Tuesday, 1 January 2013

Dana crash: 141 bodies released, says LASUTH CMD


About 141 out of 153 bodies of victims of June 3 Dana air crash at Iju-Ishaga, Lagos have so far been released, the Chief Medical Director (CMD), Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), Prof Wale Oke, has said.

He said they were released last Wednesday after DNA test, leaving nine other bodies unclaimed. One hundred and fifty of the bodies were deposited at LASUTH’s morgue.

Oke said the hospital has also issued death certificates to 89 families.

As at August 8, last year, 107 bodies had been released by the hospital.

He said statistics showed that the hospital recorded 94 per cent success handling the crash fall-out, praising Governor Babatunde Fashola for making this possible.

The governor, he said, ensured that the accident was better managed than others in the past before the victims were buried.

“The governor expressed satisfaction with the management of the accident that he sought the decision of the families on the next step since the body identification and DNA have been completed, and assured them that the state was ready to have a cenotaph at the site of the accident in honour of the deceased, if the families gave their approval,” he said.

On state of the teaching hospital, Oke said its Maternal Centre known as Ayinke House is still under reconstruction, adding that it would be opened to the public by the end of May.

“Also, the laboratory is being refurbished and it will be equipped with polymerase chain reaction (PCR), which is a DNA copying machine, among other pressing diagnostic equipment,” he added.

Oke said the hospital is operating a-three level care of health care – primary, secondary and tertiary at the same time, adding that it was established to perform research, training and clinical services.

But because it was a general hospital before its upgrade, patients still come for treatment even for the slightest headache, Oke added.

He said the hospital’s oxygen plant, which started operation of recent, has been supplying LASUTH and other hospitals in the oxygen, which he put at 98 per cent purity.

Tuesday 1 January 2013

http://thenationonlineng.net/new/health/dana-crash-141-bodies-released-says-lasuth-cmd/

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4 drown in Chandpur boat capsize


At least four people drowned and two went missing after a sand-laden boat capsized the river Meghna in Chandpur on Tuesday.

Police said four bodies were found at the boat after the divers salvaged it around 8:30pm after a hectic effort.

Three of the deceased aged between 15 and 20 were named as Zia, Shohag and Biddut, reports our Chandpur correspondent.

Mahbub Morshed, officer in-charge of Chandpur Model Police Station, confirmed the incident, told The Daily Star they were yet to trace the two others.

Asadullah, one of the a passengers of the boat, said the six people went missing after the boat APS-2 sank in the river with 50 passengers on board after hitting a jetty at Harina Ferry Terminal due to poor visibility caused by dense fog.

The other passengers swam ashore, he said.

The boat was heading for Dhaka from Shariatpur.

At least 10 passengers who swam to safety were injured during the incident.

Of them, Abdul Kuddus, 35, and Ratan, 28, were admitted to Chandpur Sadar Hospital in critical conditions.

Ferry services on Chandpur-Shariatpur remain suspended following the incident.

Tuesday 1 January 2013

http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/latest_news.php?nid=43612

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Oregon tour bus crash: Authorities struggle to identify foreign citizens involved


Berlyn Sanderson and Jaemin Seo, might easily have died in Sunday's crash of a charter bus that killed 9 people when it skidded off Interstate 84 east of Pendleton and rolled 200 feet down a mountain canyon.

Sanderson, 22, of Vancouver, B.C., and Seo, 23, of South Korea, were ejected as the bus rolled down the steep mountainside in Deadman Pass in the Blue Mountains.

"It was like one of those dreams that the world was coming to an end," recalled Sanderson, who needed 12 stitches to close a cut on her thigh, and suffered a lacerated ear.

"I'm OK, I'm alive," said Seo, a South Korean exchange student who was asleep when the bus hit a patch of ice, slammed into the median and a guard-rail and began rolling down the mountain. "Many people screamed, and I woke up."

It was the most terrifying awakening of his life, he said, and he remembers sailing through a broken bus window as if flying. He escaped with a broken right leg and a sprained right arm.

"I wanted to climb up to the road, but I couldn't walk," he said.

As survivors reflected on the weekend tragedy Monday, authorities continued to piece together the identities of the dead and the living, many of them foreign citizens. The effort was complicated because many passengers had been separated from their passports, survivors were taken to no fewer than 10 hospitals in three states and some spoke limited English.

Oregon State Police Lt. Gregg Hastings, at a news conference in Pendleton Monday said 39 people were taken to area hospitals for treatment. Ten were treated and released, and 29 remained hospitalized.

Hastings declined to disclose names of the nine passengers who died, pending positive identification and notification of families. All those who died were adults, a mix of men and women, he said.

The Korean consul in Vancouver, B.C., Choi Yeonghan, said three or four travel agencies were involved in organizing the trip.

Choi said all but three or four of the passengers on the bus were Koreans living in Canada or the United States. They were on a nine-day trip to Las Vegas, where they stayed for two days. The travelers stopped overnight near Boise before traveling through Oregon on their way back home.

The bus passengers ranged in age from 7-year-old Jimin Kim, to 73-year-old Yii Yeon Cho,. Many were exchange students from Korea, Taiwan and Japan. A total of 49 people were on board, Hastings said.

Word of the crash reached authorities around 10:09 a.m. Sunday.

The passengers describe a level of chaos they'd never before experienced, and were unprepared for.

"People screamed," said Seo, who admits, "I was very scared. Some mothers screamed to find their son or daughter. And they screamed to call 9-1-1 firefighters."

The 9-1-1 dispatch center in Pendleton received 12 calls in the moments after the crash, most from motorists passing by. But some were from bus passengers who spoke little English, said a spokeswoman for the Umatilla County 9-1-1 system.

Survivors told of people being pinned in their seats inside the broken charter bus, and the bodies of the dead lying in the snow after the vehicle came to rest on its wheels. The injured spoke of some passengers knocked unconscious and others with broken legs and arms. The survivors described being hit by rocks as the bus rolled down the rugged mountainside.

"So many dead people and injured people," mourned a Korean teen-ager, age 16. "I felt so scared."

Officials with the Red Cross, which was caring for the boy and other underage crash victims, asked that they not be named because their parents could not be reached to give permission.

Two Korean teens, ages 17 and 16, found humor in their own survival after being released from St. Anthony Hospital in Pendleton. Standing together in at the Convention Center shelter beside the Pendleton Round-Up rodeo grounds, they talked of their injuries.

The 17-year-old had a broken collarbone, and his arm was in a sling.

His 16-year-old friend had only minor injuries. "I'm fine," he said in broken English.

The 17-year-old, with a glimmer of a smile, looked at him and said, "It's unfair."

One passenger said he and others thought the driver was going too fast on the icy highway.

"I felt like he was going too fast," said Yoo Byung Woo, 25, a South Korean exchange student at Skagit Valley College in Mt. Vernon, Wash. "I worried about the bus."

Yoo said one of the riders was frightened and asked the guide if they could take another route.

No one could be reached for comment at Mi Joo Tour & Travel in Vancouver, B.C., which owns the bus.

Hastings, of the state police, said an investigation may not be completed for four weeks, possibly longer.

Tom Strandberg, spokesman for the Oregon Department of Transportation, said the accident happened on a straight stretch at the top of Cabbage Hill on Deadman Pass in the Blue Mountains. The pass gets its name from the Bannock War in 1878 when four teamsters and another man were killed by Native Americans.

Oregon State Police investigators will look into the possibily that bus driver Haeng Kyu Hwang, 54, of Vancouver, B.C., was driving too fast for the slippery conditions on the notorious mountain pass, Hastings said. Investigators also will determine if driver fatigue was a factor, he said.

The first rescue workers on the scene came from the Umatilla Indian Reservation, followed by Oregon State Police and Pendleton firefighters.

"We were somewhat overwhelmed," said Pendleton Fire Chief Gary Woodson. "It was certainly a challenging scene."

It was difficult getting rescuers down to the bus, and more difficult bringing the injured back up to Interstate 84, he said. Rescue workers, four to six at a time, carried the injured up the steep slope on backboards, and used rappelling lines and baskets to bring people up to ambulances, he said.

St. Anthony Hospital, meanwhile, went into a "Code D" for disaster mode, and called all available people in to help care for the injured, said Larry Blanc, hospital spokesman. It went surprisingly well, largely because the hospital staff practices regularly for such emergencies, he said.

Passengers who weren't badly hurt, pitched in.

"I saw many people crying and screaming, so I helped them," said Yoo, the passenger who thought the bus was moving too fast.

Yoo has had time to reflect since the accident, he said. "I will never go on bus trip," he declared.

Tuesday 1 January 2013

http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/index.ssf/2012/12/oregon_tour_bus_crash_authorit.html

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Scores killed in Ivory Coast fireworks stampede


About 60 people have been crushed to death in a stampede outside a stadium in Ivory Coast's main city of Abidjan after a New Year's Eve fireworks display.

The incident took place near Félix Houphouët-Boigny stadium where a crowd had gathered to watch fireworks, emergency officials said.

One of the injured, speaking to Reuters at a hospital, said security forces had arrived to break up the crowd, triggering a panic in which many people fell over and were trampled.

"The provisional death toll is 60 and there are 49 injured," the interior minister, Hamed Bakayoko, said in a statement on national television.

President Alassane Ouattara, visiting injured people at the hospital, called the incident a national tragedy and said an investigation was under way to determine what had happened.

A Reuters correspondent said bloodstains and abandoned shoes littered the scene outside the stadium on Tuesday morning.

The incident was the worst of its kind in Abidjan since 2010, when a stampede at a stadium during a football match killed 18 people.

Ivory Coast, once a stable economic hub for west Africa, is struggling to recover from a 2011 civil war in which more than 3,000 people were killed.

Tuesday 1 January 2013

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jan/01/scores-killed-ivory-coast-fireworks-crush

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Monday, 31 December 2012

Eight die in East China road accident


Eight people have died and four others were injured after an overloaded car collided with a truck in East China's Shandong province early Monday morning, local authorities said.

The accident happened around 2:50 am, when a five-seater car carrying 12 people slammed into a truck loaded with sand in the city of Zibo, a fire control official told Xinhua.

The official said seven passengers were killed at the scene and one died in hospital after medical treatment failed.

An investigation into the cause of the accident is under way.

Monday 31 December 2012

http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2012-12/31/content_16073116.htm

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Four killed in Bengal road accident


At least four people were killed and 16 others were injured when a pick-up van, in which they were travelling, overturned in West Bengal's Jalpaiguri district Monday, police said.

"Four people have been killed and 16 others have been admitted to two hospitals with serious injuries after their van overturned at Nagrakata," said Jalpaiguri Superintendent of Police Amit Javalgi.

The vehicle was carrying nearly two dozen people.

Six of the injured are in a critical condition.

Monday 31 December 2012

http://en-maktoob.news.yahoo.com/four-killed-bengal-road-accident-123031139.html

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Natural disaster throws children into the arms of pedophiles


It was the morning of December 26,2004, and a quiet calm rested over the city of Banda Aceh, Indonesia. A short distance away, pristine beaches decorated the coast of this traveler’s paradise as they cradled myriads of tourists soaking in the splendor of the tropical haven.

A sudden collective gasp arose from the beach goers as they turned their eyes to the horizon and saw the massive wall of water was headed for the beach, its crest loomed skyward like a giant hand reaching out to grasp the sun. Locals and tourists scrambled to find sanctuary from the unstoppable force of nature that had appeared without warning.

The 9.0 magnitude earthquake had arisen from the floor of the Indian Ocean to trigger one of the most devastating natural disasters in recorded history. The impact of the Tsunami took an incredible toll on human life.

Beneath this human tragedy, an even more horrifying tragedy lurked within the shadows. As relief workers and supplies began to flow into the torn and ravaged countryside, customs officials made a shocking discovery. Twenty pedophiles were apprehended as they attempted to board a plane. Their destination included the countries of Indonesia and Thailand where sick and injured children wandered alone and separated from their families. Nature had created a paradise for child molesters whose only intention was to target young children for fulfillment of their deepest perversion while shrouded by the chaos around them. Had it not been for the child sex offender registry, these twenty predators would have found themselves in fertile hunting grounds where no one was trained to stop them.

The aftermath of every natural disaster is mixture of chaos, despair and confusion. Aid workers struggle to meet even the basic needs of those affected, and even the workers themselves can be traumatized by the tragedy unfolding before them.

In the twisted mind of a pedophile this is the perfect environment for a child to disappear and be labeled as a casualty of nature’s fury. The World Health Organization and the United Nations have tracked the increase of sexual violence associated with natural disasters since the 1991 Mt. Pinatubo eruption in the Philippines. The United States is not immune to this travesty, as evidence from the eruption of Mount Saint Helens has shown. The South Asian Tsunami of 2004 is the first event that drew the media spotlight to bear on this despicable practice.

Unfortunately, pedophiles preying on childre are not the only evil to fear in times of disaster, for they have competition of an equally dark nature. Human traffickers also descend on areas struck by natural disaster, kidnapping women and children to sell for sex and cheap labor. Mentally and physically disabled children are easy prey for the predators that cloak themselves in the guise of savior.

In the aftermath of these disasters, infrastructures are destroyed and lines of communication severed. Victims are hungry, confused, alone and helpless and consumed by fear. Governments struggle to bring order to areas sometimes completely leveled by the forces of nature, and aid workers are often not properly screened when they enter a country in disarray.

The situation becomes even more horrific when those sent to protect the helpless end up preying upon them. The 2002 Report of the Task Force on Protection from Sexual Exploitation and Abuse in Humanitarian Crisis found that humanitarian and peacekeeping personnel could become part of the problem. In the 1990’s the United Nations sent a peacekeeping mission to the Democratic Republic of the Congo to help stabilize the region after the second Congo war and the conflicts that followed. Personnel were found to have traded food and supplies for sex with girls as young as thirteen.

As a child, I was sexually trafficked by a pedophile ring and I am one of the lucky few who survived. At the age of twelve, I attempted suicide after I tried every means to escape, including telling doctors, teachers, and running away numerous times. Ending my life seemed the only option, and when I awoke in the emergency room to a group of wide-eyed doctors, I had been clinically dead for three minutes.

I am speaking from experience when I tell you that a child can disappear in a public place in this country in a matter of seconds, never to be seen again. The people who kidnap children for their own personal sexual purposes or to sell them to others with that perversion are as skilled as any special operations personnel both here and abroad. They are driven by forces that transcend any logic society possesses.

Once you are a prisoner of sex traffickers or pedophiles you are shackled with chains of fear that include daily death threats, that as a victim I have seen carried out in front of me. Once these individuals have you, it is all over, and unless these stopped before they first lay their eyes on a victim, children will continue to disappear both domestically and globally.

How do we bring an end to the global targeting of innocent children following natural disasters? By working with the United Nations (http://srsg.violenceagainstchildren.org/), World Health Organization (http://www.who.int/violence_injury_prevention/publications/violence/med_leg_guidelines/en/index.html), UNICEF (http://www.unicef.org/protection/index.html ) and others to put policies and resources in place that eliminate the vulnerabilities that make children targets.

EPCAT International (http://www.ecpat.net/EI/index.asp) is an organization that embraces a deep passion for ending child prostitution, child trafficking and child pornography. In 2006 EPCAT published, “Protecting Children from Sexual Exploitation & Sexual Violence in Disaster & Emergency Situations. A guide for local & community based organizations.” It offers solutions to the hard lessons learned from the 2004 South Asian Tsunami and its aftermath that left vulnerable children exposed. One of the main premises that echoes within its pages is, “Children who are involved in a disaster are much less likely to experience sexual exploitation and sexual violence if the community they are from already has a high level of appreciation of the need to protect children and places importance on this.” This calls for a worldwide effort to bring the level of how we care and protect our children as the front line of defense against their victimization following a natural disaster.

EPCAT also makes the following recommendations in its report:

1.) Immediate identification, registration and documentation (done by or under the supervision of government, where the government is still able to perform this function), involving the careful identification of unaccompanied and separated children who may not be readily visible and may already be in the company of other adults.

2.) Provision of immediate safe care – preferably with extended family members. Where this is not possible separate shelters should be set up for unaccompanied minors which are centrally located, near basic camp facilities, with safe and secure access to washing and toilet facilities, and which are well lit with proper security and supervision.

3.) Placing a ban on adoptions and removal of unaccompanied and separated children without government permission, except for emergency medical treatment. 4.) Coordinated steps for tracing and reunifying family members should begin as soon as possible as valuable information and sources can be lost.

5.) Staff should have training in advance as to appropriate ways to work with children who have been sexually abused, including interviewing skills.

6.) It is essential that the circumstances of all incidences are considered and countermeasures taken to ensure that the child is not victimized again or other children abused in the same way.

7.) Staff and managers, in particular, need to be held accountable for abuses they could have prevented. Increasing female relief workers, the proper monitoring of relief distributions by senior managers, and regular staff rotation between camps and sites can all help to prevent a pattern of abuse taking hold. “

The EPCAT manual is a wealth of information that spearheads a strong effort to make sure that child victims of natural disasters are protected. I hope you will all join me in the fight to protect children around the world from the hell that I suffered as I child. Together we can set an example that resonates around the world and speaks loudly that out children are off limits to predators.

Every one of us should lend our support to organizations fighting for children around the world. If we can all just take some time to educate ourselves and then educate the world on how to protect the most precious gift of all, we can stop the next child from falling into the hands of a predator. We have some idea of the number of children who have fallen victim to natural disasters, but we have no clue of how many in that number fell prey to those intent on doing evil. Let’s not let the screams of those lost to the unnatural disaster of child predators echo in silence. Make a difference in this world by getting involved, and maybe the next child will have a chance to know a life where suffering does end.

Monday 31 December 2012

Read more: http://communities.washingtontimes.com/neighborhood/heart-without-compromise-children-and-children-wit/2012/dec/31/natural-disaster-throws-children-arms-pedophiles/#ixzz2GehKazOT

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Mastung bus attack: Bodies shifted to Rawalpindi

Twelve dead bodies of the people killed in a terrorist attack on a bus of pilgrims in Mastung, Balochistan, transferred to Rawalpindi through a special flight.

The bodies of nine persons were kept at the Holly Family Hospital and three bodies shifted the district headquarters hospital, Rawalpindi.

The body of a deceased was identified, who was a resident of Khayaban-e- Sir Syed in Rawalpindi.

Other bodies will be handed over to the families of deceased after their identification through DNA test.

In an attack on a pilgrims bus in Mastung 19 persons lost their lives.

Monday 31 December 2012

http://www.arynews.tv/english/newsdetail.asp?nid=68352

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In storm-devastated areas, hope for 2013


Slowly walking over logs and boulders while carrying two water containers, 56-year old Tessie Jentapa fetches water in the same river where her husband died when Typhoon “Pablo” battered Barangay Andap here.

“We have already evacuated at around 4 a.m. of Dec. 4. But my husband asked me if I can return to our house to get dry clothes,” Jentapa narrated.

When she returned to the village chapel where they were seeking temporary shelter, her husband, Luciano, was already missing.

“The ravaging waters took him away. It happened so fast,” Jentapa said.

Jentapa narrated that the flash flood, which carried huge logs and boulders, dumped her husband kilometers away from their home.

“When I went to the town gym a day after the storm, I quickly scanned the dead bodies lying in the ground to search for Luciano. It felt like everything was in slow motion when I saw his ring. I knew it was him. He was covered in mud and one of his legs was missing,” said Jentapa.

“It is really painful for me and our children. I really cannot describe the pain I am feeling right now. This would really be a silent New Year’s celebration for us,” Jentapa said.

She said nothing special would be prepared in their house, which was also heavily damaged by Pablo, on New Year’s Eve.

“We really have no plans of preparing anything. We only have canned sardines, instant noodles and a few grams of rice left in our rations,” Jentapa said.

Despite the tragedy, Jentapa said she is praying really hard that 2013 would bring good health for her five children.

“I know that we should not yield over the trials that we are facing right now. I am worried about what will happen in 2013 considering that my husband is now dead,” she said.

“But we only need good health and we will be able to work hard in rebuilding our lives,” Jentapa said.

For 55-year old Elia Sayayad, the year 2013 offers hope for a good harvest that would allow farmers to recover.

Living in a small peasant community in Sitio Boston in Barangay Andap, Sayayad had to walk four hours just to get relief goods and medical assistance.

Monday 31 December 2012

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/332961/in-storm-devastated-areas-hope-for-2013

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26 Somali, Eritrean migrants found dead in Libya


At least 23 Somali and three Eritrean migrants died in an overturned truck accident in Libya, Kenya's Africa Review reported Saturday (December 29th).

The migrants were reportedly heading to Tripoli with the ultimate goal of reaching Europe by sea, when the truck they were being smuggled in went off road to avoid checkpoints.

Trucks carrying illegal migrants often use roads without checkpoints, which are less safe, Somali Ambassador to Libya Abdigani Mohamed Wa'ays said. The truck was carrying about 120 migrants, mostly Somalis, he said.

Fifty-eight of the surviving migrants are being held in Libyan jail, while the injured passengers are receiving treatment in hospital, Wa'ays said.

Initial reports indicate the truck was also carrying cement. Shabelle Media Network correspondent in Tripoli Mohamed Abdi Nahar said human traffickers have started smuggling migrants under a cement cover, increasing the chance of casualties in the event of an accident.

"Since the police noticed the use of grass as a cover, smugglers turned to hiding the people being smuggled under a ceiling of cement and other goods," he said.

Monday 31 December 2012

http://sabahionline.com/en_GB/articles/hoa/articles/newsbriefs/2012/12/30/newsbrief-03

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Nine people dead in bus crash near Pendleton


Nine people are dead and at least 39 people injured after a tour bus crashed down a steep, snow-covered embankment near Pendleton on Sunday morning.

Emergency responders described a precarious scene, with rescuers using high-angle techniques and an all-terrain vehicle to carefully maneuver injured passengers and bodies up Cabbage Hill along Deadman Pass.

"'Organized chaos' is how I would describe it," said Pendleton Fire Chief Gary Woodson, who was on scene just minutes after the accident.

The number of fatalities and injuries rose as emergency crews worked through the afternoon to extricate bus passengers.

Preliminary reports from Oregon State Police cited icy conditions as a contributing factor, causing the driver to lose control of the vehicle and send the bus skidding off the road, through a guardrail and down the nearly 100-foot embankment.

The agency was more cautious late Sunday, saying the cause of the accident was still under investigation.

The bus driver survived the accident but was unable to give information about the crash Sunday because of the severity of the injuries they sustained, according to Oregon State Police.

Local hospitals went into "disaster protocol," with St. Anthony Hospital in Pendleton taking in 26 passengers, according to hospital spokesman Larry Blanc. He could not confirm the nature of the injuries, but five patients were transported to other hospitals.

Additional staff was brought in to help handle the rush of patients and the hospital has been doing a lot of X-ray imaging, Blanc said.

An Oregon Health & Science University spokeswoman said four patients from the crash had been transported there as of Sunday night.

In total, at least four hospitals treated patients from the crash: St. Anthony Hospital, OHSU, Walla-Walla General in Washington and Good Shepherd Health Care System in Hermiston.

Meanhwhile, the Umatilla County Office of Emergency Management set up a secondary shelter Sunday night for passengers who were not hospitalized. Red Cross officials were called in to assist.

Few details were known about the tour group Sunday, with most passengers hospitalized.

The bus is owned by Mi Joo Tour & Travel in Vancouver, Canada. An employee at Mi Joo Tour & Travel, Ryan Choi, said the company rents out its tour buses to travel companies.

The group was on the final day of a nine-day tour, Choi said, returning to Canada after stopping in Las Vegas.

At the scene of the crash, investigators worked through the afternoon and into the night trying to piece together precisely what happened.

The area surrounding the narrow road that traverses the pass is shrouded in deeply packed pine trees. The embankment was covered in about a foot of snow.

When emergency responders arrived on scene, the guardrail was smashed and almost a hundred feet down the snow-covered embankment, the bus "was intact, but definitely what you would expect from a fall like that," Woodson said.

Monday 31 December 2012

http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/index.ssf/2012/12/nine_people_reported_dead_in_b.html

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Colombia landslide kills five in Neiva with 25 missing

Rescue teams in Colombia have been searching for at least 25 people missing after a landslide cut off a road near the south-western city of Neiva.

Five people were killed in the accident, which happened on Saturday.

The Colombian authorities believe at least six cars are buried under tons of mud and rocks.

Hundreds of fire-fighters, paramedics and army troops have been sent to help the rescue operation in Huila province.

There are fears of a new landslide in the same area, along the road between the cities of Neiva and Florencia.

Operations will be suspended if the mountain slope becomes unstable, the authorities said.

Rescue workers on the Neiva-Florencia road Several vehicles are trapped under the earth and rocks

One of the five victims was a heavy machine operator who was clearing the road from a previous landslide.

"It is a very difficult situation as the landslide was very big," said National Rescue Director Cesar Uruena.

"We will need many heavy machines to clear the road," Mr Uruena told RCN radio.

Rescue operations were suspended on Saturday night due to safety concerns for the teams involved in the operation.

Red Cross teams and police with sniffer dogs are searching for bodies or survivors, disaster relief official Jesus Gomez told the AFP news agency

Monday 31 December 2012

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-20872242

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Sunday, 30 December 2012

‘Quinta’ death toll rises to 20


Philippines–Eight more bodies have been recovered from flood-hit villages in Western Visayas, bringing to 20 the official death toll from Tropical Storm “Quinta,” the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) said Sunday.

Undersecretary Benito Ramos, NDRRMC executive director, said that except for the three members of a family in Eastern Samar who died when a tree fell on their house, all the victims had died from drowning.

“The rains brought by the storm caused four major rivers in Western Visayas to swell swamping a large portion of the region,” Ramos told the Inquirer over the phone.

The council identified the latest fatalities as Benedicto Castor, Jezel Superio, Nilo Icawalo, Romeo Idorita, Jaymar Egamino, Joel Jimenea, Edwin Farinas and Osot Sabdane.

It said three persons were injured and four others were still missing in 44 incidents triggered by the weather disturbance.

According to the NDRRMC, the 17th storm to ravage the country in the past 12 months also damaged P225 million worth of infrastructure and agricultural products.

The NDRMMC chief said floods damaged agricultural lands and residential communities located in low-lying areas.

Ramos, who flew to Iloilo on Saturday to oversee the government’s relief efforts, said some areas of Passi City, the municipalities of Calinog and Zarraga in Iloilo province, and the towns of Dumarao, Dumalag, Cuartero and Dao in Capiz province were still under two feet of water.

The NDRRMC said 4,290 families composed of 23,337 individuals were still in 60 evacuation centers in Western Visayas.

“But the floodwaters are now subsiding continuously. We expect those displaced by the floods to return to their homes in the next few days,” Ramos said.

Besides food supplies and clothing, he said the flood victims needed construction materials to rebuild their houses.

“Most of the people who lost their houses were living along the riverbanks. Their homes were washed away when the rivers overflowed,” Ramos said.

The council said the storm destroyed a total of 5,097 houses on Panay island and two nearby regions.

According to Ramos, it may take at least three months to repair the damaged infrastructure and bring the flood-hit communities in the Visayas back to normalcy.

Sunday 30 December 2012

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/332259/quinta-death-toll-rises-to-20

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Bomb kills 19 Shiite Muslim pilgrims in Pakistan


At least 19 Shiite Muslim pilgrims were killed when a car bomb destroyed three buses in southwest Pakistan.

The attack comes as security forces searched for the killers of 21 kidnapped troops in the troubled northwest, officials said.

The remotely-triggered bomb hit a convoy of three buses carrying about 180 pilgrims to Iran and set one of the buses ablaze in Mastung district, they said.

"At least 19 people have been killed and 25 injured," said Tufail Baluch, a senior district government official. "All of them were Shiite pilgrims."

Most of those killed were burnt to death, he said. "The bomb was planted in a car. The condition of some of the injured is critical."

The injured included four women and some children but medics were having trouble identifying the dead bodies, many of which were burnt beyond recognition, said Akbar Harifal, a top official in the area.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the bombing at Mastung, some 30 kilometres south of Quetta, the capital of Baluchistan province.

Investigators recovered broken parts of a car and were investigating the possible involvement of a suicide bomber, Mr Harifal told AFP.

The province has become an increasing flashpoint for sectarian violence between Pakistan's majority Sunni Muslims and minority Shiites, who account for around a fifth of the country's 180 million people.

Baluchistan is also rife with Islamist militancy and home to a regional insurgency which began in 2004. The insurgents demand political autonomy and a greater share of profits from oil and gas resources.

It was the country's second mass killing to be reported in less than a day.

In the northwest, security forces were hunting the killers of 21 security personnel whose bodies were discovered not far from two camps outside Peshawar where they had been kidnapped by the Pakistani Taliban.

Around 200 militants, armed with heavy weapons including mortars and rocket launchers, stormed the government paramilitary camps before dawn on Thursday, killing two security personnel and kidnapping 23.

Officials said Sunday the 21 men had their hands tied with rope before they were shot. Two others - one wounded and one unhurt - were also found.

Peshawar is the main city in northwest Pakistan and close to the restive tribal areas bordering Afghanistan, which are regarded as havens for Taliban and Al Qaeda-linked militants.

"We found 21 bullet-riddled bodies of security personnel... in an uninhabited area," local government official Naveed Akbar told AFP.

"One was found alive but wounded and admitted to hospital while another managed to escape unhurt."

The bodies were handed over to families for burial as security forces cordoned off areas around Peshawar and began a search.

Mr Akbar said the troops were killed after the breakdown of negotiations between a local council of tribal elders and Taliban militants.

Mohammad Afridi, a Taliban spokesman from the tribal town of Darra Adam Khel, earlier claimed responsibility for the kidnappings. The Taliban have not yet commented on the killings.

In August the Pakistani Taliban released a video showing what appeared to be the severed heads of a dozen soldiers, after the military said 15 troops had gone missing following fighting with militants in the Bajaur tribal district.

There has been a surge in attacks in northwest Pakistan in the past two weeks, including a suicide bombing on a political meeting in Peshawar that killed Bashir Bilour, the second top politician in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for that attack, saying Mr Bilour, an outspoken critic of the militants, was assassinated in revenge for the death of one of the movement's "elders".

In a separate incident, a roadside bomb killed two soldiers in Pakistan's lawless tribal zone near the Afghan border, security officials said.

The improvised explosive device was planted along the route of an army convoy in a village some 25 kilometres west of Miranshah, the main town of strife-torn North Waziristan tribal district.

Pakistan has lost more than 3,000 soldiers in the fight against homegrown insurgents but has resisted US pressure to do more to eliminate havens used by those fighting the Americans in Afghanistan.

Sunday 30 December 2012

http://www.news.com.au/world/bomb-kills-19-pakistan-pilgrims/story-fndir2ev-1226545464362

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Four Die, 20 Missing As Mudslides Hit Pokot


4 bodies have been recovered and atleast 20 people said to have gone missing following yet another case of raging floods and mudslides in pokot on Saturday.

Efforts are currently ongoing in the area to recover and retrieve all the missing persons.

Several homes are also said to have been washed away with local residents and leaders said to be currently involved in frantic efforts to find the missing persons, most of whom are said to be young boys who had just been involved in the annual traditional circumcision practice.

The ongoing rains have been wrecking havok across the country with 10 people killed in similar circumstances in Elgeyo Marakwet o Saturday and tens of families displaced in parts of South Nyanza after River Nyando broke its banks.

Residents of Kapsokom, Kabore in Kaptarakwa and Kocholwa villages have been forced to move higher up to temporary shelters that have been set up by the Kenya Redcross.

The Meteorological department says the rains will continue into the new year and urged those living in flood and mudslide prone areas to move to higher grounds.

Sunday 30 December 2012

http://www.citizennews.co.ke/news/2012/local/item/6752-four-die-20-missing-as-mudslides-hit-pokot

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5 children, 1 adult killed in Mississippi car crash


Five young siblings and one adult died early Saturday when a sport utility vehicle went off an eastern Mississippi road and plunged into a rain-swollen creek, authorities said.

Neshoba County Sheriff Tommy Waddell said the victims appear to have drowned after their Dodge Durango left a county road 20 miles southeast of Philadelphia just after midnight Saturday.

Deputy County Coroner Marshall Prince identified the five children who died as 9-year-old Dasyanna John, 8-year-old Duane John, 7-year-old Bobby John, 4-year-old Quinton John, and 18-month-old Kekaimeas John. Family friend Diane Chickaway, 37, also died. The sheriff said all were members of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians and lived in the Pearl River community east of Philadelphia, where the tribe operates a large casino complex.

The father of the children, Dewayne John, escaped the vehicle and remains hospitalized for hypothermia and water inhalation. The children's mother, Deanna Jim, and Chickaway's husband, Dale Chickaway, also survived. The group was traveling to Conehatta, another Choctaw community, with Dewayne John driving. Waddell said he has been tested to see if he was under the influence of alcohol, though he said official results aren't in. If officials decide to file charges, Waddell said they probably wouldn't act until Wednesday.

It appears none of the nine occupants of the vehicle were wearing seat belts or were in child restraints, the sheriff said.

"It's always sad to hear of the death of a tribal member, but today our tribe experienced a great tragedy with the loss of six beautiful Choctaw souls. I cannot begin to imagine what the friends, relatives and loved ones are feeling," Tribal Chief Phyliss J. Anderson said in a statement. "There are no words that can express our sincere condolences to such a horrific accident. I join many of you in the outpouring display of love and support shown to the families during this difficult time. Our thoughts and prayers are with them."

The crash happened on County Road 107, in a rural area near the Neshoba-Newton county line. Heavy rains have deluged the area in recent days, raising the water level of what Waddell described as a normally small creek. The SUV ran off the left side of the road into the creek near the Kitchner community.

The sheriff said it wasn't raining and there was no ice on the road. "This accident is not weather related at all," he said.

Divers from the Philadelphia fire department had to be called to find the submerged vehicle. Prince said the vehicle was pulled from the water after 3 a.m. In addition to the 30 emergency workers, about 20 Choctaw tribal members gathered at the site, he said.

"It looked like he has just run off the road and went into the water," Prince said. "It was deep and swift. The vehicle was completely submerged."

Waddell said the bodies have been sent to Jackson for autopsies. The Mississippi Highway Patrol will reconstruct the accident starting Sunday to learn more.

Tribal spokeswoman Misty Dreifuss said funeral arrangements would likely be made Sunday. She said the children are expected to be buried together. Dreifuss said word of the deaths spread quickly through the 10,000-member tribe and that members "definitely have been hit pretty hard."

Waddell said that he can't recall a deadlier accident in the county in his 26 years of law enforcement.

Sunday 30 December 2012

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/5-children-1-adult-killed-mississippi-car-crash-article-1.1229762#ixzz2GYfQ2nJ1

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Chile Lowers Death Toll in Andes Car Crash


The governor of the Chilean province of Los Andes, Edith Quiroz, has lowered the number of fatalities to four in the collision of a bus and a truck on the route connecting Chile and Argentina through the Los Libertadores mountain pass in the Andes.

At noon Friday reporters were told that five had died and 25 were injured, two of them “very seriously,” but later Quiroz said that one person who was presumed dead and taken to a medical center “was finally stabilized.”

The four fatalities were the bus and truck drivers, and two workers of the Chilean construction and engineering company SalfaCorp, both of whom were on the bus.

The accident took place at 7:30 a.m. at kilometer 20 (mile 12) of the highway linking Los Andes, Chile, with the Argentine city of Mendoza.

According to police, the truck with an Argentine license plate and loaded with wheat apparently had a brake failure and crashed head-on into the bus full of SalfaCorp workers.

The highway, which at this time of year has more traffic than usual as a result of the Christmas and Southern Hemisphere summer vacation seasons, is the main border gateway between Chile and Argentina.

Sunday 30 December 2012

http://www.hispanicallyspeakingnews.com/latino-daily-news/details/chile-lowers-death-toll-in-andes-car-crash/20785/

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9 killed in Narsingdi crash


The death toll in the road crash that occurred on the Dhaka-Sylhet Highway in Shibpur upazila in Narsingdi on Sunday rose to 12 as three more people died of fatal injuries at the hospital.

The accident happened around 12:30pm when the microbus collided head-on with an oncoming bus at Chaitanya of the upazila, leaving eight people, including the micro-bus driver, dead on the spot.

"The microbus was on its way to the Shahjalal International Airport when a Dhaka-bound bus of the Haor Bilash Paribahan collided with it head-on at around 12:30pm," Sergent of the Highway Police in the Narsingdi zone Nazrul Islam said.

Another died on his way to hospital.

The deceased were identified as Faruk Hossain, 30, and his son 'Arif', 8, of Jamalpur district, 'Safiullah', 65, of Anandapur in Feni district, 'Rafique', 40, and his daughter 'Brishti', 8, of Sahebganj in Chandpur district, Moyez Uddin, 42, and his son 'Anik', 8, Ibrahim Mia, 70, Nannu Mia, 45, Masudur Rahman, 45, 'Solaiman', 50, of Kishoreganj Sadar upazila. The identity of another dead could not be ascertained.

All the victims were the passengers of the microbus.

Sergeant of the Narsingdi Highway Police Outpost Nazrul Islam told reporters that the

Eighteen people were injured in the accident and they were admitted to the Narsingdi Sadar Hospital.

Doctors said the condition of one injured was critical.

Officer-in-charge of Shibpur Police Station KM Firoz said the bodies were sent to Narsingdi Sadar Hospital for autopsies.

Labour and Employment Minister Raziuddin Ahmed Razu, Narsingdi district Deputy Commissioner (DC) Obaidul Azam and Superintendent of Police (SP) Mohiuddin went to the hospital to see the injured and inquired about their treatment.

Sunday 30 December 2012

http://bdnews24.com/details.php?id=239109&cid=2

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10 killed in Marakwet landslides, Kenya


At least 10 people among them three children have been killed after landslides hit Elgeyo Marakwet County following heavy rains.

The landslides occurred in Kocholwo, Simit, Kapsokom, Kaptarkom and Toroplongon areas of the county that have been prone to the earth movements.

The areas lie along the Keiyo escarpment and numerous efforts have been made to move families living in the area to safer places in vain.

According to preliminary reports by the Kenya Red Cross, one of the landslides engulfed a house with three children sleeping in it. They were all killed.

Screams rent the air from 1 p. Friday night when the landslides struck as villagers sought to save their lives and those of their family members.

By 8am Saturday, at least seven other bodies had been recovered in addition to the three children while several villagers were still missing and feared to be buried in the mud.

Red Cross and Government personnel with assistance from villagers made frantic efforts to look for survivors, some of who were rushed to nearby medical centres for treatment.

Rescue efforts are still on despite ongoing rain in the affected areas.

Sunday 30 December 2012

http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/?articleID=2000073887&story_title=Kenya-10-killed-in-Marakwet-landslides

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7 injured, 20 missing in Colombia landslide


At least seven people were injured and some 20 others went missing in a landslide reoccurred Saturday in southern Colombia, relief agencies said.

The incident occurred when a bulldozer was removing earth that blocked a driveway below the Andes Mountains in the aftermath of a previous landslide, and about 20 cars were waiting in a queue to pass at the time, said the Risk Management Department.

The injured have all been sent to the University Hospital of Neiva.

Due to the unstable terrain, light and weather conditions, rescuers have decided to wait until Sunday to resume the search for the 20 missing persons.

Sunday 30 December 2012

http://www.china.org.cn/environment/2012-12/30/content_27550681.htm

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