Showing posts with label Repatriation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Repatriation. Show all posts

Thursday, 24 September 2015

American Legion raises money to assist recovery of MIAs


Past District Commander Philip Baker the POW/MIA Chairman for the Department of Missouri and Post Vice Commander, along with members of Post 281 raised awareness of the 37 Missouri MIA's still remaining in Vietnam. “They all deserve to be brought home and the Piedmont American Legion will continue to work towards that goal,” concluded Cmdr.

Baker at a recent helmet drive conducted on Saturday, to help in the recovery efforts of MIA's in the Viet Nam theatre. With the Republic of Vietnam improvement of efforts in the recovery of bodies of U.S. soldiers missing in action they wanted to assure that U.S. teams be funded. The downside to this is the U.S. Government had yet to come up with resources to properly fund the repatriation of those remains still remaining in the Vietnam theater of operations.

The official POW/MIA recognition day is always the third Friday in September. Legion members worked in shifts to participate in the helmet drive that was held at the stop light in the center of town. Thanks to the generous community that was receptive to their impassioned plea they raised in one day over $2,222 which will be forwarded on to assist in recovering remains of MIA's in Vietnam. Last year they raised in two days over $4,600.00 and their efforts led to the recovery of one of our 38 Missouri MIA's earlier this year by the returning of the remains of a Missouri soldier killed more than four decades ago when his Army helicopter crashed in Cambodia during the Vietnam war. The remains of Rodney Griffin arrived April 23rd at St. Louis Lambert International Airport. Patriot Guard motorcyclists led the hearse to Griffin's native mid-Missouri home in Centralia, Mo.

Thursday 24 September 2015

http://www.waynecojournalbanner.com/news/city/article_65223b3c-6203-11e5-a650-d3fb0e9255ff.html

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Friday, 5 June 2015

Burials from Germanwings flight are delayed by paperwork errors


More than two months after a Germanwings co-pilot deliberately crashed his airliner into the French Alps, the families of the 150 people who perished in the disaster had, at long last, been preparing to put their loved ones to rest.

They had already endured weeks of anguish as French gendarmes recovered human remains from among the blackened wreckage scattered across a mountainside and still more as forensic experts then painstakingly isolated the DNA of all who had been aboard the doomed March 24 flight en route from Barcelona, Spain, to Düsseldorf, Germany.

Funeral announcements had been sent. Travel arrangements had been made. In Germany, home to 72 of the dead, preparations were in the final stages for a ceremony at Düsseldorf Airport as early as Tuesday to receive the coffins as they arrived on a dedicated cargo flight from Marseille, France. Police escorts had been ordered to accompany the hearses home.

So it was no small shock when relatives in 17 countries received an email from Lufthansa on Wednesday informing them that the plans had been upended by a bureaucratic mistake in France. The return of the remains, the families were told, had been “temporarily interrupted” for an indeterminate period because of unspecified “new official instructions,” a development that dumbfounded and infuriated relatives who had until now largely maintained a stoic public silence.

On Thursday, the families of 16 10th graders and two teachers from a high school in the German town of Haltern am See, in North Rhine-Westphalia, published a statement directing their “rage and despair” squarely at Lufthansa, the parent of Germanwings and the main interlocutor for the families since the crash.

“All this tore away loved ones from families,” the statement read. “Must more agony really be added to this pain?”

According to airline and government officials, the delay was linked to the discovery early this week of errors in the information entered into the victims’ death certificates, which rendered them invalid. According to one French official, certain details, including birth dates, were incorrectly transcribed or translated into French from their original language on more than a dozen documents.

Lufthansa and Germanwings on Thursday expressed their dismay over the delays and vowed to move forward with preparations for the repatriation while the families waited for new documents. But it remains unclear when the return of the remains can be rescheduled.

“When we have a fixed date, we will communicate this to the families,” said Heinz Joachim Schöttes, a spokesman for Germanwings. “We are working hard to be able to have this as soon as possible.”

The death certificates had all been signed by Bernard Bartolini, the mayor of the alpine village Prads-Haute-Bléone near the crash site, who along with the mayors of two neighboring villages had been awarded medals from King Felipe VI of Spain on Tuesday during a state visit for their “exemplary” handling of the crash’s aftermath.

Mr. Bartolini acknowledged to a German news agency on Thursday that the documents contained typographical and spelling errors, though he indicated that the number of cases was in the low single digits.

The delay set off a broader outpouring of anger by some of the families over the circumstances of the crash and questions about whether the airline could have done more to monitor the mental health of the 27-year-old co-pilot, Andreas Lubitz, and to maintain safeguards against the suicidal intentions of a single crew member.

“Not only because Lufthansa allowed a depressed pilot to fly,” the families from Haltern am See said in a statement, explaining their frustration. “Not only because Lufthansa failed to monitor the depression through its medical controls. Not only because Lufthansa, unlike many other international airlines, was too proud” to adopt rules requiring two people in the cockpit at all times.

The new bureaucratic setback comes as prosecutors in Germany are continuing their investigations into Mr. Lubitz’s medical history and whether the nature and severity of his psychological troubles were understood by the doctors — including flight doctors employed by Lufthansa — who had seen him in the months before the crash.

Separately, prosecutors in France are moving toward a criminal investigation. They are expected in the coming days to formally appoint an investigative magistrate, who will be charged with determining whether there are grounds to pursue Lufthansa or any of its employees for criminal negligence. Legal experts said that investigation, which is similar to a grand jury proceeding in the United States, could take years.

Since the crash, Lufthansa has begun a thorough review of its pilot selection and monitoring procedures. Meanwhile, a German task force involving airlines, regulators, aircraft manufacturers, pilots, psychologists and other experts has been studying the circumstances that enabled Mr. Lubitz to deliberately crash his plane and how to minimize the risk of such disasters in the future.

Similar working groups have been established over the past month by European Union regulators and by the United States Federal Aviation Administration.

The German task force is expected to publish an initial report this summer, which could include some initial recommendations for changes to cockpit door-locking mechanisms or enhanced psychological monitoring of pilots.

Carsten Spohr, the chief executive of Lufthansa, recently proposed that regulators consider introducing random blood tests of pilots to screen for the presence of medications that can be prescribed for certain psychological conditions.

But many airline and pilot groups remain wary of any rush to introduce new rules which might have unforeseen consequences for air safety.

“All pilots are aware that at least you must take a look into all the details to find a way to reduce the likelihood of this happening again,” said Markus Wahl, a spokesman for Germany’s largest pilots’ union, Vereinigung Cockpit. He stopped short of rejecting the idea of testing for antidepressants or other drugs, but he cautioned that “whatever measures are considered must be checked against the chance that this drives sick pilots underground.”

Even if national authorities do manage to eventually agree on new measures, regulators said it could still be years before such steps could be adopted by the international aviation bodies charged with setting global safety standards.

For the families of the Germanwings victims, however, the answers to these larger questions can wait.

At the cemetery in Haltern am See, the city is planting a memorial garden with 18 trees, arranged in a classroom formation, to honor the dead from the town’s Joseph-König-Gymnasium high school. As spring turns to summer, bereaved friends and relatives hold out hope that their loved ones can soon be laid to rest in their shade.

“They want to have their children back,” said Ulrich Wessel, the school’s principal. “And to bury them in their home soil.”

Friday 5 June 2015

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/05/world/europe/families-of-germanwings-victims-lash-out-as-return-of-remains-is-delayed.html?_r=0

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Thursday, 28 May 2015

Lufthansa begins repatriation of victims of Germanwings disaster


The bodies of victims of the Germanwings flight that crashed into the Alps in March of this year are now being repatriated to their home towns. Lufthansa, the parent company of the Cologne airline, has been contacting relatives over the last week, and asking relatives where they wish the remains to be sent.

It took a commission until May 15 to identify the 150 victims and authorities have warned that, unfortunately, there is very little biological material to give families, as the plane and all its occupants were destroyed beyond recognition.

The morning of March 24 saw around 50 Spaniards board the Barcelona-Düsseldorf flight. Spanish relatives of 45 passengers are believed to be reaching an out of court settlement on compensation with the company.

Thursday 28 May 2015

http://www.euroweeklynews.com/3.0.15/news/on-euro-weekly-news/spain-news-in-english/129126-lufthansa-begins-repatriation-of-victims-of-germanwings-disaster

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Tuesday, 3 February 2015

Synagogue building collapse: S.Africa to repatriate last of Nigerian church victims


South Africa said Monday it will this week bring back the remaining bodies of its nationals killed in the Nigerian Synagogue Church guesthouse collapse four months ago.

Minister in the presidency Jeff Radebe told reporters that a South African airforce C130 aircraft would be dispatched to Lagos Monday “to bring the mortal remains of those that have been positively identified.”

Of the 81 bodies, 70 were repatriated in November, two months after a multi-storey building collapsed at the Lagos church of the influential Nigerian preacher TB Joshua.

The outstanding 11 were still undergoing DNA identification.

“Our repatriation team is departing this afternoon for Lagos,” said Radebe, and “when they land, we will know precisely how many South Africans will be repatriated.”

Nigerian authorities have been driving the testing and verification process.

A delayed rescue operation, “climatic conditions” and the sheer number of victims that had to be identified were responsible for the prolonged wait for the bodies, said Radebe.

The disaster killed 116 people in all, including Nigerians and other foreign nationals.

Tuesday 3 January 2015

http://thenewsnigeria.com.ng/2015/02/02/synagogue-building-collapse-south-africa-takes-home-final-11-bodies/

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Monday, 14 April 2014

S. Korea repatriates body of sailor to N. Korea


South Korea handed over to North Korea the body of a man found dead off South Korea's southern coast where a Mongolian cargo ship carrying North Korean sailors sank earlier this month, an official said Monday.

The repatriation took place at the border village of Panmunjom inside a military buffer zone that separates the two Koreas, according to the government official.

The move came three days after North Korea confirmed the man's identity. On Friday, South Korea asked North Korea to help identify the man by sending photos of the body through a dialogue channel at Panmunjom.

South Korea also informed the North on Friday that it had ended the operation to search for 10 other sailors who remained missing.

The 4,300-ton ship went down in rough seas 76 kilometers off South Korea's southern port city of Yeosu on April 4 on its way to Shanghai, China, from the north's eastern port city of Cheongjin with a cargo of 6,500 steel products.

Of the ship's 16 crew members, all North Koreans, two were found dead and three were rescued soon after the accident, the South Korean Coast Guard said.

On April 6, South Korea repatriated the three surviving North Korean sailors to their homeland along with the bodies of two others who died.

Monday 14 April 2014

http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/national/2014/04/14/7/0301000000AEN20140414003900315F.html

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Sunday, 6 April 2014

South Korea returns 3 DPRK sailors, 2 bodies after cargo ship sinking


South Korea returned three sailors of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) rescued two days ago in its waters along with two bodies, Seoul's Unification Ministry said Sunday.

The Mongolia-flagged cargo ship Grand Fortune 1 sank in open waters off South Korea's southern coastal city of Yeosu at dawn on Friday, with three crew members rescued, two bodies found and 11 others remained missing.

The Unification Ministry said in a statement that the South side handed over the three rescued DPRK sailors and the two bodies to the North at 2:05 p.m. Sunday local time through the border village of Panmunjeom.

The move came after Pyongyang asked for the repatriation of the rescued sailors and the bodies of the dead via Panmunjeom.

Pyongyang on Saturday urged the parties concerned to rescue its sunken cargo ship and help survivors return home at an early date "from the humanitarian point of view," the DPRK's official KCNA news agency reported.

South Korea dispatched boats and aircraft to the scene for the third straight day Sunday to search the missing crew, but bad weather has hampered search and rescue operations.

The 4,300-ton cargo ship, which ran aground at around 1:19 a.m. on Friday, was heading to China from the DPRK city of Chongjin, carrying heavy oil and steel products.

Sunday 06 April 2014

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/world/2014-04/06/c_133242518.htm

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Friday, 21 December 2012

Update: Dakota bodies arrive in Pretoria


The Air Force on Wednesday started returning the remains of the 11 Dakota plane crash victims to their families.

A C-130 cargo plane arrived at Waterkloof Air Force Base in Pretoria where a return of mortal remains ceremony was conducted.

The Dakota plane went down in poor weather in the Drakensberg two weeks ago, killing all crew and passengers on board.

Brigadier General Piet Burger said of the 11 bodies, one was left in Durban.

Another body will be taken to Bloemfontein and the remains of three others will be sent to Cape Town.

Friday 21 December 2012

http://ewn.co.za/2012/12/19/Dakota-remains-not-arrived-yet

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Saturday, 3 November 2012

Remains of Pinoy truck driver in Riyadh explosion may be repatriated next month

Philippine Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Ezzedin Tago said the remains of the Filipino truck driver who was killed in a fuel tanker explosion in Riyadh may be repatriated to the Philippines in four to five weeks.

In an interview over GMA Network’s “News To Go” program on Friday, Tago said the family of the victim — Florentino Santiago — has been informed about the procedure for repatriating his remains.

“Hindi po kami ang unang nagbigay ng impormasyon [sa kanyang pamilya] kung ‘di yung kamag-anak niya rin dito at yung mga kasamahan niya sa trabaho,” Tago said.

He explained that the documents needed for the repatriation, which usually takes four to five weeks to be processed, are:

Police reports

Report of death

Morgue report, and

Approval of the Office of the Emir

Tago also said the next of kin in the PHL must fill-up an affidavit of acceptance of remains.

“This could be done at the DFA-Office of the Undersecretary for Migrant and Workers Affairs or in regional consular offices,” he said.

Meanwhile, in a text message to GMA News Online, Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) spokesperson Raul Hernandez, said Santiago ”was positively identified by his brother in law. His remains is now in Riyadh Central Mortuary at Shumeisy Hospital.” Hernandez also said Santiago was “just in the area when the explosion occured.”

Massive explosion

A report of the Reuters news agency said at least 23 people were killed when a fuel truck crashed into a flyover in the Saudi capital Riyadh on Thursday, triggering an explosion that brought down an industrial building and set fire to nearby vehicles. State-owned Ekhbariya television news channel reported on that the death toll had risen to 23 and emergency workers were still searching the collapsed building for more victims or survivors. Health ministry spokesman Saad al-Qahtani said 135 people were injured, mostly men and including some foreigners.

Although the incident took place near the headquarters of the Saudi Arabian National Guard and the Prince Nayef Arab University for Security Studies, officials speaking on state television said it was an accident.

Neither the guards’ complex nor the security university appeared to be damaged in the blast, which flattened a showroom for tractors, bulldozers and other industrial vehicles as well as damaging a busy flyover.

US ally Saudi Arabia is seen as a prime target for the al Qaeda branch based in neighbouring Yemen but the last successful attack inside the conservative Islamic kingdom was in 2006. Riyadh has cracked down on Islamist militants over the past decade, detaining thousands of suspects.

The civil defense department said a gas tanker had hit the Khureis Road flyover in eastern Riyadh, causing a gas leak and an explosion in the Zahid Tractor company’s showroom and warehouse, according to the state news agency SPA.

“The truck driver was surprised by a road accident on its route, causing it to crash into one of the pillars of the bridge,” spokesman Captain Mohamed Hubail Hammadi said.

Driver blamed

The civil defense chief, Saed al-Tweijri, said the fire had been brought under control. He blamed the tanker driver for the accident.

The warehouse, several storeys high, was levelled by the blast, which also caused severe damage to neighbouring buildings. Rubble, twisted metal and shattered glass littered a wide stretch of the surrounding area.

“I was inside the building when the blast came. Then boom, the building collapsed. Furniture, chairs and cabinets blasted into the room I was in,” said survivor Kushnoo Akhtar, a 55-year-old Pakistani worker, who was covered in dirt and bleeding from multiple cuts on his face and hands.

“My brother is still inside under the rubble. There are lots of people in there,” he said.

The blast at around 7:20 a.m. local time occurred on one of the capital’s busiest roads but because Saudi Arabia is still observing the Eid al-Adha holiday, traffic was lighter than normal.

An hour after the explosion, fires still raged in cars and trucks nearby and a column of black smoke billowed over the area.

By Thursday evening state television was still showing a large emergency operation at the site as workers picked through the flattened building with the aid of digging machinery.

Dozens of burnt-out vehicles surrounded the scene of the blast, including a small bus and other cars on top of the flyover, which was left buckled by the explosion.

Television footage and pictures posted on social media showed a body lying beside smoking vehicles and at least two charred bodies seated in a car. Another blackened corpse was visible in the remains of a truck.

More than 100 emergency personnel were combing through the wreckage on the flyover and searching for victims in the rubble of the building, one of two Riyadh outlets listed on the website of Zahid Tractor, a distributor of heavy machinery.

Saturday 3 novemebr 2012

http://pinoyoverseas.net/news/saudi-arabia/remains-of-pinoy-truck-driver-in-riyadh-explosion-may-be-repatriated-next-month.html

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Sunday, 30 September 2012

Bodies of French climbers killed in Nepal reached Paris

The bodies of four French climbers who were killed in an avalanche on Manaslu peak in Nepal nearly a week ago reached in Paris on Saturday, sources at Charles de Gaulle airport said.

The four — two guides and two clients — were among eight people killed after an avalanche swept through their camp on the side of the 8,156-metre (26,759-foot) Himalayan mountain early last Sunday, just hours before the alpinists were to make an attempt to reach the peak’s summit.

The other dead included a Spaniard, a German, an Italian and a Nepali guide. Three climbers, two Frenchmen and a Canadian, remain missing and presumed dead following the deadly slide.

A memorial ceremony for the dead is due to be held on Tuesday in Chamonix, the French Alpine village that is considered the birthplace of European alpinism and the home of most of the French climbers killed

Sunday 30 September 2012

http://www.nepalmountainnews.com/cms/2012/09/30/bodies-of-french-climbers-killed-in-nepal-arrive-in-paris/

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Saturday, 11 August 2012

Dana plane crash: Families bury human parts

Some families have been burying just body parts of the victims because of the fatality of the plane crash that made some victims lose several parts of their bodies in the accident.That explains why most of the victims’ corpses are not laid in state before burial because what is inside the coffin is just dismembered body, a human leg, head, hand or other parts of the body.

However, Chief Medical Director (CMD) of Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), Prof. David Wale Oke, said that it is far better than mass burial and it is what is practised in advanced countries when such fatal accidents happen.

He told Saturday Sun exclusively that the handling of the victims of Dana plane crash would be compiled into a report and presented in an international forum to show Nigeria’s advancement in managing such crises like plane crash.

He also said that in a meeting between Lagos State government and the victims’ families, it was agreed that the victims be buried separately as against mass burial, which is outdated in modern societies. He recalled a mass burial of victims of a plane crash done at Ejigbo, a suburb of Lagos State, where some relations of the crash victims can not visit easily because of distance. He commended Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola for taking the bold step to carry out the forensic analyses of the victims to ensure that each family buries its dead and that each victim has a personal grave side.

Prof. Oke noted that the antecedent set by Lagos State in handling the Dana plane crash victims will serve as a pathfinder in case of future occurrences in the country. “This is because the experts that handled the Dana Plane crash victims are here in LASUTH, are Nigerians and with the experience they have gathered, can handle similar accidents if called upon.” LASUTH CMD further explained that the delay in collection of the bodies of the Dana plane crash is partly because some families have the next-of-kin of the victims outside the country.

He also officially apologised on behalf of the hospital for the beating of a journalist, Mr. Benedict Uwalaka at LASUTH mortuary on Thursday. Normal corpses claim processes are ongoing as the relatives turn out in their numbers to finish the process of getting their corpses released after which they would place them back in the morgue to pick them at their convenience. Meanwhile, the journalist has been discharged from LASUTH and gone home, while he was advised to come for regular check-up because of the injuries he sustained.

Saturday 11 August 2012

http://sunnewsonline.com/new/national/dana-plane-crash-families-bury-human-parts/

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Friday, 10 August 2012

Lagos begins release of bodies of Dana crash victims today

THE Lagos State government will this morning start the release of 132 bodies of Dana plane crash victims.

The charred bodies are to be given in batches and in alphabetical order from today till Saturday to the families. The identities of the bodies scheduled for release have been pasted at the information centre of the Dana Air Crises Centre at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, (LASUTH), Ikeja.

Families and friends of the victims and representatives of the state government at a meeting yesterday in LASUTH heard that 132 bodies had been fully identified through their DNA samples tested abroad while 16 others have not.

The Commissioner for Health, Dr. Jide Idris, told The Guardian that the bodies would be released in batches to reduce chaos, “as there are other documents that they are going to fill for legal reasons.”

“These include the issue of next of kin, who authorises releases and the processes of release. We are releasing another 132 bodies now that are fully identified,” Idris said.

Members of the 200 families and friends that attended the meeting were still in mourning mood. Some of them expressed displeasure against state officials, whom they blamed for keeping bodies of the deceased for more than two months after the disaster.

Following the June 3, 2012 plane crash in Iju, Lagos, about 45 bodies were identifiable, 97 burnt beyond recognition and six bags containing body parts were gathered, requiring DNA test overseas.

On why some of the 45 identifiable bodies would not be released, Idris said it was to ensure that they were given to the right families. He noted that there were cases where two families had come forward for the same body.

“Some of the identifiable bodies were wrongly tagged at the crash site, while some tags fell off in the course of taking them to the morgue. So, what we are doing is to reduce the pains that the bereaved families are going through. We gain nothing by keeping the bodies,” he said.

Pathologist and Chief Examiner in the inquest, Prof. John Obafunwa, said the DNA test recorded 88 per cent success rate and the process is still continuing to identify the remaining 16 bodies.

The state government also disclosed that arrangement for the bodies of foreigners on-board the ill-fated plane, would be worked with the relevant embassies.

Information from the Ministry of Justice showed that processes for the issuance of death certificates would begin on Monday. Meanwhile, an Assistant General Manager of Airports Rescue and Fire Fighting Services, Mr. John Ekpe, at the ongoing hearing of Coroner Inquest into the crash, told the court yesterday that they could not access the actual site of the incident immediately because of the crowd.

Ekpe told Magistrate Oyetade Komolafe they had an emergency plan and disaster emergency team but the search and rescue functions outside the airport falls on the National Emergency Agency.

In his testimony before the court, he said the rescue team was at the crash site with two fire trucks and a water tanker before any other agency, but could not access the actual site of the incident because of the crowd.

Another witness, Sanni Enessi, the Chief Fire Fighter Station Commander of the airport, said the Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria has a checklist of agencies it calls for emergency plan.

The inquest continues tomorrow with Federal Road Safety Commission, Total Oil, Forte Oil and two other witnesses for appearance.

Friday 10 August

http://ngrguardiannews.com/index.php?option=com_content&id=95013%3Alagos-begins-release-of-bodies-of-dana-crash-victims-today&Itemid=559

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