Tuesday, 26 March 2013

10 killed, 2 missing as boat sinks in Liguasan River in Maguindanao


Ten people drowned and two others were reported missing when a motorized boat capsized at dusk Monday in a deep portion of the Liguasan marsh near Sultan sa Barongis in Maguindanao, officials reported yesterday.

Sultan sa Barongis Mayor Allan Angas, chairman of the municipal disaster council, said the bodies of the 10 victims had been recovered. As of last night, rescue teams were still looking for the two missing passengers.

“There were 16 passengers in all. The victims came from a family gathering and were on their way home to our town,” Angas told The STAR.

Angas said barangay officials and fishermen who joined the search teams recovered the bodies of the victims.

He said the police, military and local members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front also helped in the search and rescue operations.

Angas said the four passengers who were rescued have returned to their homes.

He said the overloaded boat overturned when strong winds caused waves in the Liguasan marsh, a 220,000-hectare swampy area bounded by Maguindanao, North Cotabato and Sultan Kudarat provinces.

Tuesday 26 March 2013

http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2013/03/27/924427/mishap-marsh-leaves-10-dead

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10 Bodies Recovered at Site of West Java Landslide


Search and rescue teams have discovered two more bodies in Cililin, West Bandung, bringing the total number of deaths to 10, after a landslide buried nine houses, the National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB) said.

Seven others are still missing as some 150 rescuers search through the disaster area. Search efforts were put on hold on Monday after heavy rains triggered another landslide.

“Nine people have not been found yet, including a six-month-old baby girl,” BNPB spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said. “Six people sustained injuries [in the landslide] and were treated at Hasan Sadikin Hospital in Bandung.”

At least 17 people and nine houses were buried in Monday morning’s landslide after heavy rains pounded the subdistrict. The West Bandung mayor has placed the district in a state of emergency until March 31.

The district administration set up some evacuation shelters to help those affected by the disaster.

It is the second deadly landslide to strike Indonesia this month.

Three people were killed and one injured after heavy downpours triggered a landslide in Papua’s provincial capital.

Tuesday 26 March 2013

http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/10-bodies-recovered-at-site-of-west-java-landslide/582143

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Amid drug war, a mystery about missing bodies


Heavy gunfire echoed along the main thoroughfare and across several neighborhoods in a firefight that lasted for hours, leaving perforated and burned vehicles scattered across the border city.

Social media exploded with reports of dozens dead. Witnesses saw at least 12.

But the hours of intense gun battles in Reynosa on March 10 gave way to an official body count the next day of a head-scratching two.

The men who handle the city’s dead insist the real figure is upward of 35, likely even more than 50. Ask where those bodies are and they avert their eyes and shift in their seats.

Cartel members, they say, are retrieving and burying their own casualties.

“Physically, there are no bodies,” said Ramon Martinez, director of Funerales San Jose in Reynosa, who put the toll at between 40 and 50. “It’s very delicate.”

If Reynosa is an example, even the government can’t count how many are dying from drug violence. The Felipe Calderon government stopped counting in September 2011. Since President Enrique Pena Nieto took office Dec. 1, the government has issued monthly statistics, saying that January killings were down slightly from December, and that February saw the lowest number of killings in 40 months — without providing numbers for the other 39 months.

Even officials have trouble settling on a figure. In April, the mayor of a town in Sinaloa state told news media that at least 40 people had died in shootouts between armed men and soldiers. State police later said seven. Local news media said 13.

Mexico City’s Reforma newspaper is keeping its own count. It says the killings in Pena Nieto’s first 100 days exceed those in the first 100 days of his predecessor, who intensified the country’s assault on organized crime.

In Reynosa, the fight for territory has caused at least four major gunbattles this month, the result of a split within the Gulf Cartel after the Mexican government made significant blows to its leadership. The biggest was the capture of Gulf capo Jorge Eduardo Costilla Sanchez in September, leaving a power vacuum and the anticipation that the battle would intensify south of the Texas border in northeast Mexico, a region that has seen some of the most horrific violence.

Michael Villarreal, also known as “Gringo Mike,” had moved against the man recently appointed by Gulf cartel boss Mario “Pelon” Ramirez Trevino to run the cartel’s business in Reynosa, U.S. law enforcement official familiar with the situation said Monday.

The local boss heard Villarreal was coming for him and, with Ramirez’s support, beat back Villarreal and his men.

“They went in to whack him and got whacked themselves,” said the official, who was not authorized to speak publicly and had no independent count of how many people died in the battle.

State authorities said that “armed civilians” fought their way through the city across the border from McAllen, Texas, on March 10, blocking streets and leaving two bystanders dead. The day after the battle, a spokesman at the local army base said the fighting was among “delinquents,” usually shorthand for cartel gunmen.

“It’s illogical,” said one funeral director, who asked not to be identified for safety reasons, speaking four days later. “People here agree that more than 50 have died.”

After all, the fighting lasted for hours in a densely populated city and the government said it seized 22 vehicles afterward. The local media as usual reported nothing, leaving residents to rely on Twitter and other social media, where details can be exaggerated.

That funeral director said his company used to pick up the bodies from shootouts and take them to the city’s morgue. But that stopped about a year and a half ago when his management decided to step back and a new funeral home started taking all that business. He said they let it go because they often weren’t getting paid for their services in those cases, but he added, “We live with fear here.”

His company still drives bodies to the morgue, “but not this kind of people,” not people who die in shootouts, he said.

A man washing down a forensics van at the city morgue under the gaze of soldiers referred questions about the body count to a supervisor downtown. That supervisor kicked inquiries upstairs, where an investigator with the state attorney general’s office pulled out two thin manila folders and said, “officially, only these two.”

They were a 37-year-old taxi driver shot through his windshield and an 8-year-old boy shot inside his father’s car at a convenience store. His father was also hit in the neck, but survived.

An employee at another funeral home, who also declined to give his name for safety reasons, said they too used to go to the crime scenes to transport bodies to the morgue, but now they don’t bother. Either the bodies are already gone or the authorities take them.

“People say there were many (bodies), but where are they?” he asked.

His competitors say Martinez at Funerales San Jose knows the answer. Without logos on their shirts or vehicles, San Jose’s people pick up the bodies, competitors say.

One competitor at first said he had no idea where Funerales San Jose was located. Later he acknowledged he did know, but was afraid to share it.

San Jose is a white stucco building on a small lot in a residential neighborhood near schools and a supermarket. Unlike its competitors’ polished showrooms, plush furnishings and uniformed attendants, it is a small, spare operation.

A young man in T-shirt and jeans sat on a chair in its empty gravel lot playing with his phone. Martinez arrived in a pickup with flashy rims and welcomed a visitor into his office. The cramped room, which smelled heavily of cigarettes, doubled as the showroom. With a wave at the eight caskets, some still wrapped in plastic, stacked along two walls, he said, “I’m tiny, small.”

One competitor said Martinez cremates the gunmen he retrieves. Martinez said that was ridiculous and guessed that the cartel takes them to their own secret graves.

Martinez, the only funeral director who agreed to be identified, didn’t seem surprised by the allegation though.

“It’s like all businesses, there’s jealousy,” he said.

Martinez is the new guy in town. He expanded about two years ago from Diaz Ordaz, a smaller town and hotbed of cartel activity about 25 miles up the border. That’s about when his competitors say they stopped getting the bodies from shootouts. Martinez said Reynosa’s established parlors just don’t like the competition.

Word had apparently trickled onto the street that Funerales San Jose does the mopping up. Martinez said that since Sunday’s shooting, at least 10 people had come to him looking for their loved ones. He declined to share their contact information saying it was confidential. He said he took down their descriptions and promised to call if they turn up, but he swears he hasn’t received any bodies.

Authorities drive by his business all the time, Martinez said. If he were taking bodies without the proper documentation, he’d wind up in jail, he said.

“I provide a public service like any other,” he said.

That afternoon, March 14, a few miles away on Miguel Hidalgo, one of Reynosa’s main arteries, traffic glided slowly through the city’s center where the four lanes curve to parallel a canal.

A silver Jeep Grand Cherokee was parked on one corner. A young man, clad in jeans and a casual shirt faced traffic, his head swiveling from side to side. He held an AK-47 style assault rifle with its signature curved ammunition clip. More men, similarly armed, piled out of the Jeep and moved with purpose along the side of a building where still more armed men waited. The Jeep and a large grey pickup briefly backed into traffic and then quickly disappeared up the side street.

Traffic continued unabated. A block away people strolled down the sidewalk, and the street window washers splashed and scraped the windshields of cars waiting at the stoplight.

In the hours that followed, social media burst again with reports of gunfights and photos of bullet-riddled trucks.

The next day, the state announced that gunmen had battled soldiers and state police at various points in the city.

Officially, one gunman was killed.

Tuesday 26 March 2013

http://www.azcentral.com/news/free/20130326mexico-drug-war-mystery-about-missing-bodies.html

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Bodies in Qaddafi’s secret morgue identified


Two of the corpses kept in the secret morgue in Shara Zawia Hospital since 1984 have been identified as those of Hadi Masoud Umrani from Zwara and Azhari Saleh Mohamed Al-Megrahi from Tripoli’s Bab Ben-Ghashir district. They were identified through the use of DNA samples.

The identification was announced yesterday, Sunday, by the Ministry of the Martyrs and the Missing.

According to the Ministry’s press office director, Hamad Al-Malki, the next of kin have already been informed by the Ministry’s Undersecretary, Mohamed Sidi Ibrahim, and a report of the procedures taken been forwarded to the Attorney General. The latter is expected to now give the permission for the bodies to be handed over for burial.

The secret mortuary was discovered on 30 August 2011, shortly after the liberation of Tripoli. The colonel in charge of security for the hospital told revolutionaries that it contained the bodies of those who had been hanged for their part in the audacious but abortive attack on Qaddafi’s Bab al Aziziya barracks in 1984, organised by the National Front for the Salvation of Libya.

Sixteen bodies were kept on ice in the morgue on Qaddafi’s orders for the next 27 years. In that time they became unrecognisable, dried out and blacked over time.

The Ministry has appealed to people to contact it and report their missing relatives and give DNA samples to facilitate the identification of the remaining nine unidentified bodies found in Shara Zawia Hospital.

Monday 26 March 2013

http://www.libyaherald.com/2013/03/25/bodies-in-qaddafis-secret-morgue-identified/

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Monday, 25 March 2013

UN staff to aid survivors after refugee-camp fire, victim identification ongoing


The UN refugee agency will dispatch social workers to assist refugees affected by a fire that claimed at least 36 lives and destroyed hundreds of dwellings at a camp in Mae Hong Son's Khun Yuam district on Friday.

The inferno has left many survivors scarred, especially children and the elderly. More than 100 refugees were injured in the incident. Four of the injured refugees are in critical condition.

The UNHCR will seek support from the government to station Thai social workers at the camp, which shelters about 3,700 refugees, most of whom are Christians.

Htoowea Lweh, a member of the Karenni Refugee Committee, said most of the elderly refugees and children had been left traumatised. Her team needs to talk with them and help them to recover, she said.

"We have found that most of the children are shaken. They do not leave their parents' sides. And they are still frightened after the devastating fire," she said. About 520 children aged less than 5 live in the camp.

Interior Minister Charupong Ruangsuwan said yesterday that the bodies of most of the dead were found near the cliffs or in the hills near the camp. "We will draw up a proper plan to prevent such an incident from recurring," he said.

The process of identifying the victims has already begun. A total of 23 bodies had been identified as of press time.

Police and doctors expected to identify 13 more very soon. "But if DNA tests are needed, officials may need more time. The results will be available within seven days in that case," Charupong said.

Police Bureau Region 5 deputy commissioner Pol Maj-General Chamnan Ruadrew said the number of people killed in the fire was confirmed at 36. According to the latest report from the Mae Hong Son Public Health Office, however, 36 refugees were killed and one was still missing.

The Public Health Ministry has dispatched communicable disease control officials, sanitation officers, psychologists, psychiatrists, medical units, food and water to assist the refugees. More than 500 mosquito nets treated with pyrethroid have been distributed to the refugees to prevent them from contracting malaria.

Health Minister Dr Pradit Sinthawanarong said officials dispatched to the camp will monitor the situation to prevent the spread of communicable diseases borne by insects such as mosquitoes.

Psychiatrists and psychologists from Khun Yuam Hospital, Sri Sangwan Hospital and Thanyarak Hospital in Mae Hong Son and a team of interpreters will be working to screen refugees and rehabilitate those who are in need of help.

A team of medical personnel from Khun Yuam Hospital will also provide treatment for the victims.

Of the injured, two were being treated at Maharat Hospital in Chiang Mai and seven at Mae Hong Son Hospital.

A centre to accept public donations has been established in Mae Hong Son provincial hall and at every district hall in the province. Donations are being accepted via Krung Thai Bank's Mae Hong Son branch, account number 508-0-256-109.

Mae Hong Son Governor Naruemol Palwat said the province is assisting the refugees by providing food, distributing 800 tents with support from the UNHCR, facilitating medical assistance provided by the International Red Cross and medical teams from Mae Hong Son province.

Armed Forces Development commissioner General Sommai Kaodira said his unit has sent mobile kitchens and water trucks to help the affected refugees.

The disaster, which has left more than 2,300 refugees homeless, is believed to have started when a cooking fire got out of control.

Monday 25 March 2013

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/national/UN-staff-to-aid-survivors-after-refugee-camp-fire-30202620.html

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A pre conclusion about the period of Mathale mass grave


Kelaniya University Postgraduate Institute Professor Raaj Somadeva who is probing the Maatale mass grave says that a pre-conclusion has been arrived at with regard to the period of the mass grave found at the Maatale hospital grounds.

The Professor said that it was possible to reach these conclusions based on gold rings recovered from the grave.

The Professor also said that attention had also been drawn on a garbage dumping site near the grave.

The Professor said that the decaying of bone fragments had been accelerated as a result of the decaying of the garbage.

The Professor said that the 54-page report the Atomic Energy Authority and he had jointly prepared had been presented on 23rd of February.

This mass grave was discovered on November 23rd last year while preparing the ground for constructing the Bio Gas Unit at the Maatale Hospital Grounds.

The excavations of the Maatale mass grave ended on February 12th.

During these excavations while 154 human bone fragments were recovered, of these 141 were human skulls

Monday 25 March 2013

http://www.hirunews.lk/55898

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Deadly landslide hits Indonesia's main island


A government official has said a landslide triggered by torrential rain has killed at least six people and left 18 others missing on Indonesia's main island of Java.

Sutopo Purwo Nugroho of the Disaster Mitigation Agency on Monday said nine houses were buried when mud gushed down from surrounding hills just after dawn Monday in Cililin village, West Bandung district.

He said rescuers pulled out six bodies, including four children, hours after the landslide.

Hundreds of police, soldiers and residents were digging through the debris, using their bare hands, shovels and hoes in search of the others reported missing.

Seasonal downpours cause dozens of landslides and flash floods each year in Indonesia, a vast chain of 17,000 islands where millions of people live in mountainous areas or near fertile flood plains.

Last month, at least 13 people were killed and hundreds forced to leave their homes after landslides and floods triggered by torrential rains hit North Sulawesi province's capital city of Manado.

Monday 25 March 2013

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/asia-pacific/2013/03/201332552655912999.html

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Mexican forensic expert bathes bodies to solve crimes


Mexican forensic expert Alejandro Hernandez dips dry, yellowish cadavers in a see-through bath, hoping his technique to rehydrate mummified bodies will solve murders in crime-infested Ciudad Juarez.

The city bordering Texas has endured drug-related violence and a wave of murders of women in recent years, with bodies dumped anywhere and drying up quickly in the desert climate, complicating the task of identifying victims and their cause of death. With his special solution, whose recipe he keeps secret, Hernandez can rehydrate bodies, making facial features as well as gunshot or stab wounds reappear.

"It is common with the climate in Ciudad Juarez...for bodies to mummify or stiffen, with the skin stretched like drums," Hernandez, an expert at the Chihuahua state prosecutor's office, told AFP.

"It has always been a great satisfaction every time we were able to identify or determine the cause of death in the 150 cases that we participated in."

The scientist has plenty of work on his hands.

Juarez became infamous in the 1990s when hundreds of women were killed in an inexplicable homicidal binge that cast a dark shadow over the city.

The "femicides" were followed by a surge of violence between powerful drug cartels that left more than 10,500 people dead in the past six years.

Sometimes, victims are discovered in a mummified state years after they were buried, often making it impossible to identify them. This is where Hernandez comes in.

Techniques to rehydrate fingers in order to get fingerprints have existed for more than a decade, but Hernandez began using his method to restore entire bodies in 2008. He is currently seeking a patent to protect his secret method.

Elizabeth Gardner, a forensic science professor at the University of Alabama who saw a body treated by Hernandez, said that the "process works, the corpse was restored and looked like it could be identified from its facial features."

"To the extent of my knowledge, this is the only method for rehydrating a corpse," she said. "This technique will be most useful in dry areas, like Juarez. It's labor - and materials - intensive, but it will be useful when other techniques fail."

With the help of assistants in a lab that smells of death and chemicals, a cadaver is raised in a harness, gingerly lowered into the hermetically sealed bath, and left to soak for four to seven days. Sometimes, technicians just dip a body part.

"We spin (the body) around the whole time until the human parts or the cadaver regain a more natural aspect," Hernandez said. "Then you can observe moles, scars, blemishes, pathological or traumatic characteristics, which allow you to find the cause of death."

Hernandez freezes decomposing bodies until they dry up, and then he soaks them in his special bath.

"We are only doing this here in Ciudad Juarez," he said, adding that the process is inexpensive.

The brutal drug war between the Sinaloa and Juarez cartels has waned in the past year, dramatically lowering the homicide rate in the city that was once the murder capital of Mexico.

But bodies continue to pile up, with men still disappearing and human remains being discovered around the desert city of 1.3 million people.

Just this month, mothers of people who disappeared worked with the police to look for remains in a desert area near Juarez, and found bones they hope to identify one day.

Monday 25 March 2013

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iBrz2JTP6ugGi80vZXXpDItxFatw?docId=CNG.7437232f8a6d540d977d91c786d42cc0.481

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Communities can protect themselves from natural disasters


Fewer communities will be affected by natural disasters if they become actively involved in disaster preparedness and emergency response activities, says a representative of a prominent NGO.

"Every village is different and their own people understand what happened in the past and what may happen in the future," Oxfam Indonesia country director Richard Mawer told The Jakarta Post.

Mawer was speaking in relation to the progress of Building Resilience in Eastern Indonesia, a disaster risk reduction project that has been developed by Oxfam Indonesia in 16 districts since June 2009.

Communities in Nuri and Welo villages in Larantuka regency, one of the Building Resilience project sites in East Nusa Tenggara (NTT), can now avoid significant damage during a disaster after they developed volunteer village preparedness teams to map out disaster risks and identify how to minimize them.

Mawer said the village teams would play a major role in protecting their villages from future floods, landslides, forest fires and even volcano eruptions. The teams looked at a whole range of issues, from analyzing the risks to understanding how they responded to these risks, and then took the necessary action to avoid damage caused by disasters.

These actions included cleaning river beds and building up river walls, planting trees to slow down the water flow and training villagers with first aid skills and on how to build temporary shelters.

“They are looking at what they can do to ensure that the water coming down the hill will not wash away their houses and put their families at risk,” said Mawer.

Through the program, women have been demonstrating what important roles they can play in village affairs, including in disaster preparedness and emergency response and in identifying future priorities for village development funds. Some of them have also initiated credit unions for women.

"It's encouraging to see that the Regional Disaster Mitigation Agency [BPBD] Larantuka plans to replicate this approach to all 250 villages in the region over the coming years," said Mawer.

A Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) Forum established in Larantuka in 2012 ensured that the BPBD, local communities and other stakeholders, including other government ministries, local NGOs and religious organizations, could work closely together and learn from each other in dealing with disaster risks.

Sunday 24 March 2013

http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2013/03/24/communities-can-protect-themselves-natural-disasters-says-oxfam.html

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Painful search for Argentina's disappeared


Marcos Queipo grew up in a place where dead bodies would fall from the sky.

In the late 1970s he was a mechanic who worked in the different islands of the Parana Delta, 200km (12.4 miles) north of the capital, Buenos Aires.

"I remember seeing these military planes throwing these strange packages over the area. I did not know what they were," he says.

"But I then saw these packages floating on the river banks. When I opened them I was aghast. The packages were dead bodies."

These events happened when Argentina's last military government was in power - from 1976 to 1983.

"At first, we did not know what these packages carried inside. But then it became known that they were human bodies”

The junta was then leading a brutal crackdown on political dissidents, a period known as the "Dirty War". Official accounts say almost 20,000 people were "disappeared" by the regime, but human rights groups say the figure is at least 30,000.

Fewer than 600 have been found and identified since then by the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team, a non-governmental scientific organisation.

The disappearances have left a deep scar in Argentine society for decades - in particular on those who had a relative taken away by the security forces at the time.

The pattern was similar for those arrested. Many were taken from their homes in the middle of the night, tortured at clandestine detention centres and then disposed of.

After years of investigations, it is thought that some bodies were destroyed with dynamite and others buried in unknown common graves, but the majority were thrown from planes into the Atlantic Ocean.

Now a new book could help provide some answers to one of Argentina's long lasting mysteries.

Written by journalist Fabian Magnotta, it is based on numerous and never-heard-before witness accounts, is pointing towards the Parana Delta as a possible mass graveyard for the disappeared.

'Death flights'

"You would see the planes in the sky, opening their hatch and dropping the packages over the area," remembers Jose Luis Pinazo, who for 40 years has driven the school boat of the area, transporting the children that live on the delta's islands.

"Sometimes you would see them every day, at other times twice a week."

"At first, we did not know what these packages carried inside. But then it became known that they were human bodies, many found on the river banks," he adds.

Mr Magnotta's book collects accounts from islanders in the delta who found bodies hanging from tree tops - in one case a body fell straight into someone's house.

"I would tell the children not to look at the bodies in the river. It was not something nice," says Mr Pinazo.

The testimonies gathered in this investigation have now been handed over to prosecutors in the current trial about the "Death Flights", in which seven people (including several former military pilots) stand accused of throwing prisoners from planes after the military seized power in 1976.

"The things I saw were not something you would talk about with others. Those were difficult times," says Mr Pinazo.

Marcos Queipo remembers that when he started finding bodies along the river, he decided to go to the police to report them.

"But they told me: 'Shut up or the same will happen to you.'"

After the junta's coup, officers at all police stations in Argentina were interviewed by the military. Many have been convicted for their roles in human rights abuses that occurred at the time.

"The people in the Parana Delta are known to be very reserved and not likely to open up to outsiders. But they also kept quiet because of fear of the military," says Mr Magnotta.

Slow process

Mr Magnotta lives in the nearby city of Gualeguaychu. For years he slowly worked to gain the trust of the islanders with the help of a local friend who lives in the delta's main town, Villa Paranacito.

Many were initially wary of speaking out, but the trials and convictions of former military officers that have taken place in Argentina in recent years have given courage to those who were afraid of telling what they knew.

Both Mr Queipo and Mr Pinazo only agreed to speak to the BBC if their names or faces were not shown. But after doing the interview, they both changed their minds and accepted being identified.

"Since my book was published more and more people have come forward to give testimony of the horrible things they saw here during the dictatorship," says Mr Magnotta.

He says that now, at least twice a week, he is getting emails or calls from people who want to add information to his research.

"The publication of this investigation has helped those who were reluctant to speak before," he adds.

Hope

Families of the disappeared are watching closely to see what this new research can add to their decades-long search.

"I still have hopes of finding the remains of my son. If I ever find them it will help me enormously," says Santa Teresita Dezorzi, who at 82 is still politically active. She is the leader of the human rights organisation Mothers of May Square of Gualeguaychu.

Her son Oscar was kidnapped by security forces on 10 August 1976. He was arrested in the middle of the night, forced half naked into a vehicle, and never seen again.

He was a member of Montoneros, an armed guerrilla group which fought the military in the late 1970s.

"Of course I have thought long about the possibility that his remains are here, in the nearby delta. How can I not think about that?," she says.

At the time of his arrest Oscar had a five-month old son, Emanuel, who is now 37. As for his grandmother, the disappearance of his father is a burden he has carried all of his life.

"I remember when I was a child that people would look at me as if they knew something I did not. Families like ours, who have lived with a situation like this, are different. We are not a normal family," says Emanuel.

Last December a court found four former military and police officers guilty of the illegal arrest, torture and disappearance of Oscar Dezorzi and three other left-wing activists from Gualeguaychu.

But for the Dezorzis, the trial produced no information on where Oscar's remains might be.

"I don't know why they still have to keep hurting us. My grandmother has done nothing wrong. I have done nothing wrong. Then why not tell us where my dad is," says Emanuel Dezorzi.

"There are many families in Argentina destroyed by this, just like us. We have gone through 37 years of not knowing. To have a relative disappeared is a wound that does not close until the person appears again."

Sunday 24 March 2013

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-21884147

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Sunday, 24 March 2013

Group to exhume bodies of immigrants buried South Texas cemetery in hopes of identification


Starting in May, a group will exhume the remains of dozens of illegal immigrants laid to rest at Falfurrias Cemetery in South Texas in hopes of identifying them.

At the end of last year, 35 immigrants who had died in Brooks County were still unidentified, and immigrant groups called for the use of DNA tests to help with the process.

The San Antonio Express-News reports that the county's decision to partner with Baylor University physical anthropologist Lori Baker's group Reuniting Families to identify the remains defused those tensions. But challenges ahead for the forensic anthropologists include lost markers for some of the graves.

Last year, ranchers and law enforcement in Brooks County found 129 decomposing bodies and skeletal remains of illegal immigrants — by far the most in any Texas county. That number was about double what it was the year before and six times higher than in 2010.

Brooks County is a patchwork of ranchland with about 7,200 residents. To circumvent the Falfurrias border checkpoint, human smuggling routes cut through miles of thick brush in the rural county. During summer months in the area, temperatures climb into the 100s.

Amid a rising number of unidentified dead over the past decade, Baker has taken on the task of identifying and repatriating the remains of illegal immigrants scattered throughout morgues and cemeteries in the Southwestern U.S.

Raquel Rubio-Goldsmith, a lecturer in the Department of Mexican American Studies at the University of Arizona, has spent the past two years researching how each county along the U.S. Mexico border processes immigrant remains.

For instance, while Texas offers guidance on how to handle remains, discretion and practices vary according to jurisdiction.

"When we look at the total number of deaths on the border, it's very difficult to know if they are right because nobody really knows how many people die in Texas," Rubio-Goldsmith said. "There are hundreds of people reported missing, and there are hundreds of people unidentified, and yet there's no way of putting those two things together right now."

For fiscal year 2012, the Border Patrol reported 463 migrant deaths in the Southwest border sector, and though the Tucson sector, which at 170 recorded the most deaths, nearly 60 percent of all deaths occurred in Texas, the greatest number of them in Brooks County.

Sunday 24 March 2013

http://www.therepublic.com/view/story/1d14bb4d4fb34af0bea9da870b3569c2/TX--Identifying-Immigrants

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Eight fishermen die, 15 missing in rough seas in Senegal


Eight fishermen died and 15 others went missing after their canoes capsized in rough seas off the coast of Senegal, hospital sources and owners of the boats said Sunday.

"The morgue has received eight dead bodies," said Babacar Thiandoum, director of the Saint-Louis hospital in northern Senegal, where the incident took place.

"A total of 15 other fishermen who went out to sea didn't came back," Alassane Fall, owner of one of the canoes, told AFP - a figure confirmed by the other boat owners.

Another eight people survived and are in hospital.

Commercial fishing is one of Senegal's main export industries, but it has in recent years been hit by dwindling fish numbers and falling revenues.

Sunday 24 March 2013

http://www.modernghana.com/news/454600/1/eight-fishermen-die-15-missing-in-rough-seas-in-se.html

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Death toll in Bangladesh tornado climbs to 23, nearly 500 injured


The death toll from a tornado that swept through some 25 villages in eastern Bangladesh, rose to 23 with rescuers finding three more bodies in debris, a day after the deadly storm which also left nearly 500 people injured. The storm which hit the area on Friday, left a trail of destruction in 20 villages of Brahmanbaria sadar, Bijoynagar and Akhaura upazilas.

"Three more bodies were recovered on Saturday. One of them was Yasmin, who is the mother of two young boys and was found inside the tank of a sanitary latrine," a local journalist at the site told PTI by phone. Television footage showed villagers under an open sky around their flattened homes awaiting relief as the storm that lasted for some 15 minutes wreaked havoc in the area. Survivors said the storm blew away many people off the ground and several of the dead were found yards from their houses or where they were when the disaster struck. Rail travel between the capital and three districts Chittagong, Sylhet and Noakhali was suspended, as tracks were blocked by trees uprooted by the tornado.

Officials said the tornado led to partial collapse of the Brahmanbaria jail among other damaged buildings, killing a prison guard but all inmates were secure in the facility and officials were safe. "The storm was so powerful that it overturned dozens of motor vehicles and big trucks and uprooted dozens of trees and electricity poles," a local official told a private TV channel at the scene. Initial reports said at least 10 people were killed and a newspaper put the toll for the injured at 500 in the storm that lashed the distant villages in Brahmanbaria district.

Police superintendent of Brahmanbaria, M Moniruzzaman said some 100 people were rushed to hospitals, over a dozen of them with critical wounds. Bangladesh is among the countries most prone to natural floods, tornadoes and cyclones.

Sunday 24 March 2013

http://ibnlive.in.com/news/death-toll-in-bangladesh-tornado-climbs-to-23-nearly-500-injured/380807-2.html

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Forest fire ruled out as death toll hits 37


Local forestry officials have insisted no forest fire occurred in the area that day, RFD deputy director-general Rerngchai Prayoonwet said.

Almost 40 people were killed and more than 100 injured in the blaze at Mae Surin camp, which is situated in Mae Surin forest reserve and Doi Wiang Lah wildlife sanctuary and is home to about 3,000 refugees.

Witnesses told police that they saw embers being blown by the wind land on the thatched roof of a refugee house, sparking a fire which quickly spread to other houses.

However, officials from the RFD and the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation Department, which oversee forest land in Khun Yuam district, believe the fire started inside the camp.

Mae Hong Son governor Naruemon Palawat said Sunday she had directed Khum Yuam police to investigate the cause of the fire.

She said while a forest fire had not been ruled out, police believed the blaze may have been caused by people cooking. Arson has been ruled out.

The fire broke out in Zone 1 and Zone 4 of the camp about 4pm and was brought under control about 6pm.

Authorities Sunday stopped searching for bodies, with the official death toll at 37 with 115 injured.

The latest casualty was a male refugee who was seriously injured and succumbed at Nakornping Hospital in Chiang Mai Sunday, Khun Yuam assistant district chief Samreong Sudsawat said.

The 37 dead victims comprise 21 males and 16 females. Ten of the dead were children. Nineteen of the injured refugees were seriously hurt.

Pol Maj Gen Chamnan Ruadraew, deputy commander of the Provincial Police Region 5, said officials were working to identify the dead. A Christian burial rite was held for the victims Sunday. More than 400 makeshift houses at the Mae Surin camp were ruined, leaving more than 2,300 refugees homeless. Two firefighters were also killed and five others seriously injured as they raced to tackle the Mae Surin blaze when the six-wheel lorry they were travelling in plunged into a ravine between kilometre markers 83 and 84 in Pai district.

The camp is one of nine refugee camps on the Thai-Myanmar border set up more than two decades ago to offer asylum to ethnic Karen fleeing the fighting between the Myanmar army and rebel troops.

Governor Naruemon said the refugees' houses will be rebuilt on their original location because a stream flows through the area year-round.

The refugees themselves also had no desire to move, she said. Construction of the houses is expected to be completed in a month.

Humanitarian assistance from the state and private sectors continues to pour in for the refugees, with officials from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees preparing food.

Soldiers from the Armed Forces Development Command have set up kitchens at Khun Yuam municipality office. More than 1,000 packets of food were taken to the camp by helicopter.

Public Health Minister Pradit Sintawanarong Sunday said the ministry had sent disease control units to curb the spread of malaria at a temporary shelter set up nearby to house the refugees left homeless by the fire.

Psychiatrists have also been sent to help refugees affected by the blaze and a team of sanitation officials has been assigned to ensure proper hygienic conditions at the shelter.

Haze and thick smoke from forest fires in the region grounded a planned helicopter trip to the stricken camp Sunday morning by a group of officials led by Interior Minister Charupong Ruangsuwan and Chatchai Promlert, director-general of the Disaster Prevention and Mitigation Department.

The officials had planned to fly from Chiang Mai to visit the camp.

Meanwhile, five fire fighters are in hospital after getting hurt tackling forest fires. Four are being treated at Nakornping Hospital and one is being treated at Maharaj Nakorn Chiang Mai Hospital.

Sunday 24 March 2013

http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/local/342174/rfd-steps-into-blaze-row

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Why do planes taking tourists to Nepal to visit Mount Everest keep on crashing?


Angie Gaunt woke up on a Friday last September to hear the radio announce an air crash in Kathmandu.

The report said that Britons were among those killed shortly after a Sita Air flight took off, en route to the Everest region. Gaunt’s husband, Timothy Oakes, was in Nepal realising his long-held dream of trekking to base camp.

‘I jumped out of bed screaming. Only a few hours earlier I’d read he was flying out to Lukla to start the trek,’ she says. She called her friend Maggie Holding, whose husband Steve was travelling with Oakes. Days earlier, the four had enjoyed a meal before the men set off for Heathrow.

Calls to the Foreign Office confirmed that both men’s names were on the flight manifest. The FCO rang Holding to confirm Steve’s death as she watched footage of the burning wreckage on TV.

All of the 19 people on board, seven of whom were British, died. It was Nepal’s sixth fatal air crash – three of them Everest-bound – in two years, a period that claimed the lives of 95 people.

The lure of the Himalayas attracts more than 100,000 trekkers, including 40,000 Brits, each year to Nepal. Visitor numbers to Everest have doubled since the end of the civil war there in 2006.

Some 35,000 walk each year to Everest’s base camp, the vast majority starting from Lukla’s Tenzing-Hillary Airport.

Climbing the peak is also more popular than ever. Last spring was so busy there were queues on the upper slopes.

This spring is the 60th anniversary of the first ascent by Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay.

Trekkers and climbers are already flocking to Nepal to join in the celebrations. Thousands more will take Everest flights to view the peak from the air.

Now Angie Gaunt, Maggie Holding and other relatives of those killed in the Sita Air accident want to know what has been done to improve aviation safety.

Pilots and experts in Nepal fear more accidents will happen in a country where political failure and poor regulation are undermining its vital tourist industry.

Sixty years ago, when the British expedition left Kathmandu’s lush valley to climb Everest, they walked the whole way to base camp in around three weeks.

In 1953, with few cars and very few roads, there was no choice. The first planes only landed in Kathmandu, Nepal’s capital, in 1949. Now the city’s polluted streets are clogged with traffic.

A construction boom has gobbled up farmland to house a growing population swollen by those escaping poverty and the ten-year civil war that brought an end to the Nepalese monarchy.

Manju Pokhrel migrated to the city a decade ago, and built a shack on the banks of the polluted Manohara river, close to Kathmandu’s airport. She was one of the few up and about that September morning.

Flights into the Everest region start early to make the most of calm flying conditions. More than 60 flights a day land at Tenzing-Hillary Airport at the height of the season.

The Pokhrels and their neighbours barely notice them. But Manju heard an engine note that was unfamiliar.

‘It was going put-put-put-put,’ she says.

From the cowshed, her husband Badri saw an aircraft turning unusually low over the rooftops towards the slum. Manju watched it clear the corrugated roofs and plough nose-first into a bare patch of sand 150ft from where she sat.

What was so unusual with this latest Everest crash was that it happened close to Kathmandu and not nearer to Lukla, often cited as the most challenging airstrip in the world. Built in the early Sixties, Lukla airport is now an essential part of Everest tourism, carved into a hillside above the Dudh Kosi river at 9,200ft.

The old dirt strip was tarmacked in 1999, but landing at Lukla is still a challenge. Just 1,500ft long and only 60ft wide, the runway ends in a blank mountain wall and has an uphill gradient of 12 per cent.

Only STOL (short take-off and landing) aircraft, like the Dornier 228 or Twin Otter, are able to land in such a short distance. Overshoot and you crash into the hillside at its end. Undershoot and you plough into the steep hillside beneath.

Both have happened. The approach can only be attempted in good weather and there are still no navigational aids.

And because the bottom of the runway is lower than the top, pilots suffer spatial disorientation, with their aircraft lower than they think.

‘What you’re seeing is an illusion,’ says Nepal Airlines pilot Vijay Lama.

‘It’s scintillating. I never do a landing with tourists without them applauding.’

During the tourist season, in the spring and autumn, airlines in Nepal focus on lucrative flights to Everest. Foreign visitors to the country pay a hefty premium to subsidise seats for Nepalese passengers.

The half-hour flight from Kathmandu to Lukla costs a foreigner $127. Seventy per cent of Nepal’s domestic air freight also passes through Lukla to service the Everest trekking industry.

With only four parking bays at the tiny strip, at peak times pilots have just five minutes to turn around and head back to Kathmandu.

Incidents – minor accidents where the aircraft bumps into something – are not uncommon but often go unreported.

And with so little time on the ground, pilots can’t check on what’s being put on board. With Nepal’s laissez-faire attitude to regulation, aircraft routinely leave Lukla overloaded.

Ang Chhu, a sherpa who has worked on dozens of expeditions and climbed Everest three times, says everyone knows how to get extra weight onto a flight.

‘You give the baggage loader 1,000 rupees (£7.50) and they’ll get it on. Either they’ll overload the aircraft or they’ll take someone else’s stuff off. The tourist only finds out when they’ve landed at Kathmandu.’

‘I can almost guarantee you that all the flights in and out of Lukla are overloaded,’ says Lama.

‘Taking off from Kathmandu, you can feel if the aircraft’s too heavy. I’m very strict about it. I’ll go back. But can you do that if you are flying for a private airline?’

Nepal’s private airlines are doing their utmost to cash in on the country’s booming tourism sector.

Bad weather frequently closes Tenzing-Hillary Airport during the season and tourists become desperate to fly out to connect with flights home. In 2011, cloud obscured Lukla for a week, and 4,000 tourists and sherpas crowded into the village.

Food prices soared and tempers frayed. It’s in conditions like this that air traffic controllers come under pressure and bribes swap hands to move tourists up the waiting list.

Local politicians, airlines, police, even tourists can get access to control towers and lean on controllers to permit flights. ‘Controllers have to be isolated from the public at remote air strips,’ Lama warns. ‘Nobody should be able to go in the tower.’

Lama is an outspoken critic of how aviation is regulated and managed in Nepal.

‘The biggest question is why so many accidents have occurred in our country. We play this game of throwing the ball into someone else’s court all the time. We have to accept our mistakes.’

Four months on from the Sita Air disaster, I’m standing at the spot where the aircraft came down, looking for answers. A gaggle of boys and girls are playing football nearby. Scraps of half-burned trekking gear still lie in the dirt – the top of a ski pole, half a walking boot – along with what looks like a piece of the aircraft itself.

Soaring in the sky on the flight path to the airport are black kites that feed on the rubbish dumped in the filthy water. The pilot of the doomed plane, Captain Bijay Tandukar, reported hitting one of these birds, severely damaging the right engine during take-off.

Experts in Nepal believe fragments from the engine may have damaged the tail fin, taking the aircraft either completely or partially out of his control.

Local people on the ground believe Tandukar steered his stricken plane away from the camp; some pilots agree. Until the official accident report is released no one can be sure.

It took 15 minutes for police to arrive and start moving hundreds of onlookers away from the burning wreckage.

Almost half an hour after the crash, the first fire engine appeared but on the wrong side of the river, which was swollen with late-summer rain.

When the fire was out, police turned the tail fin on its side, disrupting the site before investigators could arrive. Then the aviation authorities did what they usually do following a crash in Nepal – they blamed the pilot.

On the morning of the crash, at her home in Kathmandu, the pilot’s wife Julie Tandukar got a call from one of her husband’s pilot friends.

He told her there had been an accident and to turn on the television. Like Maggie Holding, she saw her husband’s aircraft on the screen in flames.

Tandukar had been a pilot for 15 years. At the time of his death, he was planning to study in America to become Sita Air’s pilot instructor.

Yet even while the wreckage was still smouldering, an official at the aviation ministry, Suresh Acharya, told the media that following the bird strike the pilot had been ‘panic-stricken’, and had tried to turn too quickly to regain the runway. This was the story that went round the world, but his comments angered Tandukar’s family.

‘On what basis did he say this?’ says Julie Tandukar. ‘If he’d said this privately to colleagues, that would have been fine, but not to the media. We have to wait for the accident report. He doesn’t know what happened.’

Shortly after his press briefing, Acharya was appointed to the crash investigation team.

Julie Tandukar says she hasn’t been able to tell her five-year-old son that his father is dead.

‘We told him his father’s in America buying him a plane. You know, a lot of people by the river think my husband is like a god for taking the aircraft away from their homes.’

Pilots are still seen as glamorous in Nepal, but thanks to decades of political interference and corruption the national airline has turned from being a source of pride into a national joke. It now has fewer than half a dozen aircraft in service.

Leaner private operators have taken up the slack but insiders say it’s too easy to start a domestic airline in Nepal. The list of failed airlines easily outstrips those still in business. When one goes bust, like Agni Air did recently after two fatal crashes, remaining aircraft are sold on to a new operator.

Pilots say they are under too much pressure from their bosses during busy periods and that the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal (CAAN) isn’t capable of addressing the problems undermining safety. They worry that heavy traffic in the Everest region could lead to a mid-air collision.

‘CAAN cannot close its eyes any more,’ says Lama. ‘There have been too many crashes. It’s the same in lots of developing countries.

'We bring in a system but we don’t make people stick to it. The regulatory body hasn’t been able to keep up with the growth in aviation. We have the same aircraft, but twice the traffic.’

Nagendra Prasad Ghimire is the chair of the investigation board for the Sita Air crash and worked at the civil aviation ministry for 36 years.

He knows his team is under close scrutiny. Investigators from the UK’s Air Accident Investigation Board have also flown to Nepal to form their own judgments.

He acknowledges police compromised the crash site but claims the tail section was moved as part of the ‘rescue operation’. Ghimire admits there is some ‘hanky-panky’ with overloading aircraft but that regulations are enforced.

He says development loans could bring new navigation aids to Lukla and that traffic growth is under control.

‘We (have) instituted a traffic flow system. Lukla needs to know how much traffic it’s getting. So far so good.’

Doubts about regulation and lack of investment in Nepalese civil aviation could have dire consequences for Everest tourism as relatives seek legal redress and foreign governments try to protect their nationals.

In Nepal, compensation for families of air-crash victims is limited to $20,000 (£13,400), an anachronism in modern civil aviation.

‘Commercial operators with low levels of liability don’t make flying safer,’ says James Healy-Pratt, head of aviation at law firm Stewarts Law.

In the UK, he adds, there’s no such restriction, and tour operators might find themselves liable under European law.

Hampshire-based Explore Worldwide, the company that organised the trek for all the British victims, has already joined with other operators to send an independent aviation auditor to Nepal, according to managing director Ashley Toft.

The European Aviation Safety Agency has written to CAAN asking what is being done about improving safety. Some experts believe that one or more of Nepal’s domestic airlines will soon be placed on the EU’s blacklist.

Local people are planning a prayer ceremony for the first anniversary of the Sita Air crash. Angie Gaunt and Maggie Holding say they are grateful to the Foreign Office and praise the charity Disaster Action. But they are still waiting for answers. ‘I would never have said to Steve, “Don’t go, it’s too dangerous,”’ says Maggie Holding.

‘These things always happen to other people, don’t they? It should have been the best experience ever in the mountains and I would very much wish for others to have that experience – but safely.’

Sunday 24 March 2013

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/moslive/article-2296381/Everest-danger-Why-planes-taking-tourists-Nepal-climb-mountain-crashing.html

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Families still seeking truth 70 years after wartime HMS Dasher disaster in Firth of Clyde that killed 379 men


The dark waters of the Firth of Clyde are icy cold today as families gather to mark a secret wartime tragedy that set the sea ablaze – and claimed the lives of 379 men.

It is exactly 70 years since aircraft carrier HMS Dasher exploded off the Ayrshire coast at Ardrossan, sending debris 60ft into the air and spewing burning petrol across the surface of the water.

But seven decades on from the disaster on March 27, 1943, relatives of many of those sailors are still fighting to find out exactly what happened to them.

Author John Steele, who has spent years researching the tragedy, is convinced that Dasher’s sinking is the subject of a cover-up and delicate information is being withheld because the ship was a “floating bomb” from the start.

He said: “Dasher was a disaster waiting to happen. It was an embarrassment to the Ministry of Defence.

“The Navy were so desperate for ships that they bought five converted aircraft carriers from America – Dasher used to be a banana boat.

“The ships weren’t up to scratch. They failed on over 20 Royal Navy regulations – the most significant being petrol leakage.

“Sometimes the pilots were sloshing about in petrol lying in the ship’s hangar. Sometimes they couldn’t use their cabins because of the petrol fumes.

“And the extractor fans weren’t up to the job. It was an explosive cocktail – and the worst happened.

“But it was covered up and it continues to be covered up. The bodies of 68 casualties which were recovered from the sea have never been found. It seems they were buried in a mass grave, probably somewhere near Ardrossan, but we still don’t know where.

“The relatives of these men have no graves. Surely they have suffered enough? Surely now is the time to release the information? Where are these boys buried?”

The Dasher was carrying 75,000 gallons of diesel, 20,000 gallons of aviation fuel and a full load of torpedoes and depth charges when she went up in a massive explosion. She took just eight minutes to sink.

There were no German U-boats in the area and Germany never claimed responsibility.

Official war diaries record the cause as suspected internal explosion.

John suspects that something as simple as a discarded cigarette or the spark from a dropped spanner could have ignited leaking petrol, though no official details were released.

It became one of the biggest wartime disasters in British waters.

John said: “Everything was kept secret for 30 years – and much of the information is still secret. But after 30 years, they slipped some documents into the public records office, which is now the National Archives.

“They did that without an announcement so only professional researchers would come across it.

“Only a handful of people found out – none of the relatives who had written letters pleading for information.”

Retired company manager John, 73, and his wife Noreen, 72, live near Ardrossan beach. Their home looks out across the spot where the ship went down – halfway between the Ayrshire coast and the isle of Arran.

They became interested in the disaster after moving from Paisley and listening to some of the locals discuss old memories of a large explosion at sea and bodies being washed ashore.

But when they tried to discover what happened to Dasher, they could find no published details.

John and Noreen were so intrigued, they embarked on relentless research, pursuing secret documents held in military archives and interviewing any of the 149 survivors they could track down.

They uncovered information which shocked the relatives of those who died.

John said: “The parents and wives of the men who died were told nothing. They were just sent telegrams telling them they were killed or missing – not what happened or where or why.

“The men who survived were told never to talk about it. Of those bodies recovered, only 24 burials took place, with no explanation of what happened to the rest.

“We obtained permission to have an area of Ardrossan cemetery excavated last year but there was no sign of a mass grave. So we still haven’t found the location of the burials. It’s a terrible situation.”

Grandmother Eunice Clark, 73, from Bridge of Weir, Renfrewshire, was only three when her father George Wood became one the Dasher casualties.

He had only joined the crew three weeks before the catastrophe, having previously served in the merchant navy.

Eunice grew up spending holidays in Ardrossan with her grieving mother Betty and little brother George, who was born after their dad died. With no grave to visit, it was her mum’s way of being close to her husband. George’s body was never found.

She said: “I don’t remember much from the time but my mum spoke about it.

“There were so many stories going about – that the ship hit a mine in the water. But my mum never found out what happened before she died and we still don’t really know.

“To me, the ship was a death trap right from the start. As a result, I never got to know my dad and my brother never met him.”

The ship is now an official war grave, lying on the seabed 600 feet down in the firth. John and Noreen arranged for a team of specialist divers to lay a brass plaque on the wreck commemorating the men who died.

There are two memorial plaques to the Dasher victims – one at the seafront in Ardrossan and one in Brodick on Arran.

A special service will take place in Ardrossan today.

Every year there is a ceremony for bereaved relatives aboard the Calmac ferry from Ardrossan to Arran. The ship stops directly above the wreck while prayers are said and floral tributes are cast into the water.

It’s an important gesture for Eunice and one she clings to even 70 years on.

She said: “I go to the memorial service every year. It’s doing something for my dad and for my mum. It’s very sad.”

Sunday 24 March 2013

http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/families-seeking-truth-over-wartime-1782540

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Bihar boat tragedy: Seven bodies recovered, 3 still missing


Seven bodies were fished out while three others are missing in the boat capsize in Ganga at Bhagalpur today, as Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar announced a compensation of Rs 2 lakh for next of kins of victims.

Sub-Divisional Officer, Kahalgaon, Sanjay Kumar said that after day-long efforts, six more bodies have been fished out from the river, mostly of women and girls. Body of a woman was recovered in the morning hours, he added.

Search is on for the three missing, he said.

Tragedy struck when the country boat capsized in Ganga in Bhagalpur district this morning, with at least 25 people, including women and children on board.

They were mostly labourers enroute Rani Diara.

Expressing grief over the incident Kumar today announced that the Disaster Management department will give Rs 1.5 lakh, and another Rs 50,000 from CM's relief fund, totalling Rs 2 lakh, for each of the next of kin of victims.

Sunday 24 March 2013

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/bihar-boat-tragedy-seven-bodies-recover.../1092405/

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Nepal: Separate security units to fight natural disasters


The government is thinking of constituting trained and equipped search and rescue (SAR) teams of security personnel to deal with natural disasters in the country.

One medium SAR team comprising 50-60 personnel each from the Armed Police Force (APF) and the Nepal Army (NA) and around 10 light SAR teams of 10-12 personnel from the Nepal Police (NP) are proposed to be formed under the National Disaster Response Framework. The Disaster Response Division under the Ministry of Home Affairs (MoHA) has prepared the framework. The ministry is the focal national institution to coordinate, formulate policies and programmes to deal with various kinds of natural disasters. According to the category of SAR teams, heavy includes those teams with highly sophisticated equipment like helicopters and bulldozers and well-trained human resources who can be mostly found in mega cities like New York. The medium and light teams are common and responsible to carry normal activities during any disaster.

According to Laxmi Dhakal, joint-secretary at the MoHA, considering the need of trained and equipped SAR teams to effectively fight natural disasters like flood, landslide, earthquake and fire, among others, the ministry came up with the proposal to form special security teams. The proposal is one of the components of a draft of National Disaster Response Framework (NDRF). At present the security personnel from all the three departments—NA, APF and NP—are involved in carrying out rescue and search operations in the country during natural disasters. “Though there are some security persons trained in disaster management, there are no separate units formed under the security bodies to specifically fight disasters,” he said.

Unlike the present situation, where a few individuals trained in disaster management are working from their respective units, the proposed framework aims at forming a separate battalion or company responsible for disaster preparedness only, said Dhakal.

The NDRF document will be discussed during the upcoming meeting of the Central Natural Disaster Relief Committee chaired by the PM on Friday.

Sunday 24 March 2013

http://ekantipur.com/2013/03/24/capital/separate-security-units-to-fight-natural-disasters/368929.html

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Saturday, 23 March 2013

Hailstorms in southern China kill 12, injure hundreds


Hailstorms that hit southern China this week have killed 12 people, injured hundreds more and caused tens of millions of dollars in damage.

The official Xinhua News Agency says nine people were killed in the city of Dongguan in southern Guangdong province after a Wednesday hailstorm. It says 272 others were injured from the storm, which caused economic losses of 357 million yuan ($57.5 million).

Three other people died from hailstorms that began Tuesday in neighboring Hunan province, where 1,900 houses have collapsed, according to Xinhua's report Saturday.

Southern China has seen thunderstorms, hurricanes and hailstorms in the past few days. China's Meteorological Administration says the severe weather is expected to continue through the weekend.

Saturday 23 March 2013

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/hailstorms-china-kill-12-injure-hundreds-article-1.1297095

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Kano bombings: Igbo reject mass burial


Senate yesterday pleaded with the presidency to end the recurring loss of lives to bomb blasts even as it urged President Jonathan to consider other security options in tackling insecurity. This is coming even as Igbo leaders insisted that the victims of Monday’s blast at the Luxury Bus Park in Kano should not be given mass burial. Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, who presided over Wednesday’s plenary, described the explosions as “unfortunate and regrettable”.

His words: “We must do everything as a country to end this carnage. The life of every Nigerian means a lot to all of us…We must do everything to put a stop to what is happening. All the relevant committees should find a solution to what is happening”. Following the suicide bomb attacks in which five luxury buses were targeted, killing more than 22 people, the leadership of the Igbo in Kano have demanded three remedial actions from the Federal Government. Igbo leaders in the North tacitly passed a vote-of-no-confidence in Kano State Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso, over his inability to commiserate with the victims 48 hours after the unfortunate incident.

The remedial actions sought by Igbos are: Rejection of mass burial for the victims ; setting up of a committee to collect and manage compensation funds and that Federal Government should beef up security around Ndigbo and other endangered groups in the North. Chairman of the Senate Committee on Education, Uche Chukwumerije, made these known on the floor of the Senate yesterday. Shortly before the plenary, Chukwumerije raised Order 43 (personal explanation) of the Senate Standing Rules (2007, as amended). Unlike other motions, Chukwumerije’s motion was not opened to debate as stipulated by the order.

Chukwumerije stood ramrod straight in his all-white attire and told the Senate that based on the deluge of phone calls from Ohanaeze and the leadership of Igbo in Kano and eyewitnesses, the dead were between 100 and 120, while 80 per cent of the victims were Igbo. Besides, Chukwumerije said, “Ndigbo will not continue to be the sacrificial lamb of Nigeria’s fractured history. “The point of what happened in Kano, the multiple explosions, that aroused our concern is the fact that the target, this time, seems to be unquestionably ethnic/regional. Most of the former targets had been vaguely religious, had been vaguely the masses.

But from the feedback we got from Kano and from the consequences of the bombings, it now seem that the attack is ethnic/regional and we believe this must be addressed at the earliest possible opportunity because we know that the social fabric of this country suffers from two fault lines: ethnicity and religion. “These are fault lines enemies of the state can exploit in order to cause tension within the country. A total of five buses were involved. After the first bus which was heading to Lagos was involved in a head-on collision which became engulfed in fire, a second bus heading towards Port Harcourt was also hit, which set three other buses on fire.

“Far more than that, the first two buses were fully loaded and put together, both buses had 155 passengers, excluding the drivers and attendants were affected. Going by the estimate of eyewitnesses, they said the dead were at least 100 and 120 and from the perception of one ethnic group, 80 per cent of those killed were Igbo. The remaining 20 per cent is made up of different ethnic groups were other southerners and some northerners who were hawkers… “In our country, the two most sensitive areas which our history has shown up always are tribe/religion…The group perception of Igbo all over Kano was that the attack was targetted primarily at them because they lost so much property and human beings.

“They expected the governor to come and say: ‘Sorry, please.’ They said that would show that the governor cares for them. The (state) government has lost an opportunity of isolating the terrorists as marginal on the fringe of society. The victims would have the impression that everybody is involved; they are all against us which is not true! “The least the people expect now are three: Government must do all it can on security, not only for the Igbo in the North, but for all citizens: the Igbo in the North are saying that let the Federal Government manage whatever compensation funds they want to give for this. The people say they do not trust such funds in the hands of Kano State Government; and three, they don’t want mass burial. They want to quietly take their people home and give them decent burial…”

On his part, Chairman of the State and Local Government Administration, Senator Kabiru Ibrahim Gaya, who represents Kano South, bemoaned a situation where some states are better policed than Kano which had been the victim of Boko Haram attacks. “Mr President, it is appalling that we have only 8,000 policemen in Kano to monitor security in the state when Lagos has 33,000, Kaduna has 13,000 and Port Harcourt also has 13,000 policemen! From history, Kano State has been business partners with other tribes in Sabon Gari but some forces are being deployed to fan embers of disunity. “Some people are working against the unity of this nation.

Yet, government is not doing anything. Nobody lives in peace anymore and people are afraid to move around. The latest report I got now is that our children are even afraid to go to school because of what happened in Maiduguri. Are we going to continue like this?”, he querried. Ekweremadu however, shot down attempts by Senators to conribute to Chukwumerije’s and Gaya’s comments. He reiterated that the extant order cited by Chukwumerije did not allow for debate on the floor. Senate thereafter observed a minute silence in honour of the victims.

Saturday 23 March 2013

http://ireporters247.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/kano-bombings-igbo-reject-mass-burial.html

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