the train was moving at just 10 kilometers (six miles) per hour, Tabasco state authorities blamed the derailment on speed and rain.

Officials "continue providing assistance to the migrants affected by the accident at shelters opened in the states of Tabasco and Veracruz," the INM said.

"There are more injured, but they did not want assistance because they feared being deported and preferred to stay like that," the Rev. Alejandro Solalinde, who is known for his work with Central American migrants, said.

Shelters along the route covered by the train are preparing to handle injured migrants who might show up over the next few days, the Mexican priest said.

The freight train derailed around 3:00 a.m. Sunday outside Huimanguillo, a city near Tabasco's border with Veracruz state.

The train went off the tracks close to the community of La Tembladera, officials said.

An estimated 300,000 Central Americans undertake the hazardous journey across Mexico each year on their way to the United States.

The trek is a dangerous one, with criminals and corrupt Mexican officials preying on the migrants.

Gangs kidnap, exploit and murder migrants, who are often targeted in extortion schemes, Mexican officials say.

Central American migrants follow a long route that first takes them into Chiapas state, which is on the border with Guatemala, walking part of the way or riding aboard freight trains, buses and cargo trucks.

Wednesday 28 August 2013

http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/international/death-toll-in-mexico-migrant-train-wreck-rises-to-9/

http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2013/08/27/search-continues-for-victims-mexico-train-derailment/

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Eight killed in Vadodara buildings collapse, over 24 still trapped


Eight people have died and dozens more have been trapped in the collapse of adjacent three-storey apartment buildings in western India, according to police.

The first building collapsed at approximately 4.30am local time, police said, and the other fell half an hour later, pinning more than 30 people under the debris of an apartment block that was home to about a dozen families in Vadodara, Gujarat state.

Police said rescuers were working to pull out the people trapped under the rubble, several of whom were wounded.

"Seven bodies have been retrieved and seven people evacuated so far," a local official told the BBC.

Most of the occupants of the 14 apartments in the first building were sleeping when it collapsed. The adjacent housing block was evacuated minutes before it buckled

About 14 families were staying in the building.

Manish Bhardwaj, Vadodara Municipal Commissioner, Satish Sharma, city police commissioner and city Mayor Bharat Shah and other senior officials have rushed to the site.

"Rescue and relief operations are in full swing. However, it is difficult to tell the exact number of people trapped under the debris. A few people, including a minor girl, have been rescued from the site so far," Vadodara mayor Bharat Shah said.

Talking to PTI, he said, "I was admitted to hospital and soon after learning about this mishap, I am on my way to the site.

Army and National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) teams have arrived to assist the fire brigade in the rescue work.

Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi consoled the death of the persons while asking the state authorities to conduct the rescue operations to bring out all those trapped inside.

He also asked the state finance minister Nitin Patel to rush at the spot for monitoring rescue operation launched by Vadodara municipal corporation and national disaster relief force.

Chief minister also announced a relief of Rs. two lakh for the kin of the deceased and said an inquiry commission will probe the incident.

Built for the economically weaker sections by the Vadodara Urban Development Authority (VUDA), the buildings were in dilapidated conditions and locals blamed the poor construction and no maintenance by the authorities.

"We had drawn the attention of authorities like VUDA about the buildings but they paid no heed and now both buildings collapsed as we had feared," local residents told local channels.

The injured have been rushed to SSG hospital for treatment.

Building collapses are common in India as builders try to cut corners by using substandard materials, and as multistorey structures are built with inadequate supervision.

Wednesday 28 August 2013

http://www.hindustantimes.com/India-news/gujarat/6-killed-in-Vadodara-buildings-collapse-over-24-still-trapped/Article1-1113955.aspx

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/aug/28/indian-building-collapse-dead-trapped

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BAHID Conference - Call for Papers

We are pleased to announce that the next conference of the British Association for Human Identification (BAHID) will take place on Saturday 30 November & Sunday 1 December at Chancellors Hotel and Conference Centre in Manchester (UK). The usual 'welcome reception' will take place on Friday evening 29 November. The theme of the conference will be centered around ‘Preparing for Disasters’ with invited talks from forensic experts and disaster planners. The British Association for Human Identification (BAFA) will hold a meeting and workshop(s) on Sunday 1 December.

Submissions of oral papers and poster presentations from all disciplines relating to human identification and disaster planning are invited. We particularly encourage presentations of student research dissertations. BAHID will award £500 in prize money for the best student presentation(s) and £100 for the best student poster. Please submit an abstract of no more than 250 words to bahid73@yahoo.co.uk.

Your submission should include details of all contributing authors, their professional or institutional affiliations, and email contact details of the corresponding or presenting author. Please indicate whether this will be an oral presentation or a poster presentation. Student presenters should indicate their eligibility. After assessment of all the abstracts by the BAHID Conference/Scientific Committee you will be notified if your submission has been successful.

Final date for abstract submissions: 30 September 2013

If you have any questions, please contact j.bikker@dundee.ac.uk (BAHID Membership Secretary) or info@bahid.org

Wednesday 28 August 2013

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In Mexico, families fight red tape to find the missing


When 12 young bar goers vanished in the heart of Mexico City three months ago, their relatives rushed to hospitals and police stations desperately searching for missing loved ones.

Frustrated with the investigation's slow progress, the families blocked streets in protest, won meetings with the city's attorney general and barged into his press conferences when they felt they were being neglected.

On Tuesday, a Mexican official said 12 of 13 bodies found in a mass grave outside the capital last week were identified as the kidnap victims, but the relatives asked independent Argentine forensic experts to confirm it.

The mass abduction has cast a spotlight on Mexico's struggle to solve thousands of disappearances and the efforts families have to undertake themselves in the face of all-too-often uncooperative officials or shoddy police work.

"Authorities make an effort to investigate in those cases where families make enough noise that the cost for authorities of negligence is too high to ignore," Nik Steinberg, a Human Rights Watch researcher who wrote a report on Mexico's disappeared, told AFP.

"If the families don't exert public pressure in cases of disappearances, they have little hope of investigations even being opened."

The Heaven bar case is Mexico's most high-profile mass kidnapping since President Enrique Pena Nieto took office in December, vowing to reduce the abductions and murders linked to drug cartels that vexed his predecessor.

"The Heaven case is emblematic because it shows that Mexico is still unable to respond to disappearances committed by organized crime," said Pilar Tavera, director of Propuesta Civica, a civil society group.

In an effort to crack cases, the federal attorney general's office said Monday it would offer rewards for tips that help them find missing people.

The agency has created a special unit of 12 prosecutors to investigate disappearances. They face a database of 26,000 people who vanished between 2006-2012, but officials say the figure is likely lower because many left home willingly.

The unit's creation is a positive step, Steinberg said, but "Pena Nieto needs to do much more given how widespread the problem is and given the inadequate response of police up to now."

When they do investigate, authorities often fail to carry out "the most basic steps" like visiting morgues or interviewing witnesses, he said, while Tavera said victims are often painted as criminals.

Countless Mexican families have had to conduct their own police work and track down witnesses at great risk to their own lives, or pressure authorities with protests.

What's surprising is that this happened in Mexico City, considered largely immune from the disappearances and killings plaguing states terrorized by drug cartels.

"If we didn't make a lot of noise, nothing would have happened and (the missing) would have just become statistics," said Eugenia Ponce, aunt of 16-year-old Jerzy Ortiz, one of the 12 who were snatched in broad daylight on May 26.

Ponce had gone to a police station to look for her nephew, only to be told to look elsewhere. The "Amber Alert" system, which immediately triggers searches of missing minors, was never activated for Ortiz.

They were told they had to wait the customary 72 hours to file missing person reports. It took two weeks for prosecutors to call it a kidnapping after security camera footage showed a group of men bundling the victims into cars.

Mexico City Attorney General Rodolfo Rios defended his agency Monday, saying it detained seven suspects and would keep working until all those responsible are caught.

He said the kidnapping was payback for the killing of a drug dealer in a dispute between two gangs, but relatives deny the 12 were involved in crime.

Maria Guadalupe Fernandez, a member of the United Forces for Our Disappeared in the northern state of Coahuila whose son disappeared in 2009, said the Heaven case ended tragically but that at least parents will have closure.

"This case can be a paradigm for investigations. It took three months, but they found them," she said. "The (Heaven) parents will get their children. But our grief just goes on and on, in limbo."

Wednesday 28 August 2013

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/afp/130827/mexico-families-fight-red-tape-find-the-missing

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Japan: Six more police forces to receive DNA-testing gear


The National Police Agency will deploy automated DNA-profiling equipment to six more prefectural departments by next March to speed up criminal investigations and the identification of bodies recovered from disasters, police sources said Tuesday.

As a result, 11 prefectural forces will have the equipment, which is capable of testing about 80 samples at the same time. Using conventional methods, experts need to test samples manually — a method that is too slow to respond to requests from investigators.

Objective evidence such as DNA test results has come to play an important role in criminal trials, the sources said.

In 2012, the police submitted some 270,000 samples for DNA-profiling tests, a more than tenfold increase from 2005.

The NPA received ¥940 million in the fiscal 2012 supplementary budget to deploy the equipment in the Kanagawa, Aichi, Hyogo, Miyagi, Ishikawa and Hiroshima prefectural police departments.

Wednesday 28 August 2013

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2013/08/27/national/six-more-police-forces-to-receive-dna-testing-gear/

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