Thursday, 17 January 2013

Official says stability behind cremations of landslide victims


An official from Zhenxiong county, Yunnan Province, where a landslide recently claimed 46 lives, admitted on Wednesday that it was partially for stability's sake that the county government hastily incinerated the bodies of the victims without approval from the victims' families.

Zhu Henghui, director of Zhenxiong county government administrative office, said stability played a part in the decision making process of incinerating the victims' bodies, which led to protest from local villagers, who blocked the roads and demanded an explanation on Sunday.

Despite the announcement from the government claiming the landslide was a natural disaster, local villagers believe that the Gaopo coal mine, which is 500 meters from the landslide scene, is to blame for the landslide.

Zhu has agreed Wednesday to let villagers, who sent a joint letter to the State Council Wednesday to demand an re-investigation, check the local coal mine after the Chinese New Year, Beijing Times reported on Thursday.

Zhu could not be reached by the Global Times as of Thursday night.

Hu Peiwen, deputy head of the publicity department of Zhenxiong county, told the Global Times that the local government has dispatched work teams to persuade the villagers to claim the ashes of their beloved ones.

"The government's incineration of the bodies was done to prevent emotional distress to the villagers once they see them," Hu said, adding that epidemic prevention is another factor in the decision.

Hu's opinion was echoed by Zhou Chengwu, director of the Zhenxiong funeral parlor, who told the Xinhua News Agency that as the only funeral service provider in the area, the funeral house simply did not have enough ice tanks to store all 46 bodies.

"It's a small town and we only have limited resources. It's routine to incinerate bodies within 24 hours for those who died in natural disasters such as earthquakes and landslides," Zhou said.

As of Wednesday night, no family member of the victims has picked up the urns from the Zhenxiong funeral house, the Beijing Times reported.

"We are working on persuading the villagers. Most of them have showed a certain degree of understanding of our work," Xiong Tao, an official from the publicity department of the Zhenxiong government, told the Global Times.

Despite the government assurances, Luo Yuanshou, the brother of one victim, said he still hasn't picked up his sister's ashes and that he finds the incineration highly inappropriate.

"I don't understand what they mean by maintaining stability. If it is truly a natural disaster like the officials have claimed, there is no need to fear how villagers would respond. The fact that they incinerated the bodies so hastily is a sign of cover-up. I will not claim my sister's urn until I find out what truly caused the disaster," Luo told the Global Times.

Thursday 17 January 2013

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/756679.shtml

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Landslide Survivors Demand Investigation of Mine’s Role


Relief efforts continue in Yunnan, where a remote village was decimated by a landslide last Friday. 46 people died, including 19 children. China Daily reported that 29 of the victims were from a single clan, now reduced to just three members. Many survivors are now living in tents, awaiting pre-fabricated housing and the eventual construction of a new settlement nearby.

Crowds of survivors protested outside the local disaster relief headquarters on Sunday night, after it emerged that victims had been cremated without their families’ approval. Local authorities apologized, but explained that they were not equipped to deal with so many dead bodies at once. From Xinhua:

“Why can’t I see my child for the last time?” Luo Yuanju, a migrant worker who hurried home after she got the tragic news that she had lost 29 relatives in the landslide, told the Beijing News. “This cremation was done without our approval. Why couldn’t the authorities wait for one or two days?”

[…] Government authorities had cremated all the bodies by Sunday, triggering anger from the victims’ families. According to the tradition of the village, where dwellers are mostly members of the Yi ethnic minority, the bodies of the dead are usually buried instead of cremated.

Lei Chuying, deputy head of Zhenxiong county, said cremation orders were given due to consideration of epidemic prevention and people’s feelings.

“Many parts of the bodies were missing while the buried were dug out,” Lei said, “The painful scene might cause trauma among relatives.”

An official investigation quickly concluded that the landslide was an entirely natural disaster, but local authorities have still faced criticism over their lack of preparedness. From Global Times:

Jiang Xingwu, a geological expert in Yunnan, told a press conference on Saturday afternoon that the area’s steep incline of 35 to 50 degrees and the composition of the soil made it prone to landslides.

Jiang said that the earthquakes with magnitudes of 5.7 and 5.6 which hit neighboring Yiliang county in September 2012 were also a cause, and the continued rainy and snowy weather over the past month led to the saturation of the slope, with gravity eventually causing the landslide.

The People’s Daily, a flagship newspaper of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, Sunday questioned why there wasn’t any early warning given the prolonged rainy and snowy weather over the past month.

[…] Also of concern was the fact that a 2010 geological disaster prevention plan by the Zhenxiong government showed that the local government had compiled files for 184 hazardous sites including 29 major ones areas, but Gaopo village was not on the list.

In addition, some locals continued to voice suspicions that nearby mining activity was really to blame. From Xinhua:

Some villagers believe the landslide may have been triggered by a gas explosion, and they doubt the experts’ conclusion that the coal mine boundary was 500 meters away from the landslide.

“The mining area is right beneath the landslide,” a coal miner in Gaopo said, as quoted by media on Monday.

Witnesses told Xinhua they saw “earth and rocks sprayed up into the air” when the landslide occurred. At the same time, some other villagers said they had not been to the scene and only heard about the “explosion” from others.

[…] Wang Shijun, another person who lost family in the landslide, said a big crack appeared before the landslide. “Big enough to swallow a bull.”

However, some villagers said the crack was 1 meter wide and some said a half meter wide, while others said there was no crack.

Luo Yuanshou, the brother of a victim, initiated the joint letter and sent to the State Council on Wednesday. The villagers believe the Gaopo coal mine, which is 500 meters from the landslide scene, could have played a role in the landslide. Villagers wondered why the hillside remained stable following a 50-day snowstorm in 2008.

Luo told the Global Times that the villagers are demanding the State Council order the State Administration of Coal Mine Safety, the Ministry of Land and Resources and the China University of Geosciences to investigate the landslide. The original investigation “hastily concluded the landslide had nothing to do with the mine without even an on-site investigation of the mine. The hill was not that steep and is covered with vegetation,” said Luo.

Jiang Xingwu, who headed the original investigation, told the Global Times Wednesday that he stands by the results of his investigation, adding he understands that the villagers may want another opinion.

The preference for burial over cremation is not limited to the Yi: see ‘Henan Officials Commit a Grave Error‘ on CDT. Neither is Friday’s landslide the only apparently natural disaster for which human activity has been blamed: see ‘2008 Sichuan Earthquake Likely Man-Made‘.

Thursday 17 January 2013

http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2013/01/yunnan-landslide-survivors-protest-unapproved-cremations/

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Illegal sale of dead bodies at city hospitals


The number of unclaimed and unidentified dead bodies lying in the government hospital mortuaries’ is increasing every year by almost 10 per cent.

According to the ‘missing people’ complaints filed at the Satya Harishchandra Foundation (SHF), an NGO that cremates unknown, unclaimed dead bodies there is a steady increase over the last few years.

The foundation that cremated 1,145 bodies in 2011, held last rites for 1,330 bodies in 2012, an increase of 184 bodies compared to the previous year.

These bodies are usually received from Osmania government Hospital and Gandhi Hospital.

The NGO officials say that they have established the foundation in 2004 and ever since they have been witnessing a regular increase in the number unidentified, unclaimed dead bodies.

In 2006, a total of 176 bodies were cremated and the figures have doubled in the recent years.

“The density of the population in Hyderabad has also increased with a lot of rural population migrating to the city.

Many people desert their family members in the hospital unable to take care of them,” explains secretary of SHF Mahesh Kumar.

The founder and general secretary of SHF K Rajeshwar Rao, added that while the number of bodies from Gandhi (673) are higher compared to OGH (657) this year, which is usually the other way around.

“This year’s number is still low compared to 736 bodies in cremated from OGH.

The reason is that there is an illegal sale of dead bodies from that hospital to private medical colleges.

Though it is permitted to sell unclaimed, unidentified dead bodies it should be done with the consent of the police, following several other protocols,” says Rao.

Mahesh Kumar also mentions that although both the hospitals sell around 15 dead bodies a month for `15,000 per body, few workers at the hospital sell more dead bodies illegally.

When Express contacted the OGH authorities on the issue, they refused to comment on the topic and said no such illegal sale of dead bodies is taking place.

However, Rao said otherwise.

“Medical colleges require a number of bodies for dissection.

Many bodies are even sent to other states like Kerala, Delhi as the law in those places doesn’t permit the sale of dead bodies, instead encourages people to donate.

He said according to the GO number 231, only unclaimed dead bodies can be also but not unidentified ones.

“Unknown bodies should be given to police,” said Kumar.

Rajeshwar Rao also said that after the number bodies arriving from OGH had declined in 2010 to 533 from 736 in 2009 and he filed an RTI application at all police zones.

“According to the RTI report, 593 unclaimed/unknown bodies were sent from the police stations to the hospitals between January 2010 - September 2011 and they were sent to us for cremation,” he adds.

He says that a majority of these dead bodies are from rural areas, economically poor who cannot afford medical care, mentally disturbed and elderly people left by their children from old city areas.

The attitude of the hospital authorities should change.

The tracing of the missing persons has come down from 27 per cent in 2008 to less than 7 per cent in 2012,” Rao ascertained.

Thursday 17 January 2013

http://newindianexpress.com/cities/hyderabad/article1423715.ece

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Arizona: Naming the dead from the desert


It's the job of a forensics team in Arizona to identify the bodies of migrants found in the desert. Anthropologist Robin Reineke describes how she pieces together the sad jigsaw puzzle of personal attributes and belongings.

There are many ways to enter the US. The way that's taken by the very poorest is to come through the Sonoran Desert on foot.

It's a very forbidding place - the temperatures in the summertime are regularly in the triple digits Fahrenheit and there's no water.

Groups of people will walk for three to five days, travelling by night and drinking out of cattle troughs or whatever they can find. It's unlikely they will see other people for the duration of the trip.

At present, Tucson, Arizona has almost 800 unidentified bodies of migrants who didn't make it to the other side.

They were found by border patrol, by citizens of the Tohono O'odham Indian reservation, or by ranchers or hikers. I compare these unidentified remains to lists we have of missing persons, collected from families of migrants last known to have been attempting the crossing.

When there is a possible match, I call the family.

Recently, I called the wife of a missing man. "There's someone who could potentially be your husband," I told her. "Can I ask you some questions?

"Did he have any tattoos? You said that he was missing an upper molar. Could you tell me more about that?"

One day in the desert heat is enough to make a body unrecognisable, so the possessions that are found with the remains can be incredibly important to the family.

There's often an interesting combination of objects. Mostly it is the normal stuff that anyone would take with them on a trip - toothpaste, socks, snacks, water.

But then there are these very personal items - photographs of loved ones, handwritten notes from family members, kids' drawings.

The letters are from the children or wives of those we've found dead, wishing them luck and telling them that they're loved, that they should be very careful on the journey, that the family's prayers are with them, that the family's hopes are with them.

And the photos have been touched and pulled out over and over again, then folded up and put back carefully.

Some of the items have unspoken stories.

There was a young kid - he was probably only 15 or 16 years old - and the soles of his shoes were just completely worn off. He had been carrying one orange paper flower.

I remember a man who had a small dead hummingbird in his pocket. I know that for a lot of indigenous North American peoples hummingbirds hold a sacred significance - they represent hope and love and they're a powerful protective symbol.

With certain objects, my familiarity with Mexican and Central American cultures helps me to make a guess about where someone came from.

For example, many migrants carry prayer cards - small cards with a saint or a holy scene printed on them with an accompanying prayer. A prayer card of the Virgin of Juquila is likely to have belonged to a Oaxacan traveller, since it is there that she is venerated.

You can think of it like a puzzle - a puzzle which has a great deal of importance to a lot of people.

While most anthropologists who work in human identification are physical or forensic anthropologists who specialise in skin and bone, I am a cultural anthropologist focused on the social world.

My training helps me bridge the gap between forensic scientists and the families of the missing, who are generally indigenous people.

The forensic scientists and I have a lot of faith in science, which is a belief system. It requires trust in officials, in the scientific method, in technology. Many families of missing migrants are coming from communities in Mexico or Central America that have been violated for centuries by officials, scientists and technologies. There is a lot of mistrust.

Moreover, the family is looking for something recognisable, something that carries the trace of the person they knew.

______________________________

Case ML #10-00533
The owner of these prayer cards was found by an off-duty border control guard while he was hiking on a remote mountain, on 12 March 2010

The male, aged between 22 and 35, had likely died years earlier, since little more than his skeleton remained


______________________________

They can get fixated on details scientists might consider nearly irrelevant, like the buttons on a pair of trousers or a brand of tennis shoes. These are things that have meaning to them. They are also things that someone can change, unlike their DNA or fingerprints.

So while I might be trying to arrange a DNA comparison with a family, they'll be asking to see photos of the remains. Sometimes they show up in my office, having driven for hours, asking to see the body.

Generally, we don't allow this unless the dead person is recognisable. Some might argue that it is not our job to protect families from the truth. But if they see an unrecognisable, decomposed corpse or skeleton, they may not only be traumatised, they may simply reject the identification. I've been involved in a few of cases where we have come very close to a positive ID and the family suddenly rejects involvement or says we're lying.

Because of the highly decomposed nature of the bodies, the calls I make are never as simple as, "I am sorry to inform you…" Instead, it's the beginning of a process that could take months. It unfolds as a kind of a negotiation between the scientists and the families. Both sides have the same goal - to find the missing person.

But for the scientists, the problem is an unidentified dead body, whereas for the families, the problem is a missing living person. These realities pull them in opposite directions.

And, coming after a long period of not hearing anything, these are months of agony for families. What they have already endured is terrifying. You cannot grieve without a body - without certainty that the person is gone. Every single day that you are living a normal life, you know they could be suffering.

One case that stands out is a large group of Guatemalans that were all from the same town, who attempted to cross in the summer of 2010.

The man who was leading the group had crossed before, maybe five or 10 years earlier. But the border had completely changed - it is a lot more difficult to cross over now. The man got lost with this whole group of friends and relatives following him.

One of them was able to call his wife and tell her that they were lost, that they had been walking for seven days, that they were out of food and water, that some of the group had been vomiting blood, that they knew they were going to die.

I received all the reports of the missing and a big sleuthing operation began. Three sets of bodies were found in different locations, months apart. We were able to identify five of them. The other seven or eight remain missing.

I went to Guatemala with my husband in the summer of 2011 to meet the families of the dead and missing from this group. I was struck by the difference between those whose loved ones had been identified and those who were still waiting.

Even with the knowledge that the whole group had been lost in the desert, and that some of them had come home in coffins, the families of the missing were distraught - sickened by the condition of not knowing. Their faces are burned into my memory.

I won't pretend that I have an easy job and that I don't take some of it home. I work with an incredible team, who have taught me everything. And I have a wonderful husband and a fuzzy dog at home to keep me sane.

And I feel very honoured to be doing this work. The unidentified are here in Tucson and I feel an obligation to them.

The immigration issue is tough but it's not intractable.

For me, it's frustrating that there is so much attention on the physical line of the border, and on border security. When hundreds are dying each year, their bodies rotting in the desert, we have to think about what is an effective border, what is effective security - and security for whom? It is time to really think about what we have done as a continent to cause people to risk their lives in such large numbers.

Immigrants are being blamed for a lot at the moment - they're being scapegoated. I feel that these people were, by and large, good, hard-working people that did not mean any harm. By attempting the crossing they were trying to do the very best for their families.

I would definitely do the same thing.

______________________________

Case ML #11-00206



Money

Many migrants carry all the money they have. Before they meet up with their coyote (guide) they are often carrying the payment with them in cash, which is usually more than $2,500.

This is very dangerous. Every year, hundreds of Central American migrants fall prey to criminals, especially drug cartels and gangs.

False Mexican Voter ID card

When false Mexican ID is found with unidentified remains, Robin’s team look at their missing lists from neighbouring countries – in this case, the owner was Honduran.

He would have needed false ID to travel through Mexico, where he would also have been considered an “illegal”. Another reason for the fake ID is that if he had been caught trying to cross into the US, he would only have been deported back to Mexico rather than all the way to Honduras.

SIM cards

These are not uncommon. Migrants often carry them as back-up in case their cell phones get taken.

List of names and numbers

This is one of the most common items found with migrants. The guides often take their cell phones at the start of the journey, so the migrants carry numbers with them instead.

The numbers were key to helping the team identify this individual, who was found in January 2011, about 10-15 months after his death.

Someone from the Mexican consulate called one of the numbers and spoke to a person who knew a man using false ID. He was ultimately identified through a DNA match, thanks to the Argentine Forensic Team, which funds a large number of DNA comparisons for Central Americans.

Prayer card

The words read “Cristo mi piloto” (Jesus is my pilot) with a prayer on the back.

Wallet

Since all travellers carry wallets, and many of them are very similar, these rarely help in the identification process.

______________________________

Thursday 17 January 2013

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-21029783

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Mastung bombing: Funerals offered for 15 victims


The Shia community of Rawalpindi offered funeral prayers on Wednesday for 12 persons killed in the Mastung terrorist attack after their identities were determined through DNA testing a day earlier.

Before handing over the 12 bodies, which included two women, the Shia community offered their funeral prayers at IJ Principal Road near Muhammadi Imam Bargha in New Katarian.

The bodies of three victims hailing from Rawalpindi were earlier handed over to their relatives for burial, while the other 12 were given to their relatives after the collective funeral. Five of the dead bodies would be taken to Sindh, and rest to different areas of Punjab for burial.

Four other dead bodies remain at Holy Family Hospital.

Speaking after the funerals, Majlis Wahdat Muslimeen (MWM) Pakistan Secretary General Allama Nasir Abbas Jafri criticised the government for their failure to curb terrorism and especially the targeted killings of Shias in Balochistan.

He said if governor rule was rescinded as demanded by the Balochistan Assembly, they would start protesting against the federal government as the elected government of Balochistan’s only achievement was five years of failure to protect the common man.

All politicians are gathered in Lahore to safeguard their interests but they had never sit together to bring out a collective policy against the terrorism in the country.

DNA verification

On Tuesday, the district administration of Rawalpindi received identity confirmation of 18 out of 19 bodies from the Mastung attack and had initiated the process of handing them over to their heirs.

In response to a request from the medical superintendent of Holy Family Hospital (HFH), where 16 dead bodies were kept after being brought from Quetta two weeks ago, the Institute of Biomedical and Genetic Engineering (IBGE) Islamabad on Tuesday sent the reports for samples from 18 victims.

The Rawalpindi district administration took samples from the bodies and blood samples from relatives of the unidentified and sent them to IBGE for DNA profiling.

The bodies, which could not be visually identified due to the circumstances of their deaths, were flown in to Rawalpindi from Quetta on a C-130 on January 1 after the December 31, 2012 bombing of a bus carrying Shia pilgrims near Mastung.

Apart from the 16 bodies at HFH, three were kept at District Headquarter Hospital (DHQ) and the administration waited for the arrival of samples of the bodies taken at Quetta to match them with samples from claimants.

After a wait of 10 days, the Rawalpindi administration was informed that the samples taken at Quetta had been lost and new samples should be taken for further identification of the bodies.

A senior doctor at HFH said they had to pay Rs10,000 per sample to the IBGE and the bodies were to be transported to their native areas in Punjab and Sindh.

Rawalpindi District Coordination Officer (DCO) Saqib Zaffar said the administration was trying to contact the relatives of the dead and leaders of Shia community to hand the dead bodies.

He said there were three dead bodies from Rawalpindi, while the rest were to be transported to different areas of Punjab and Sindh.

Regarding the 19th victim, the DCO said it was being kept under consideration for further test to determine the relationship between the deceased and the claiming relative.

About the transportation of the dead bodies, he said it was preferred that the families themselves collected the bodies, however, if they could not afford to, the district government would help them in the process.

Thursday 17 January 2013

http://tribune.com.pk/story/495001/mastung-bombing-funerals-offered-for-15-victims/

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String of bomb blasts in Iraq kill at least 22, mostly Shiite pilgrims


Insurgents unleashed a string of bomb attacks mainly targeting Shiite Muslim pilgrims across Iraq on Thursday, killing at least 22 people and extending a wave of deadly bloodshed into a second day.

The eruption of violence follows nearly two weeks of relative calm, and threatens to enflame rising tensions among Iraq’s ethnic and sectarian groups.

The worst attack took place near Dujail, 80 kilometers (50 miles) north of Baghdad, where a pair of car bombs exploded near pilgrims who were traveling on foot to a shrine in the town of Samarra.

The head of the Salahuddin provincial health directorate, Raed Ibrahim, said 11 people were killed and more than 60 were wounded in that attack.

“We heard thunderous explosions, and everybody went outside and saw burning cars and several bodies on the ground. Market stalls on both sides of the road were on fire,” said Naseer Hadi, who works in the Dujail post office.

The pilgrims were heading to Samarra to commemorate the death of two prominent Shiite Imams who are buried in the al-Askari shrine there.

A 2006 bombing at the gold-domed shrine that was blamed on al-Qaida in Iraq set off years of retaliatory bloodshed between Sunni and Shiite extremists that left thousands of Iraqis dead and pushed the country to the brink of civil war.

The attacks in Dujail came hours after a car bomb struck a bus carrying foreign pilgrims near the southern Shiite holy city of Karbala. Four people were killed and 12 were wounded in that attack, according to police and hospital officials.

The explosion tore through the undercarriage and blew out most of the windows of the white and blue tour bus that got hit. Nusaif al-Kitabi, deputy chairman of the Karbala provincial council, said the bus was carrying pilgrims from Afghanistan.

In the town of Qassim, 125 kilometers (78 miles) south of Baghdad, a parked car bomb exploded near a bus stop, killing five people and wounding 20. The casualties included Shiite pilgrims who were heading to Karbala, said police and hospital officials.

Shiite pilgrims are a favorite target for Sunni insurgents who seek to undermine the country’s Shiite-led government and provoke a return to sectarian fighting.

In northeastern Baghdad, a roadside bomb apparently meant to hit an army patrol missed its target and struck a civilian car, killing 2 passengers and wounding two others, said police and hospital officials. Like most other officials, they spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information to reporters.

Thursday’s bloodshed comes a day after a wave of attacks killed at least 33 people across Iraq in the country’s deadliest day in more than a month.

Thursday 17 January 2013

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/iraqi-officials-car-bomb-attack-kills-4-shiite-pilgrims-heading-to-shrines-south-of-baghdad/2013/01/17/47d7d3b8-6079-11e2-bc4f-1f06fffb7acf_story.html

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Truck hits bus; 6 dead, 57 hurt


Six people were killed and 57 others were injured, many of them critically, when a trailer truck rammed a passenger bus in the City of Naga Wednesday afternoon.

Traffic investigators of the Naga City Police Station believed that the accident was caused by a mechanical malfunction, which caused the truck, driven by Antonio Umagay, to lose its brakes.

Owners of the trailer truck and passenger bus and Representative Pablo John Garcia (Cebu Province, 3rd district) have committed to shoulder the medical expenses.

Garcia and his wife Karen said in their Twitter accounts that the congressman’s staff was working 24 hours to help the accident victims, which included arranging for the burial of four persons and providing the meals of those brought to the hospital.

Police Officer 2 Cristito Canono of the Naga Police Station told reporters the accident occurred around 4:30 p.m. in a steep portion of the Naga-Uling Road in Sitio Gaway-gaway, Barangay Uling.

Umagay, who was driving a trailer truck owned by WT Construction Inc. (WTCI), was supposed to deliver a bulldozer to Carcar City. His boss, Eddie Lopez, confirmed that Umagay had left their office in Asturias to make the delivery.

But while crossing Sitio Gaway-gaway, he suddenly lost his brakes, causing the large vehicle to speed downhill.

A passenger bus belonging to the Calvo Bus Liners Inc. was also moving uphill in the same area. The bus, driven by Jimmy Limoran, reportedly carried more than 50 passengers bound for Toledo City from Cebu City.

Umagay allegedly drove to the opposite lane, in an attempt to stop the truck.

Instead, it hit the mid-section of the passenger bus and sent it down a roadside canal.

Umagay, along with four unidentified passengers of the bus, reportedly died on the spot. Police investigators reported that an unidentified passenger died while en route toward the Toledo District Hospital.

At least 27 passengers were brought to a hospital owned by the Carmen Copper Corp. in Toledo City, while 30 others were brought to the Toledo District Hospital. Eventually, the 57 surviving passengers were brought to different hospitals in Cebu City for further treatment.

Canono said that as of 10 p.m. Wednesday, six deaths were confirmed, not eight as earlier reported.

Rescuers from the Naga City government and from Carmen Copper needed about five hours to remove all passengers from the wreckage. The last fatality, an unidentified man, was removed from the wrecked bus at 9:30 p.m.

After hearing of what happened to her husband, Jessica Umagay immediately went to the scene of the accident. One of her seven children accompanied her.

As she saw her husband’s body, Jessica said she regretted that they never found peace together. She told reporters that while she and Umagay shared a home, they were estranged.

Umagay and the bodies of the five victims (whose identities could not be confirmed last night) will be brought to the St. Francis Funeral Homes in Naga City.

Alvin Calvo, who represented Calvo Bus Liners, also told reporters that they are willing to shoulder the medical expenses.

Lopez, representing WTCI, said he has yet to take up the accident with management

Thursday 17 January 2013

http://www.sunstar.com.ph/cebu/local-news/2013/01/17/truck-hits-bus-6-dead-57-hurt-263332

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Medical Examiner Trying to ID Four Bodies


Right now authorities are working at least 140 cases across Virginia where bodies found cannot be identified.

Wednesday, authorities put faces on four of these cases and then took their work to the media for help.

These four cases - one each from Pittsylvania, Carroll, Alleghany and Lee Counties - are just the latest in a series of clay busts that have been produced in an effort to solve some of these cases with the oldest being 25 years old.

When they were found, nothing but bones remained, however enough of the skull of each one of them survived, giving authorities a new chance at solving some of their old cases.

"Our goal is to reunite deceased persons, who are currently unidentified, back with their families," said Donna Price with Medical Examiner's Office.

In the spotlight are four men: A Hispanic male found in Lee County in 2011, another Hispanic man found in southern Carroll County just last year, a third Hispanic male found in Blairs in 2005, and a fourth man believed to have been missing since the flood of 1985.

All of the first three are suspected of being migrant workers, which has made identifying them nearly impossible.

"We have an idea of who he may be but he has no known relatives in the area and the only relatives we know of that may be in Mexico... we've been unable to locate them at this time," said Lt. Todd Barrett with the Pittsylvania County Sheriff's Department.

The fourth man was found in the Jackson River in 1986. But like the other three, the suspected man is not local - officials believe originally from Ann Arbor, Michigan, they just can't verify it through a DNA match.

"It's just a strong feeling that we have. The age is within the range. The problem we have is none of his family is still alive in the area," said Sheriff Kevin Hall with the Alleghany County Sheriff's Department.

But investigators hope their luck will change as these faces, and their possible connections, go public.

All four of these men are part of the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System - also called the "NaMus System" - which is a national database, open to everyone, that compiles information in an effort to get deceased people identified.

Thursday 17 January 2013

http://www.wset.com/story/20607086/medical-examiner-trying-to-id-four-bodies

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Bus crash kills 14 in Yobe


Fourteen people have been killed and four others seriously injured when their bus crashed into a truck and caught fire in northern Nigeria, a road safety official says.

"At around 6:30 am (1630 AEST) today a commuter bus which was carrying 18 passengers crashed into an abandoned truck in the middle of the road that had lost control and fell on its side overnight," Usman Masari told AFP.

The crash happened near the town of Potiskum, capital of Yobe state, added Masari, head of the state Federal Road Safety Commission.

"The bus caught up in flames, resulting in the death(s) of 14 passengers while four others sustained serious injuries," he said.

Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation, has one of the worst road accident records in Africa, with poor roads, badly maintained vehicles and reckless driving conspiring to kill thousands every year.

At least 27 people on a truck laden with cattle and sheep drowned after their vehicle plunged into a river in northwest Sokoto state last month, officials said.

Thursday 17 January 2013

http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/01/bus-crash-kills-14-in-yobe/

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Wednesday, 16 January 2013

Philippines govt gives up search for missing fishermen


Lt. Gen. Jorge Segovia, head of Task Force Maritime Search SarGen, on Wednesday said the search and rescue operation for the still missing 352 fisherman has been called off, more than a month after super typhoon Pablo unleashed its wrath in eastern Mindanao.

“Our operations is shifting to support and rehabilitation operations and to deliver aid to survivors,” Segovia said in a press conference.

Segovia was accompanied by Mayor Darlene Antonino-Custodio who said the city has to move on.

Custodio said the city will be giving assistance to families of the missing fishermen as they recover from the loss of their loved ones.

At least 378 fishermen were reported missing several days after Pablo hit landfall in Davao Oriental that also left more than 1,000 dead.

Of the listed missing fishermen, 18 were found alive while 8 dead bodies were recovered from 51 fishing vessels from at least 10 fishing companies here that were caught in the middle of the storm.

Four of these fishing vessels were confirmed by survivors to have sunk at the height of Typhoon Pablo.

Only last week, Segovia refrained from issuing a statement on the fate of the missing fishermen.

“It is a sensitive issue especially for the families (of the victims),” he reasoned out.

At least three Philippine Navy ships and two floating assets of the Philippine Coast Guard were involved in the search and rescue mission.

A P-3C Orion maritime surveillance aircraft from the United States Navy as also dispatched to the area to help search for more survivors.

The operations however failed to recover any survivor other than those rescued by passing fishing vessels early in the tragedy.

Some relatives are hoping the fishermen are still alive.

Ana Lou Caspi-Nemenio, whose father is the ship captain of a catcher vessel of the Salazar-owned Thidcor fishing company, said she received reports that the crew of two of his father’s light boats were found in a state of shock while riding a bus somewhere between Leyte and Surigao.

She could not verify the report however.

Owners of the missing fishermen are still giving cash advances to the families of the missing fishermen.

But one fishing company has reportedly offered a cash assistance of P50,000 in exchange of a waiver and quit claim.

Rosanna Contreras, executive director of Socsksargen Federation of Fishing and Allied Industry (SFFAI), however said she has not received any information about the reported cash assistance.

SFFAI is handling all cash advances of families of the missing fishermen.

SFFAI said the Pablo tragedy was a big blow to the tuna industry. The federation said the lost fishing vessels valued up to P640 million.

Wednesday 16 January 2013

http://asiancorrespondent.com/95532/govt-gives-up-search-for-missing-fishermen/

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Death toll of Egypt’s building collapse rises to 16


The death toll of the building collapse on early Wednesday in Egypt’s northern seaside city of Alexandria rose to 16, and 10 injured people have been rescued under the rubble, Health Ministry’s spokesman, Ahmed Omar, told Xinhua.

Omar said that the dead bodies were transferred from the collapse spot to the morgue of Koum al-Dikka in Alexandria while the injured people were taken to nearby hospitals at Alexandria’s Abou Qir area.

Omar confirmed to Xinhua that the death toll of the collapse was 16 so far, although Egyptian state TV said it was 17.

An eight-storey building in Alexandria’s suburb of Maamoura collapsed early Wednesday and the civil protection authority said that the building was illegally constructed in a narrow street without an official permit.

The rescue teams are currently continuing their efforts in search for more survivors.

Wednesday 16 January 2013

http://www.nzweek.com/world/death-toll-of-egypts-building-collapse-rises-to-16-43141/

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Vietnam’s Buddhist response to disaster


Buddhist monks, nuns and their followers have long contributed to Vietnam’s disaster relief efforts. Sometimes equipped with canoes filled with instant noodles, woollen hats and psychosocial counsellors, this local cadre may lack standard operating procedures, but it constitutes a largely undocumented and significant disaster relief system running parallel to governmental efforts.

Buddhist temples’ (or any religious organization’s) contribution to disaster relief is still under-studied by international donors and NGOs working on disaster response, despite their growing role in a number of places, says Ian Wilderspin, a technical specialist on disaster risk management for the UN Development Programme (UNDP) in Hanoi.

However, Bui Viet Hien, a UNDP programme analyst, co-authored a 2011 study in collaboration with the Ministry of Sciences and Technology on the role of informal organizations in boosting community resilience to flooding in a district of the coastal Binh Dinh Province in south-central Vietnam.

Groups identified in the study included, among others, business leaders in the rice industry; boat owners who lived closest to the pier and provided emergency transportation during flood seasons; and dyke protection brigades nominated by village elders to supervise dykes during rainy seasons. The study broke down each group’s contribution to boosting resilience, concluding that people in the above three groups had the most impact on their villages’ ability to get through disasters.

There has not been a similar effort to assess informal organizations’ contribution to disaster response, she told IRIN last September. “It is an important question to ask [religious organizations’ contribution to disaster relief and prevention], but we simply do not know.”

Eric Debert, a programme manager with international NGO CARE in Vietnam, said though religious groups are not targeted directly in CARE’s work with communities on disaster risk reduction, they may be represented in other community associations and groups CARE consults.

Nevertheless, it could be a “gap”, he noted. Since 2006 CARE has coordinated the Joint Advocacy Network Initiative (JANI) funded by European Union aid body ECHO.

JANI includes 18 international and local NGOs as well as mass organizations (like Vietnam’s Women’s Union, whose stated membership is 13 million) which promote a community-based approach to help residents in disaster-prone areas face increasingly frequent and more intense natural hazards.

Buddhist operating procedures?

“They [Buddhist temples] have good intentions, but little strategy,” said Nguyen Huu Thang, the vice-director of social welfare and disaster for the Vietnam Red Cross (one of two groups nationwide authorized to receive disaster relief donations) which has collaborated with Buddhist temples organizing relief trips. Temples’ lack of formal training in humanitarian response can lead to “confusion or chaos” if relief groups deliver goods haphazardly without coordinating with local officials, said Thang.

But the leader of Quan Dinh temple on the outskirts of Hanoi, who goes by her Buddhist `dharma’ name (given during an initiation ceremony), Sister Peaceful Light, told IRIN the temple always goes through an official structure, whether it is Vietnam Red Cross or provincial authorities.

Pagoda leaders in or close to disaster-stricken areas often meet and guide arriving groups on hikes or by canoe to provincial authorities, who then direct them to villages most in need.

Thang said Buddhist temples were more active in organizing disaster responses than other religious groups.

In a country where more than half the population declares itself Buddhist, the network is wide - some 25,000 temples staffed with monks or nuns nationwide as of five years ago - Vietnam’s Buddhist Association reported to international media.

But the count then, and now, is only approximate. “Not all temples are registered with us. Some villages put joss sticks in an urn with rice and have a nun that visits occasionally. Is that a temple? Perhaps, but not known to us,” said an association staff member.

Tracking informal giving

“Why do you need to know how much we gave? Is it not enough that we did?” asked the nun overseeing one of the most well-known Buddhist pagodas in the central city of Hue, Tay Linh temple, who goes by the name of Sister True Compassion.

Buddhist temples file annual reports with the national Vietnamese Buddhist Association which lists donation amounts and how the money was spent: Surviving families of canoes which sank; children in a leper colony; cancer patient’s home visit. And in late 2011 when storms battered the southern tip of Vietnam, killing an estimated 85 and forcing another 13,000 families from their homes, Tay Linh temple’s disaster relief activities filled almost an entire page.

In 2011, the temple’s charity board, which Sister True Compassion heads alongside her position as vice-director of the regional charity board representing all Buddhist temples in Hue, calculated it gave some US$24,000 to communities hit by disaster.

When IRIN asked the national Buddhist association for a breakdown of how much money from overseas was sent to Buddhist temples in Vietnam, and how much money was donated to disaster relief efforts, officials said they had not formally analysed giving or disaster relief activities.

Not an uncommon response, noted local NGO Vietnam Asia Pacific Economic Centre, which published a study in 2011, with support from Asia Foundation, on philanthropic giving in Vietnam. The study noted that while in recent decades there has been “substantial individual giving... to alleviate the suffering of others particularly in times of disaster,” there has not been “systematic research or reports on giving patterns”.

Based on interviews with 200 households and 100 businesses nationwide, the NGO learned that “informal channels” - including pagodas, churches and community groups - received most charitable giving, while “official channels”- corporate organizations and funds for the poor - received but a fraction (27 percent in urban areas, 9.4 percent in rural ones).

“We do not work like formal organizations. Please do not call me a leader of anything,” said Sister True Compassion. “We are only trying to alleviate suffering and build compassion. That is all.”

Wednesday 16 January 2013

http://www.irinnews.org/Report/97256/Vietnam-s-Buddhist-response-to-disaster

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300 families missing due to rain disaster in Mozambique


The Mozambican authorities said on Tuesday that they are searching for 300 families who went missing due to a storm that hit the central province of Zambezia.

The families went missing in the districts of Mocuba, Milanje, Namarroi, and Gile, after their homes were swept away by the fury waters.

A team from the government, involving personnel from the country’s natural disasters office, the police and the army are looking for the missing ones.

The calamity has cut off several regions of Zambezia from the outside world, according to Rita Almeida, spokesperson for the National Disasters Management Technical Council (CTGC).

So far this year at least six people have died in severe storms in Mozambique and 572 have been displaced from their homes, she said. The six confirmed deaths were all reported from the northern city of Nampula. Some of the victims were drowned and others were electrocuted, when cables were blown down by strong winds.

The mayor of Nampula, Castro Namuaca, explained that some Nampula neighborhoods, such as Namutequeliua and Muatala are crossed by rivers, which people walk across without any difficulty in the dry season.

But they become raging torrents during the rains. “Some people were not sufficiently cautious, and were swept away by the waters, ” said Namuaca.

According to Almeida, two other deaths have been reported, but bodies have not yet confirmed them.

She said 447 people have been displaced in Panda, and 45 in Homoine, both districts in the southern province of Inhambane.

These CTGC figures do not take account of the destruction of houses in Nampula. According to the municipal authorities, over 1, 000 houses built of flimsy materials, state buildings and electricity transformers were damaged or destroyed.

The City Council is using sheets of tarpaulin to improvise shelter for those who have lost their homes.

The damage to the electricity supply occurred mostly in parts of the city that are plagued with illegal, clandestine connections to the grid, particularly the neighborhood of Namicopo.

The Mozambican Electricity Company (EDM) said it will take 150, 000 U.S. dollars to install a reliable electricity network in Namicopo.

The CTGC declared an “orange alert” across the country on Friday, and is preparing for possible flooding in the main river basins.

The National Water Board (DNA) has warned of significant rises in the levels of the Zambezi and Buzi rivers in the center of the country, the Messalo in the north and the Inhanombe in the south.

The Buzi reached flood alert level at Goonda, in Sofala province, on Sunday night, and the flood surge is now travelling downstream towards Buzi town.

The Zambezi is above flood alert level at Caia and Marromeu, on its lower stretches. The DNA also warned that one of the major rivers in the south of the country, the Save, may reach flood alert level at Massangena, in Gaza province, on Tuesday or Wednesday.

It is recommending that people take precautions, such as moving equipment and property away from river banks, and avoiding crossing rivers.

Tuesday 15 January 2013

http://www.nzweek.com/world/300-families-missing-due-to-rain-disaster-in-mozambique-42952/

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Two Bodies Found On Costa Concordia


The bodies of the two last missing victims of the Costa Concordia cruise ship disaster may have been found, according to reports in the Italian media.

The news comes exactly one year after the huge liner — more than twice as big as the Titanic — ran aground off the Tuscan coast of Giglio, Italy.

The Concordia struck a rock and capsized on Jan. 13 near the island of Giglio after captain Francesco Schettino allegedly drove the ship on an unauthorized route too close to shore, ripping a huge gash in the hull. The ship tumbled onto its side with more than 4,200 people aboard, and 32 lives were lost.

Among them, Sicilian passenger Maria Grazia Trecarichi and Indian crew member Russel Rebello are still unaccounted for and presumed dead.

“Not being able to give back these bodies to their families is now the biggest tragedy,” Franco Gabrielli, the head of Italy’s civil protection agency, said at a poignant day-long commemoration at Giglio on Sunday.

But according to reports in the Italian media, the bodies were known to be located in the most unreachable area of the wreck near the stern.

“I was told four months ago that my brother’s body had been found, but recovery is impossible until the rotating of the ship,” Kevin Rebello, Russel’s brother, told the daily Il Tirreno.

Engineer and fire brigade chief Ennio Aquilino confirmed that the two victims are most likely trapped near the stern, where the ship collapsed.

“That’s our guess. We won’t be able to reach the bodies until we move the ship,” he told the daily La Nazione.

But the companies undertaking the refloating and removal of the Concordia – American Titan Salvage and Italian firm Micoperi – denied that the missing bodies had been located in the wreck.

Meanwhile, Gabrielli told reporters that plans for what is considered the largest re-float in history were behind schedule.

He announced that the 950-foot-long, 116-foot-wide, 114,500-ton carcass of the Costa Concordia will be refloated and towed from Giglio’s waters no earlier than September.

Originally, officials said they hoped to tow the ship away and break it up by early 2013.

The cost of the operation has also risen from the $400 million originally estimated to $530 million.

Prosecutors are seeking a 20-year prison sentence for Captain Francesco Schettino. He is facing accusations of manslaughter, causing a shipwreck and abandoning the ship. Prosecutors say he caused the disaster by sailing too close to shore and maneuvering the ship “as if it were a canoe.”

Tuesday 16 January 2013

http://news.discovery.com/human/two-missing-bodies-likely-found-on-costa-concordia-130115.htm

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NBI returns to get DNA samplings from exhumed remains, relatives


The forensics team of the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) has returned here to get DNA samplings from the exhumed remains of unidentified victims who perished during typhoon Pablo on December 4.

At the public cemetery in Purok 4, Barangay Cabinuangan on Monday afternoon, MindaNews saw a team of the NBI’s Disaster Victim Identification (DVI), working on the remains exhumed from the niches and compartments that were temporarily sealed as of December 26.

Nearby, funeral parlor attendants sprayed disinfectants on the white caskets and body bags containing the remains.

A total of 384 bodies had been buried as of December 26. But the municipality’s records showed 426 “bodies found.” As of January 15, the number of “bodies found” had reached 437, Marlon Esperanza, information officer, said.

Esperanza acknowledged on December 27 that the figures do not tally. A total of 426 bodies were supposed to have been found, according to the Incident Command Center’s listing but only a total of 384 had been buried as of December 26, with the supposed remaining 42 bodies unaccounted for.

He explained they were still validating the list. But he noted that some relatives apparently claimed to have identified their loved ones from among the remains just so they could secure death certificates. Death certificates are required to avail of government’s P10,000 financial assistance for each slain relative, or to claim insurance.

Relatives of those who died had repeatedly asked them when the NBI would come to take their DNA samples, Esperanza said.

Bernardita Pebujot, municipal sanitary inspector, told MindaNews on Monday that the NBI team informed them they would finish the sample-taking at the cemetery in three days.

Pebujot said the team finished taking samples from 60 remains on Monday. At least 269 remains awaited exhumation for tissue sampling as of December 26.

Tissue sampling from the surviving relatives will be done in the municipal gym after the NBI is done with the cemetery samplings, she said.

New Bataan had the highest death toll of all the towns along Pablo’s path across Mindanao, Visayas and Luzon: some 400 out of at least 1,000 dead.

To commemorate the 40th day of their death, memorial walls were erected in two areas: at a makeshift shed outside the San Antonio de Padua parish on Sunday and a concrete wall at the former site of the barangay hall in Andap on Monday.

Fr. Edgar Tuling, parish priest, blessed the white streamer cloth containing the names of those who perished, shortly before the 8:30 a.m. mass on Sunday. Relatives lit candles and offered flowers in their memory.

A total of 527 names were listed but the list soon bore erasures and additions. As it turned out, some of those listed dead were actually alive while some of those who were killed were not listed.

Luciana Ditros, 53 of Purok 14, San Juan Village in Andap, told MindaNews her name was included among the dead but her slain husband, Pabian, 57, was not on the list. She said they borrowed the black pen marker used in writing the names, added Pabian, and struck lines across her name and her nine-year old nephew’s, Judito Chris Salopan, who was riding the motorcycle with his father on this Sunday morning.

Aside from Pabian, Salopan’s mother, Epifania and cousin Princess May Conate, 12, were also killed.

At the memorial wall in Andap at least 569 names of the dead and missing were handpainted. But before it was unveiled Monday morning, relatives and neighbors requested sign artists to delete the names of survivors and add the names of those who were slain but were not listed.

As of 1 p.m. Monday, 25 names had been deleted from the church memorial wall while 11 other names were added.

Tuling said it is good that relatives or neighbors are making the corrections – whether on delisting the name of a survivor, adding the name of a slain relative or correcting the spelling of names.

In Andap, two residents told the sign artist early Monday to change the spelling of Tulio to Julio.

There may be more misspelled names on the list but there may be no chance to make the corrections. In both memorial walls, most of the victims had the same family names, among them Abonero. Pontijon. Magbutong. Rebucas. Babag. Canillo. Unselagan.

Tuesday 15 January 2013

http://www.mindanews.com/top-stories/2013/01/16/nbi-returns-to-get-dna-samplings-from-exhumed-remains-relatives/

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Tuesday, 15 January 2013

In zee gevonden man stuurman Baltic Ace (in Dutch)


(translate with Google Translate at the bottom of the page)

De man die 19 december dood in de Noordzee werd gevonden, blijkt de eerste stuurman van de Baltic Ace te zijn. Dit vrachtschip verging op 5 december op ongeveer 75 kilometer uit de kust ter hoogte van Goeree-Overflakkee.

Van de 24 bemanningsleden konden er 13 worden gered. Vijf opvarenden werden dood geborgen, zes lichamen werden nog vermist. Met de vondst van de 31-jarige Poolse stuurman is het aantal vermisten nu nog vijf.

Het Korps landelijke politiediensten maakte dit dinsdag bekend. De politie kon de man identificeren aan de hand van vingerafdrukken.

Een Nederlandse kotter vond het lichaam van de Pool op 19 december ruim 20 mijl westelijk van IJmuiden. Het stoffelijke overschot werd door een reddingsboot geborgen en aan de politie overgedragen.

Duikers van de marine hebben afgelopen weken rond en onder het wrak van de Baltic Ace gezocht, maar troffen geen lichamen aan. De vermisten waren kort na de ramp al doodverklaard.

Tuesday 15 January 2013

http://www.telegraaf.nl/binnenland/21221508/__Stuurman_Baltic_Ace_gevonden__.html

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Landslide kills 6 in Bogor


Six people were killed when a landslide off a 30-meter cliff swept through 10 houses and a mosque in Cipayung, Bogor, West Java, on Tuesday.

The six victims were identified as Roni, 17; Aris, 50; Hendri, 7, and 45-year-old Karmina with her two children, Robi, 21, and Ita, 12.

Bogor Disaster Mitigation Agency (BPBD) head Yos Sudrajat said that the search and rescue team had found two victims, but were still searching for the four others.

“It was difficult for the team to find the victims because the area was inaccessible,” he said, adding that the rescue team was forced to search for the victims without heavy equipment.

Yos said that his agency had also provided a shelter for the victims whose houses had been destroyed. “We have sent 47 people to the shelter,” he said, as quoted by tempo.co.

A local resident, 30-year-old Suma, said the accident occurred at around 6 a.m. “The rain had been pounding the village since last night and suddenly we heard a rumbling sound above our houses,” he said.

Tuesday 15 January 2013

http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2013/01/15/landslide-kills-6-bogor.html

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Spectrometry to the rescue!


The next time a major earthquake strikes it could be an ion mobility spectrometer (IMS), not a sniffer dog, searching for people trapped in the rubble. New research has demonstrated that the instrument can detect a pattern of 12 chemicals that signal the presence of life. This could eventually lead to a handheld device to guide search and rescue teams.

Using chemistry to find people trapped in disaster sites makes sense, according to Wolfgang Vautz, of the Leibniz Institute for Analytical Chemistry, Germany, who helped develop the techique. Sniffer dogs are normally used for this purpose, but they need breaks and can get confused when there are lots of dead bodies around.

Vautz’s idea was to find survivors by detecting signature chemicals in human breath. To identify candidate molecules Vautz and his team sealed volunteer graduate students in a small office for six hours. The air from the room was sampled and put through a GC–IMS instrument – the latter is a type of spectrometer that separates ions according to their size and shape.

Carbon dioxide concentration was the control variable in Vautz’s experiments, as this could only originate from the volunteers’ respiration. At a real-life disaster site though, the situation could be complicated by other potential CO2 sources like fires. IMS analysis revealed that 12 simple organic chemicals – such as octanal and benzaldehyde – emanated from the graduates and increased in line with the CO­2.

By taking samples from inside a void and measuring their chosen chemicals the researchers could reliably discern whether a human was inside. Each sample took three minutes to analyse, and the test was very sensitive. Vautz says it even showed when one volunteer left briefly to use the bathroom.

Stephen Barton, a principal lecturer in analytical chemistry at Kingston University London, UK, says the concept is ‘interesting, not least because of the future possible advances, such as getting an indication of the health of the trapped person’.

Health monitoring is one of Vautz’s longer-term goals for the device. But the immediate challenge is deploying the technique in disaster zones, rather than a laboratory. Vautz says his team ‘struggled’ to carry the 25kg instrument around in a recent field test. But he is confident they can lighten it by choosing only the hardware necessary to analyse the 12 chemicals. ‘There are many examples of handheld IMS detectors already in use,’ he says, ‘one being for the detection of chemical warfare agents.'

Another obstacle is finding out how chemicals from fires and breached industrial faculties would interact with the analytes in real life. ‘Next we will need to find a partner from the search and rescue services to work with, so we can test this properly, in an ethical way,’ Vautz says.

Tuesday 15 January 2013

http://www.rsc.org/chemistryworld/2013/01/ion-mobility-spectrometry-sniffer-dog-natural-disaster-survivors

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Eight killed as truck turns turtle in Gazipur


Eight people were killed and three others injured as a fertiliser-laden truck overturned on the Dhaka bypass road near Ulukhola Bridge in Kaliganj upazila in the early hours of Monday.

Identities of the deceased could not be known immediately after the accident.

Police said a Rajshahi-bound truck loaded with fertiliser from Sylhet skidded off and turned upside down on a road divider in the area at about 3:00am after its driver lost control over the steering wheel, leaving eight people dead on the spot and three others injured. The people were travelling in the fertilizer-laden truck.

Police said the eight passengers died on the spot and three suffered injuries as the fertilizer bags fell on them.

On information, police recovered the bodies and rescued three injured removing piled up sacks of fertiliser.

Of the injured, one Mujibur was admitted to Tongi Upazila Health Complex and two others were sent to local clinics.

Sub-inspector Murad Hossain of Kaliganj police station said 12 day labourers were on the truck carrying fertilizer.

It is assumed that they could be hailed from different areas of the northern region and were travelling back home.

But police failed to trace whereabouts of the driver and helper of the truck.

Tuesday 15 January 2013

http://www.dailyprimenews.com/details.php?id=5231

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Ten killed in Sukhothai collision


Ten people, among them a five-year-old boy, were killed on Tuesday in a head-on road accident in Sukhothai's Khiri Mat district.

The tragedy took place on the Sukhothai-Kampaengphet road at about 8.30am when a green pickup loaded with workers heading out of Muang district crashed head-on with a bronze pickup heading to Muang district.

Police arriving at the scene found bodies scattered on the road while others remained trapped in the vehicles.

The driver of the bronze pickup, who was identified as Shinakorn Soikham, was found dead at the wheel. Three passengers in the green pickup were killed and trapped in the car. Four of eight passengers who were thrown out of the back were killed. The rest were injured and rushed to a hospital nearby. Two of them, a mother, known only as Nam as well as her five-year-old son succumbed to their injuries.

Police are investigating the cause of the crash.

Tuesday 15 January 2013

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/aec/Ten-killed-in-Sukhothai-collision-30197954.html

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