Thursday, 27 February 2014

Corpses still being found after Haiyan


Four months after Super Typhoon Haiyan hit the Philippines, bodies are still being found, though the government hasn't updated the death toll of 6201.

Bodies are still being found under the wreckage almost four months after Super Typhoon Haiyan ravaged the Philippines as survivors struggle to rebuild their lives.

The government's confirmed death toll of 6201 has not been updated for a month, as officials investigate whether the recently-discovered corpses are among the 1,785 listed as missing.

UN undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs Valerie Amos recounted the shock of discovering the dead during a visit on Wednesday to the devastated central city of Tacloban.

"As the debris is cleared, they are finding more dead bodies. We experienced that for ourselves," she told reporters.

Amos visited Tacloban to inspect the progress of the UN-aided rehabilitation effort and check on the condition of survivors of one of the strongest typhoons ever to hit land.

The government's National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council confirmed bodies are still being found.

"Sometimes they find two or three a day, then there are days where they find none," its spokesman Reynaldo Balido told AFP.

The latest casualty figures were a month old and did not reflect any subsequent corpse retrievals as the authorities work to reconcile the numbers, he added.

Balido said residents have learnt to adapt to the sight of newly found corpses.

Haiyan raked across the central Philippines on November 8 last year, wrecking 1.1 million houses and displacing more than four million residents of some of the country's poorest provinces according to the UN.

The worst damage was inflicted by huge tsunami-like surges of seawater into Tacloban and other coastal communities.

Thursday 27 February 2014

http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/2014/02/27/corpses-still-being-found-after-haiyan

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2 missing Indian navy officers found dead inside naval submarine


The Indian navy rescued sailors from one of its Russian-built Kilo class submarines following an accident off the coast of Mumbai, a mishap that brought back memories of fire and explosions aboard a similar boat in August that killed 18 men and left no survivors.

Seven of the crew were airlifted and treated for smoke inhalation on the INS Sindhuratna, which was inducted into the Indian Navy in 1988, Rahul Sinha, a Mumbai-based spokesman for the nation’s navy, said in a telephone interview. Two sailors were missing, Associated Press reported, citing D.K. Sharma, another spokesman.

The nation’s naval ships in the area were coordinating the rescue mission as efforts were on to locate the missing men, Sinha said.

Rescuers found the bodies of two Indian navy officers inside a naval submarine on Thursday, one day after the men went missing following an accident aboard the vessel, an official said.

Seven sailors were overcome by smoke on Wednesday during a training exercise in the submarine off Mumbai’s coast, but two officers were unaccounted for following the incident.

Rescuers who boarded the submarine after it reached port Thursday found the officers’ bodies, a Defence Ministry official said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to reporters. He did not give any further details.

The seven sailors who were overcome by smoke were in stable condition at a Mumbai hospital, said Capt. D.K. Sharma, a navy spokesman.

Sharma said investigators were investigating what caused the smoke.

India’s navy has a fleet of 16 submarines, including 10 diesel-electric Kilo class vessels. They have a maximum diving depth of 300 meters (984 feet), a top speed of 18 knots and are able to operate for 45 days with a crew of 53 people, according to the navy’s website.

There have been several accidents aboard Russian-made submarines in the past 15 years. Twenty Russians died on a vessel when a faulty firefighting system was accidentally activated during trials in the Sea of Japan in 2008. The Kursk sank in August 2000 after an onboard explosion in the Barents Sea, killing all 118 on board.

In December, the INS Talwar, a Russian-built stealth frigate, slammed into a trawler off India’s west coast, sinking the boat and tossing 27 fishermen into the sea. All of the fishermen were rescued.

Another navy frigate ran aground near the Mumbai naval base in January, damaging some equipment. And earlier this month, the INS Airavat, an amphibious warfare vessel, ran aground and its commanding officer was stripped of his duties, the Press Trust of India news agency said.

In a Mumbai dockyard early on Aug. 14, explosions and fire inside the INS Sindhurakshak caused temperature to soar high enough to melt steel, jamming doors and hatches and twisting ladders. That was the worst submarine accident in the country’s history and the biggest setback for the navy since the loss of a warship in 1971 during a conflict with Pakistan.

Thursday 27 February 2014

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-02-26/india-sub-crew-burned-beyond-recognition-3-bodies-found.html

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