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Wednesday, 9 October 2013

Matale Mass grave findings to China for Carbon dating


Samples of human skeletal remains unearthed from a Matale mass grave would be handed over to the Criminal Investigation Department to be sent to laboratories at the Institute of Archaeology, Beijing, China for radiocarbon dating, Judicial Medical Officer of the Kurunegala Teaching Hospital Dr. Ajith Jayasena said yesterday.

Dr. Jayasena, who participated in the exhumation of skeletal remains, said that the bones had been dated preliminarily to the 1986-90 period by a team of local experts led by Prof. Raj Somadeva of the Postgraduate Institute of Archaeological Research. The samples of human bones would be sent to Beijing for international level confirmation so that they would be tested using sophisticated radiocarbon dating systems. The second verification had been permitted by the Courts.

Dr. Jayasena said that teeth found along with human skeletal remains were being studied at the Forensic Medicine Institute in Colombo and the report was due within the next six days. The report is expected to be submitted to the Matale Magistrate’s Court on Nov. 04.

The first signs of the mass grave were noticed when a group of labourers dug up a section of the Matale Hospital grounds on Nov. 26, 2012, to construct a bio gas unit. Subsequent excavations led to the discover of skeletal remains belonging to 155 persons besides metal rings, coins and some pieces of charcoal. Relatives and family members of those who went missing during the JVP’s second armed struggle in 1987/89 period have so far submitted 64 affidavits to the Matale Magistrate’s Court.

Wednesday 9 October 2013

http://globaltamilnews.net/GTMNEditorial/tabid/71/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/97439/language/en-US/article.aspx

7 bodies found in charred ruins of Bangladesh factory


Rescue workers recovered seven bodies Wednesday from the charred ruins of a garment factory on the outskirts of Bangladesh's capital after firefighters brought the massive blaze under control, police said.

Revising an earlier death toll which put the number of dead at nine, local police chief Amir Hossain said most of the victims had been so badly burned that they could not be identified.

"The death toll is seven. Previously we over counted the toll," Hossain told AFP at the scene of the fire in Sripur which broke out on Tuesday evening.

"Two bodies have been identified and handed over to their relatives. Five other bodies were charred beyond recognition," he added.

Hossain said that the fire was now "under control" although parts of the two-storey building were still smouldering.

The fire is the latest in a string of deadly disasters in Bangladeshi garment factories.

A total of 1,129 were killed in April when a garment factory complex collapsed in the nation's worst industrial disaster.

A fire at the Tazreen garment factory in Dhaka killed 111 workers in November last year.

Wednesday 9 October 2013

http://www.emirates247.com/news/7-bodies-found-in-charred-ruins-of-bangladesh-factory-2013-10-09-1.524020