Thursday, 11 July 2013

4 bodies yet to be identified after Secunderabad hotel collapse


Three days after the City Light Hotel collapsed in Hyderabad, relatives of four victims are yet to be informed about the death of their loved ones. Of the 17 people who perished in the incident, bodies of four that were extricated from the rubble on Monday are yet to be identified and are lying unclaimed in the Gandhi Hospital mortuary. Investigating officials said these deceased hotel workers hail from Odisha and presumed that their relatives did not turn up as they were unaware of the mishap.

Every year, several hundred people migrate to the city from states like Odisha, Bihar, Assam and Madhya Pradesh looking for work. Experts said the latest deaths underscore the lackadaisical way in which most of these workers are recruited. Employed mostly in small eateries, owners do not have a clue about their original addresses and in some cases, do not even bother asking their names, they said. The fact that they are provided free food and accommodation lures them to these jobs. Several such workers were present at the City Light Hotel as well.

Ch Srinivasulu, a sub-inspector attached to Mahankali police station, said attempts are on to trace the victims' family members. "Their pictures have been pasted on hospital mortuary walls and information has also been disseminated via other means. We have collected their fingerprints and preserved their DNA," said Srinivasulu. He added that other hotel employees were helping them identify the bodies.

Meanwhile, another injured person, who had earlier sought treatment at a private hospital, got himself admitted at the Gandhi Hospital on Tuesday evening. Currently, 17 people who escaped with injuries in the incident are undergoing treatment at the state-run hospital.

Even three days after the mishap, the hospital is filled with the cries of relatives, with nurses and other staff trying to console them. Many among the dead, including M Ramesh, 40, were the lone breadwinners of his families. His eldest daughter aged 18 is also physically challenged. Doctors said they tried to do everything to save the victims, from surgeries to ventilator support.

Thursday 11 July 2013

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/hyderabad/4-bodies-yet-to-be-identified/articleshow/21009530.cms

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Ship owner offers reward for tip leading to the recovery of six of its missing crewmen


The owner firm of Bangladeshi cargo vessel MV Hope yesterday offered a $6,000 reward for the information leading to the recovery of six of its missing crewmen — $1000 for each.

Captain Mohiuddin Abdul Kadir, representative of the insurance firm P&I (Protection and Indemnity) Club, said the ship owner’s agent in Thailand had offered the reward to draw attention of the local fishermen and boatmen.

The online version of Phuket Gazette, an English language newspaper of Thailand, uploaded a piece of news Tuesday afternoon, saying that the local fishermen had seen four bodies in life jackets floating around 50 km off the spot where the ship tilted.

On that night, the ship’s owner firm Trade Breeze Shipping Limited had contacted Captain Segsit I — an official of the ship owner’s agent firm in Thailand named Thoresen Shipping & Logistics — to verify the report, Captain Kadir told The Daily Star.

“We told him to take immediate measures to recover the bodies if they were missing crew of the MV Hope,” Kadir said.

The cargo ship tilted in the Andaman Sea near the coast of Phuket in Thailand on July 4. All the 17 crewmen abandoned the ship fearing that it would capsize.

Nine crewmen have so far been rescued, and bodies of two have also been recovered. But six other crewmen remained missing.

Meanwhile, three out of four crewmen, who were undergoing treatment at a hospital in Phuket after they were rescued on Thursday and Friday, would arrive in Dhaka tonight on a Bangkok Airways flight, said Captain Kadir.

They are seaman Abu Bakar Siddique, second officer Mohammad Mobarak Hossain, and deck cadet Raek Fairooz.

Engine cadet Mushfiqur needed to stay in the hospital for a week more, Kadir said.

He added that the bodies of chief officer Mahabub Morshed and chief engineer Kazi Saifuddin were supposed to be taken to Bangkok from Phuket today to complete some legal procedures.

Thursday 11 July 2013

http://www.thedailystar.net/beta2/news/ship-owner-offers-reward-for-tip/

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FASE Advanced Course on Postmortem Interval and the FASE 10th Anniversary Symposium, Heidelberg, Germany, 26-28th Sept 2013


This year FASE celebrates its 10th anniversary and we decided to celebrate it along with the FASE Advanced Course on Postmortem Interval, organizing an one-day forensic anthropology symposium. At the symposium you can present your latest research and work through poster and oral presentations. The symposium is also meant to allow the participants to share experience and opinions and to confront themselves with forensic anthropology practice in other countries. For that reason this year the Symposium will have an invited speaker : Bradley Adams, PhD, D-ABFA - Director of Forensic Anthropology Unit, Office of Chief Medical Examiner, New York, USA. The FASE Advanced Course on Postmortem Interval and the FASE 10th Anniversary Symposium which will take place in Heidelberg, Germany on 26th, 27th (Advanced course) and 28th September 2013 (FASE symposium). The deadline for abstracts' submission is July 20th, and for registration is July 31st. Details can be found on the FASE website: http://forensicanthropology.eu

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Search for China landslide missing in Sichuan


The death toll from a landslide caused by heavy rain in China's Sichuan province has risen to 12, state media report, with 11 people still missing.

Wednesday's landslide in Dujiangyan city covered an area of two sq km (0.8 sq miles), reports say.

It followed days of bad weather that has led to flooding which has damaged hundreds of homes in southwest China.

The weather has forced the evacuation of more than 36,000 people in Sichuan and Yunnan provinces.

Rescuers had found a total of 12 bodies at the site of the landslide in Zhongxing town, Dujiangyan, state-run news agency Xinhua reported.

Officials say search and rescue operations are ongoing, with life detection instruments being used to locate survivors.

There are about 1.5 million cubic m (329 million gallons) of mud, rock and debris covering the area affected by the landslide, an expert quoted by Xinhua said.

Earlier on Thursday, state media reported that more than 60 people were missing across Sichuan province as a result of the weather.

'Buzzing noise'

A local villager in Dujiangyan, Gao Shiquan, said that he ran outside his home after he heard the landslide.

"I could see the hill opposite me had collapsed. There was a buzzing noise for around two or three minutes. My first feeling was that the hill had collapsed and the entire hillside was buried," he told Xinhua news agency.

Rescuers had safely relocated over 350 tourists affected by the landslide, the Dujiangyan local government announced on its website.

More than 1,000 blankets had been distributed to Dujiangyan, while neighbouring Wenchuan county, which had also been hit by floods, received 500 disaster relief tents and 500 quilts, state media said.

Dujiangyan official Liu Junlin told reporters on Wednesday that the rainfall in the city was the highest since national weather records were established in 1954.

On Wednesday, more than 2,000 people were trapped in a tunnel expressway connecting Dujiangyan with Wenchuan, as a result of the heavy rain.

They waited several hours before being rescued and relocated, Wenchuan's emergency management office said.

Thursday 11 July 2013

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-china-23253044

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Names emerge from shadows of 1948 crash


Jaime Ramirez stood in front of an oak tree, jagged and black from a plane crashing into it all those years ago. He removed his white cowboy hat, closed his eyes and whispered, "Abuelo, Tio, estoy aqui." ("Grandfather, Uncle, I am here.")

Nearby, Tim Z. Hernandez, who had feared this moment might never happen, leaned down and sprinkled tobacco and sage. When the writer first came to this hushed place, looking into a 65-year-old mystery, he had felt he was intruding. Each time he returned, he always left a small offering. He could hear the Woody Guthrie song "Plane Wreck at Los Gatos" playing in his head:

The sky plane caught fire over Los Gatos Canyon,

A fireball of lightning, and shook all our hills,

Who are all those friends, all scattered like dry leaves?


On Jan. 28, 1948, a plane chartered by U.S. Immigration Services left Oakland carrying 32 people, including 28 Mexicans. Many were part of the bracero program and had finished their government-sponsored work contracts. A ride home was part of the deal. Others had entered the country illegally.

Over farms and ranches on the edge of the Diablo Range, 20 miles west of Coalinga, the World War II surplus DC-3 trailed black smoke. An engine exploded. A wing broke off, floating left and right. More than 100 witnesses watched bodies and luggage thrown from the fireball. There were no survivors.

News accounts named only the pilot, first officer, stewardess — who was also the pilot's wife — and an immigration officer. The others were listed simply as "deportees."

Guthrie read about the crash and wrote a poem protesting the anonymity of the workers. Schoolteacher Martin Hoffman later set the words to music.

The song lived on. A string of artists including Willie Nelson, Dolly Parton, Johnny Cash and Bruce Springsteen sang the chorus of imagined names: Goodbye to my Juan, goodbye Rosalita, Adios mis amigos Jesus y Maria.

In 2009, Hernandez was at the Fresno County Library scrolling through old newspapers, researching a book about Bea Franco, the inspiration behind the Mexican girlfriend character in Jack Kerouac's "On the Road." He'd immersed himself in the era's music, especially that of Guthrie, who sang about migrant workers and Central Valley fields.

It was a life Hernandez, 39, knew well. The poet and novelist now lived in Colorado, but grew up in farm towns across the Central Valley. He traced his love of storytelling to long road trips with his family picking crops. His mother, Lydia, would read books aloud; his father, Felix, would jump in and say "That's not what really happened" and spin his own endings.

A 1948 headline about a fireball plunging to earth caught his eye. He thought of Guthrie's song about the deportees. For the first time, Hernandez realized that Guthrie wasn't referring to the city of Los Gatos, near San Jose, but to the juniper-scented hills and canyons above the oil pumps in western Fresno County.

"Who were the people on that plane?" he wondered. "Did anyone ever tell their loved ones why they didn't come home?"

In 2011, Carlos Rascon, the new director of cemeteries for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fresno, visited the old Holy Cross graveyard. He noticed a bronze marker that read: "28 Mexican citizens who died in an airplane accident."

A cemetery worker gave him "a short, cut-up version" of the crash, Rascon said. "But 28 souls in a mass grave with no names? It just didn't sit right with me."

The cemetery register listed numbers 1 through 28, and after each someone had written only "Mexican National." The diocese's church register had the names but some were obviously misspelled and all were missing middle initials — key in a culture with many common first and last names.

Rascon's father-in-law had been a bracero. He told Rascon they used to call the planes that flew them home, usually at night, El Tecolote (the Owl). Rascon thought he should do something with the names, but he had no clear idea what.

Back in Colorado, Hernandez couldn't get the deportees out of his mind. Scouring old news accounts, he learned they were buried at Holy Cross. His calls to the diocese cemetery offices were brushed off when he said he wanted information from 1948.

Frustrated, he scanned a roster of employees on the diocese website until he found a Latino surname — Rascon.

"I'm looking for the names of 28 deportees," Hernandez told him in a phone call last year.

"I have the names," Rascon replied.

Hernandez suddenly felt nervous. He'd already decided to write a book about the deportees if he could find their names. Now there was no turning back.

Rascon told him what else he'd heard from the cemetery workers: Someone had been leaving flowers at the grave for years. Often in November on El Dia de los Muertos, when Mexicans honor their dead.

Jaime Ramirez grew up in Charco de Pantoja, a rancheria of about 3,000 people in central Mexico.

When he was about 9, he and his siblings asked their mother why they did not have two grandfathers. She said her father died in a plane crash in the United States when she was 11, and she didn't know where he was buried.

Her father had saved enough money during his bracero contracts to buy land but couldn't afford corn seed. He and his best friend — Ramirez's great-uncle — decided to cross the border illegally to earn money for crops. They never came home.

In 1974, Ramirez came to the United States at age 18 to work as a dishwasher in Pasadena. He planned to look for his grandfather's grave but didn't know where to start. Eleven years later, he had become a kitchen manager and was transferred to a restaurant in Salinas. There he heard someone mention "Diablo Range." Something stirred deep in his memory. Was that the place mentioned in his mother's faded Mexican newspaper clipping about the crash?

He started his search at the Fresno County Hall of Records, where he found death certificates with the misspelled names of his grandfather and great-uncle. The documents said they were buried at Holy Cross. He would not believe it unless he saw the grave.

Even without the directions a receptionist gave him, he would have been able to find it. The rest of the cemetery, where no one had been buried since the 1950s, was a jumble of statuary; the western corner was empty, except for one small marker.

"I just stood still, staring at it. I kept telling myself, 'I found them,' " he recalled of that day in 1989.

That night he called his mother in Mexico. She cried. His paternal grandfather got on the phone and said, "Mi'jo, I can go in peace now that I know where my brother was buried."

Ramirez now owns a restaurant and home just a few miles from Holy Cross. When relatives from Mexico visit, they go to the grave. In November, he leaves flowers.

Hernandez made note of clues among recovered items: a Laundry Union Workers card from San Francisco, a letter addressed to someone in Northern California, baby clothes found near a woman's body.

He enlisted Rascon to pull the death certificates, which had middle names. After the two men untangled some highly Anglicized spellings, they finally had complete names. But they had no ages, no birthplaces, no relatives — no stories.

"Each of our families is made up of epic stories. Tales of migration, struggle, sacrifice and triumph," Hernandez said. "How do those just fade?"

Hernandez and Rascon had decided to raise money for a memorial engraved with the deportees' names. As they neared their $10,000 goal, Rascon and the diocese wanted to press ahead, but Hernandez was reluctant without having found even one family member.

He put out a plea through local media, but heard nothing. After he mentioned his quest at a writers conference at the National Steinbeck Center in Salinas, a woman with silver curls and tears streaming down her face approached him.

"My father believed in the importance of names," Nora Guthrie told him. "He would repeat them like a chant. Even just finding their names matters."

Hernandez agreed it was time to dedicate the memorial. He'd come to accept that he might never find any of the families.

Ramirez, the restaurant owner, recently told a friend the story of his grandfather. That friend repeated the story to another man who said, "Wait! Your compadre's grandfather was in the paper." He dug out a 2-month-old article about Hernandez's efforts.

In late June in Coalinga, Ramirez met Hernandez for the first time. He told the writer about his grandfather, Ramon Paredes Gonzales, and his great-uncle, Guadalupe Ramirez Lara.

They drove up the winding canyon and walked through whispering dried grass to the tree where the plane crashed. Hernandez reached out his hands to the tree and ravine.

"Do you feel that?" he asked.

"Of course, I feel that," Ramirez said, needing no explanation. "May they rest in peace."

The monument will be unveiled on Labor Day.

"They're answering Woody's prayer," Nora Guthrie said. "If you keep the questions — the ideas — alive, then someday, someone will come along to answer. My father sang, 'All they will call you will be deportees.' This is a back-atch'ya. A resounding 'No, we all have names.' "

The stone will be etched with 32 falling leaves, four of them bearing the initials of the Americans who died on the flight. In the center will be 28 names:

Miguel Negrete รlvarez. Tomรกs Aviรฑa de Gracia. Francisco Llamas Durรกn. Santiago Garcรญa Elizondo. Rosalio Padilla Estrada. Tomรกs Padilla Mรกrquez. Bernabรฉ Lรณpez Garcia. Salvador Sandoval Hernรกndez. Severo Medina Lรกra. Elรญas Trujillo Macias. Josรฉ Rodriguez Macias. Luis Lรณpez Medina. Manuel Calderรณn Merino. Luis Cuevas Miranda. Martin Razo Navarro. Ignacio Pรฉrez Navarro. Romรกn Ochoa Ochoa. Ramรณn Paredes Gonzalez. Guadalupe Ramรญrez Lรกra. Apolonio Ramรญrez Placencia. Alberto Carlos Raygoza. Guadalupe Hernรกndez Rodrรญguez. Maria Santana Rodrรญguez. Juan Valenzuela Ruiz. Wenceslao Flores Ruiz. Josรฉ Valdรญvia Sรกnchez. Jesรบs Meza Santos. Baldomero Marcas Torres.

Thursday 11 July 2013

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-deportees-guthrie-20130710-dto,0,2642231.htmlstory

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19 killed, 16 injured in Peru road crash


At least 19 people were killed and 16 others injured Wednesday when a bus they were travelling in fell off a cliff in the Peruvian Andes, said the police.

The tragedy occurred early Wednesday on a stretch of highway known as "Mal Paso" (bad passage) near the town of Colcabamba in the Tayacaja province.

The bus was carrying 40 to 45 passengers when it lost control and plunged 300 meters into the cliff, said the Highway Police.

The driver of the bus appeared to have been competing with another bus of the same company to see which vehicle could pass first through a blind curve along the stretch of road, it said.

The accident site is distant and remote, a fact that hinders efforts to rescue the survivors and retrieve bodies.

The cause of the latest deadly crash was under investigation, Paredes said.

On July 1, a bus fell into a ravine outside the capital Lima, killing 19 and injuring 15.

Highway fatalities occur regularly in the Andes, where crowded buses travel along narrow, twisting and ill-paved roads.

Thursday 11 July 2013

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/world/2013-07/11/c_132531508.htm

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Burials mark Srebrenica anniversary


Bosnia will bury 409 victims of the Srebrenica massacre, including a newborn baby, on Thursday, the 18th anniversary of Europe's worst post-war atrocity in which Bosnian Serb forces slaughtered some 8000 Muslims.

Tens of thousands of people were expected to attend a mass funeral of the victims whose remains were found in mass graves in the eastern Bosnian Srebrenica region and only identified almost two decades after the 1995 mass killing.

On the same day, the UN Yugoslav war crimes court was to rule on an appeal of the decision to drop a charge of genocide against Bosnian Serb wartime leader Radovan Karadzic, who faces other counts including masterminding the Srebrenica massacre.

"This year we are going to bury the youngest victim of the genocide, the Muhic family's baby" whose remains were exhumed from a mass grave in 2012, said Kenan Karavdic, a government official who is in charge of the burial ceremony.

The baby, who died shortly after her birth in July 1995 at the UN base in Potocari, near Srebrenica, "will be buried next to the grave of her father Hajrudin, killed in a massacre," Karavcic told AFP.

Ahead of the funeral services, columns of simple wooden coffins, covered with green cloth, were aligned in a vast hall as relatives were searching for their loved ones.

At the cemetery in the memorial centre in Potocari, amid rows of white marble columns, were freshly dug graves with green wooden signs where the coffins were to be laid.

Srebrenica was a UN-protected Muslim enclave until July 11, 1995, when it was overrun by Bosnian Serb forces.

The troops brushed aside lightly armed Dutch UN peacekeepers in the "safe area" where thousands of Muslims from surrounding villages had gathered for protection.

They loaded thousands of men and boys on to trucks, executed them and then threw their bodies into mass graves.

The remains of 5657 victims, identified through DNA tests, have already been buried in the memorial centre in Potocari since the process started a decade ago.

Their remains - often only a handful of bones -- were found in more than 300 mass graves in the area, said Amor Masovic, head of the Bosnia's Institute for Missing Persons.

But many victims remain unidentified and more were yet to be found.

Thursday 11 July 2013

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/breaking-news/burials-mark-srebrenica-anniversary/story-fn3dxix6-1226677660937

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Forensic advances since 9/11 may identify Canadian train victims


Advances in forensic and medical sciences since the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks may help Canadian authorities identify the remains of dozens of people killed in the country’s worst rail accident in 27 years.

Even tiny shards of bone may be helpful to scientists, said Mark Desire, assistant director of the DNA World Trade Center Identification Project in New York, which is still working to identify thousands of skeletal fragments. His agency tests each piece multiple times and is devising new methods to access DNA in the cells so it can return the remains to the families.

About 50 people are still missing or were confirmed dead after a Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway Ltd. train carrying 72 carloads of crude oil barreled Saturday into Lac-Megantic, about 250 kilometers (155 miles) east of Montreal. The crash incinerated 30 buildings in town, complicating recovery work.

“Fire, chemicals and even water destroy DNA,” Desire said in a telephone interview. “For the thousands of remains that yielded no DNA profile, the techniques of the day weren’t good enough, so we’ve developed new techniques. With today’s technology, if even small bits of bone survive, they may be able to generate a DNA profile. You never know until you try.”

What used to be the heart of the small lakeside town now looks like a post-apocalyptic wasteland. Buildings close to the blast were decimated, while those further from the tracks have some walls standing. Firefighters are still working to control hot spots burning in the wreckage. None of the 20 bodies discovered thus far were identifiable.

DNA Confidence

“We are confident that we are going to be able to get DNA from the bodies that we recovered on the site,” said Genevieve Guilbault, a spokeswoman for the Quebec coroner’s office, in a telephone interview. “We are actually expecting to get some identifications in the next few days.”

DNA tests and dental records will be needed to identify the victims because of the intensity of the fire, she said.

There have been improvements in every step of the process in the dozen years since terrorists hijacked and crashed four commercial airlines at three sites, damaging the Pentagon and leveling the World Trade Center in 2001.

There is better extraction of DNA from the remains, greater sensitivity for detecting even small amounts of genetic material and improved databases to manage and track the information, said Howard Baum, director of the office of forensic science in New Jersey and former deputy director of the forensic biology laboratory in New York City’s medical examiner’s office.

Bone Difficulties

Extracting DNA from bone is one of the most difficult ways to get genetic material, according to Desire. The method, once done by hand, is now performed using a machine that uses vibration to pulverize the bone sample into the finest powder possible. Liquid nitrogen, detergents and decalcifying agents are added to help gain access to the cells and the DNA inside.

“The more cells you break open, the more DNA you have to work with,” he said. “You may have a large sample, but the DNA may be all but destroyed. Here in New York, we are generating DNA from very small bits of burned bone.”

The Quebec coroner’s office is focusing on DNA as it works to locate, catalogue and compare the remains. The agency asked families to bring in razors, toothbrushes and hairbrushes so it can gather samples. Genetic samples from close relatives may be needed to hone in on victims whose personal belongings may have been burned by the fire, hampering a direct genetic comparison.

“The more challenging the sample, the more degraded, the less likely you’ll get markers you can use for identification,” said Bruce Budowle, director of the institute of applied genetics at the University of North Texas Health Science Center in Fort Worth. “The technology over the years has improved quite substantially to extract DNA, improve the quality and repair of the DNA and identify other genetic markers.”

Dirty Samples

Scientists can now take damaged DNA, enhance small portions that are still useful, and amplify those over the damaged parts, said Budowle, the former top scientist at the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation who helped build the agency’s DNA laboratory. Even if you improve the sample, it can still be very dirty, contaminated with chemicals from the environment or a fire, he said. There are now techniques that resist the contaminants and allow technicians to extract DNA, he said.

Collecting the samples is the first hurdle, said Howard Cash, president of Gene Code Forensics, an Ann Arbor, Michigan-based bioinformatics company that specializes in DNA analysis. His company devised the Mass Fatality Information System used to identify 2,749 people who were killed in the Twin Towers on Sept. 11, 2001. New York’s recovery efforts yielded 20,000 pieces of remains, which were compared to thousands more reference samples from family members in a kinship analysis.

Information Systems

“After getting whatever DNA profile they can from the remains, the next step is an information management problem,” Cash said in a telephone interview. “The system can work with very complicated family trees. The software has been developed to do sophisticated analysis and determine the amount of confidence you can have in the accuracy of the information.”

Accuracy is critical, and it takes time, the experts said.

“I know everyone is grieving, and the sooner you identify everyone the sooner they get closure,” Baum said. “But you have to do this right. If you rush to do it, that’s when mistakes can happen. It’s better to do it a little slowly. The consequences of doing it wrong are tremendous.”

Thursday 11 July 2013

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2013-07-10/forensic-advances-since-9-11-may-identify-canadian-train-victims

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How a rusty key found next to human remains unlocked identity of man who went missing 14 years ago


Not DVI, but still a fine piece of detective work worth reporting here..

The body of a missing man who had not been seen for 14 years has been identified - thanks to a rusty key.

A dog walker found human bones and a shoulder bag in February last year but police initially had no idea who the man was.

Crime scene investigators then analysed the contents of the bag and discovered a pair of reading glasses missing both lenses, a wrist watch... and the old key.

And when they scrubbed the key with solvent, it revealed a serial number.


Police linked the number to a house in Battersea, south-west London, and discovered a missing man - Carl Johnston - had links to the address and also Burpham, West Sussex, where the bones were found.

Officers from Sussex Police tracked down his family, who confirmed they had not seen him since 1999.

The body was subsequently identified - bringing an end to 14 years of uncertainty - and an inquest recorded an open verdict. Mr Johnston would have been 67 when he passed away.

Writing about the investigation on his blog, CSI officer Chris Gee said the investigation, which he carried out with colleague DC Alison Hoad, was like a 'jigsaw puzzle'.

He said: 'The bag was in close proximity to the bones, with a high potential the two were related.

'The forensic service provider performed a basic DNA comparison with the deceased’s relative, and came to the conclusion that there was a 1 in 40 chance of them being related.

'During the post-mortem at the beginning of the investigation, the forensic anthropologist gave an indication towards the age the person was when they died but no cause of death could be determined.

'The coroner was happy that no further work was needed and accepted this identity.

'We at Sussex Police strive to help and bring closure to families who need it.

'DC Hoad set a fantastic example of how persistence and attention to the finer detail can really pay off.

'Everyone else had overlooked the keys, but our two minds made this cold case heat up.

'I’m really pleased we could present our findings to the family and offer them their relative back, someone they had lost for so long.'

Thursday 11 July 2013

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2359485/Carl-Johnstons-body-identified-Burpham-West-Sussex-14-years.html

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Death toll rises to 20 in Lac-Megantic; missing revised to 50


The death toll in Lac-Megantic rose by five Wednesday, bringing the total of bodies found in the carnage to 20. A total of 50 people have been confirmed missing.

Insp. Michel Forget confirmed the number in a press conference Wednesday evening.

The identity of one body discovered in the wraackage has been identified, said coroner Genevieve Guilbault. The family has been informed, but out of respect to them, the coroner said she would not reveal their name.

She added that 15 of the 20 bodies have been sent to the coroner's laboratory in Montreal for identification. The coroner's office is asking families of the dead and missing to provide DNA samples, possibly from toothbrushes or combs, to help identify the remains that have been retrieved.

Earlier in the day, Forget said the number of those missing had been unconfirmed.

"I can tell you personally that I was with someone this morning who saw a name and a face of someone they know on a list of missing people and they were incredibly affected -- but the person [on that list] is not missing," said Forget.

"We have found three people who were at one point on the missing persons list. They were out of town," Forget said.

The SQ can be contacted at 1-800-659-4264 to confirm any missing people who have since been found.

The number of police officers who are working in Lac-Megantic to scour the devastation is now 200.

Police are treating the blast area as a crime scene and say they are collecting evidence in case of possible charges of sabotage or criminal negligence.

"In Quebec it is up to the Crown, to prosecutors, to lay charges, not police," acknowledged Forget.

Thursday 11 July 2013

http://montreal.ctvnews.ca/death-toll-at-20-in-lac-megantic-could-reach-50-police-say-1.1361045

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Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Sec’bad Hotel collapse: Scar helps father identify dead son


Imagine the prospect of having to look at disfigured and decomposed bodies in a morgue and then struggling to identify their own children.

On Wednesday, Hanumantha Rao found himself lost in the middle of unclaimed bodies retrieved from the debris of City Light Hotel. He was looking for the familiar surgical scar on the right side of his son’s head, the only discernable mark that could have helped him identify the body.

In the end he found the scar and when the harsh reality of having lost his young son forever set in, the father lost control. Tears started to roll.

“He was just 20 years old and I still don’t understand why he deserved this. His body was disfigured and the scar on the head was the only way we could identify him,” he cried, on identifying his son Sai Suresh Kumar.

The youngster worked at a nearby textile showroom and ventured into the hotel at around 5.30 a.m. on Monday to have a cup of tea.

“I still wonder why he had to wake up so early and go to the hotel. This is like a bad dream. Although he was my elder brother, we were like friends because he was older to me by just three minutes,” said Sai Likhitha, Suresh’s twin sister.

Along with his sister, Suresh did his schooling in a private school in Saroornagar before moving to Guntur, when his father, a government employee, was transferred.

“He was not interested in studies and was restless. He had dreams and wanted to move on, start from scratch. He always told me that he will become a successful businessman,” recalls Likhitha.

Cell phone found

After retrieving the body of Suresh, the authorities managed to get hold of his cell phone, which he was carrying on person. Later, the police also managed to recover phone numbers and immediately contacted Hanumantha Rao.

“We received the call on Tuesday evening and immediately rushed to Hyderabad. Despite my efforts, Suresh was never interested in studies. He left Guntur and came to Hyderabad four years ago for work. I never thought that one day I will have to come to take his body,” said the disconsolate man.

Wednesday 10 July 2013

http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/Hyderabad/secbad-hotel-collapse-scar-helps-father-identify-dead-son/article4902576.ece

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China Sichuan landslide 'buries up to 40 people'


A landslide has buried between 30 and 40 people in China's Sichuan province, state media say.

The landslide occurred in Zhongxing town on Wednesday morning. More than 100 rescuers with rescue dogs were at the scene, Xinhua news agency said.

The landslide followed days of torrential rain across parts of China that has caused floods in some areas.

On Tuesday, a bridge in Sichuan's Jiangyou collapsed, with at least 12 people missing.

Footage from Chinese state media, meanwhile, showed the dramatic rescue of a Deyang factory worker, who was stranded by the floods after the factory was washed away.

"The water level is so high that vehicles, forklifts and excavators have all been washed away," Wei Xiao, another factory worker, told Reuters news agency.

'Evacuated'

Zhongxing is in Dujiangyan city, one of the places badly hit by the 2008 Sichuan earthquake.

The landslide, which spanned around two square kilometres, damaged at least 11 homes, Xinhua reported.

"So far we only know 11 families were buried and more than 200 residents have been evacuated," a local official told AFP news agency.

Patrol members in Dujiangyan told local media that by the time they arrived at the scene, a few hours after the landslide, "everything was already a vast expanse of water".

Eyewitnesses described seeing stones and debris running down the hill, covering around eight holiday homes in less than three minutes, local media reported.

Meanwhile, rescue teams had been deployed in Jiangyou to search for those missing after Qinglian bridge collapsed, state media said.

At least six vehicles were reported to have plunged into the river when it came down after days of heavy rain.

Jiangyou's local government said that the river volume had suddenly increased to a 50-year high on Tuesday.

"The high levels of flood sediment, and strong and destructive force of the water, caused the Qinglian bridge to collapse," it said.

Two other bridges, one in Jiangyou and one in Deyang city, were also washed away, officials said.

Chinese officials said that the heavy rain had affected more than 508,000 people in Sichuan and Yunnan provinces, damaged around 300 homes, and forced the evacuation of 36,800 people, Xinhua reported.

For the worst affected areas, it appears that there is going to be little respite, says the BBC's Martin Patience in Beijing.

Heavy rainfall is forecast in Sichuan province over the next 24 hours, our correspondent adds.

In 2011, over five million people were reported to be affected by deadly floods in eastern China.

In 2008, Sichuan was hit by a devastating earthquake which led to almost 90,000 people dead or missing.

Wednesday 10 July 2013

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-china-23251188

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Uganda tanker fire - Two bodies remain unidentified


The DNA results of the victims of the Namugoona inferno have been processed, with the results of eight unidentified bodies positively matching, while two bodies remain unknown due to non-matching results.

"Two bodies of a woman and a man are still unidentified in the mortuary following non-matching DNA results," said Ibn Ssenkumbi the Kampala metropolitan police spokesman.

Ssenkumbi added that one of the bodies had been claimed by two families. Resty Nabbona, a resident of Kinoni, Masaka, who lost a relative, said they started the funeral arrangements last week and are only waiting to bury the deceased.

She said doctors have now advised them to bring the mother of the deceased and if the DNA results match, then they will take the body. The family has been advised to return for the final results after two days.

The inferno, which resulted from a leaking fuel tanker, has so far claimed 41 lives, while a few are nursing wounds at Mulago hospital.

Wednesday 10 July 2013

http://allafrica.com/stories/201307100677.html

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Bodies at Lala Lajpta Rai Hospital's mortuary become food for mongoose


Slackness on part of the health personnel and guards on duty at the mortuary of Lajpta Rai Hospital (LLR) has proved unfortunate for the kin of a woman whose body had been kept in the mortuary from past few days.

When the relatives reached the mortuary to take the body they found that it was eaten-up by mongoose. It is the fourth incident of its kind in the last two days when the bodies kept in the morgue of LLR were eaten-up by mongoose.

The body of Moni Singh (35), from Shyam Nagar was kept at the mortuary of LLR from past few days. According to the sources, Moni died last week after she met an accident near Kali Mathiya crossing and breathed her last during the treatment.

On Tuesday, when kin of the woman came to identify the body, the same was found in mutilated state. Major portions of the body were found eaten-up by mongoose. Some portions of the body, including her eyes, ears and nose, were so badly eaten that they were not even visible.

"To our dismay, when we went to take back the body on July 9 after keeping it in the mortuary for around five days, it was found in a decomposed state with a foul odour emanating from it. The hospital staff has played a cruel joke with our sentiments by not taking proper care of the body for which they must be taken to task," lamented the distraught relatives of Moni Singh.

This was not the lone case as cruelty of mongoose and lackadaisical approach of the medical staff on duty at mortuary remained pathetic for Mitrani (53) also. She was also brought to the LLR mortuary for postmortem but turned into a food for mongoose. Flesh from nose, chin, shoulders was missing from the body of Mitrani.

The matter came into light when the mortuary staff took all the bodies into an account after the incident on Monday in which mongoose had eaten-up the body of an 11 year old girl, Durga, from Panki ,who died by drowning.

Her body was brought to the mortuary on Sunday. As the postmortem was conducted late on Sunday night, the body of Durga was kept at mortuary. On Monday, when the relatives of Durga reached the mortuary to claim the body it was fount mutilated. The hospital staff claimed that the body was eaten-up by mongoose.

Chief medical superintendent (CMS) of LLR hospital, Dr SB Mishra, while confirming that the body had got decomposed, cited the large number of mongoose in the mortuary as the cause behind the incident. However, the officials were unable to explain why the bodies were kept in the mortuary without taking any precautionary measures against mongoose present there.

He added that he would ask municipal corporation to catch mongoose on Wednesday. He also assured to take frequent rounds at mortuary so that the security machinery remained active.

Wednesday 10 July 2013

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/kanpur/Bodies-at-Lala-Lajpta-Rai-Hospitals-mortuary-become-food-for-mongoose/articleshow/20994231.cms

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City Light Hotel collapse toll rises to 17


The death toll in the City Light Hotel mishap rose to 17 as four more bodies were dug out on Tuesday from the debris of the hotel on RP Road in Secunderabad that collapsed on Monday morning.

The four victims were identified as Ali Raza Tarayakar alias Ali Raza Kirmani, 55, the hotel manager, R. Venkatesh, 35, the tea master, K. Kiran Kumar, 26, the biryani master, and K. Suresh, 24, who worked as a salesman in a textile shop.

One hotel employee was alive when he was pulled out on Monday midnight. The 34-hour rescue operation came to an end on Tuesday evening.

The fire department and police were reinforced by the Nation Disaster Rescue Force and Quick Reaction Team.

NDRF officials said on Tuesday evening that the rescue operation was finished as there were unlikely to be any survivors still trapped beneath the rubble.

“The NDRF officials informed us that it is highly unlikely that anyone is still trapped under the debris. Thus the rescue operation is finished. However, cleaning up the debris will go on,” said North Zone deputy commissioner of police R. Jayalakshmi.

The owner of the hotel, Syed Hassan Boluki, against whom a case has been booked for negligence, is yet to be arrested.

Jayalakshmi said that the rescue mission was the priority. “On Wednesday, the full fledged investigation into the matter will begin. After detailed investigation, we will see if he has to be arrested.”

Syed Hassan, who lost his son and another relative in the building collapse, is undergoing treatment in a private hospital after suffering a heart stroke.

Relatives of the deceased took possession of the bodies after the post-mortem examination. “We have handed over 12 bodies so far after post-mortem examination. The three remaining bodies are yet to be identified,” said an official from the Gandhi Hospital mortuary.

Among the injured people, all are said to be stable except for one Nagesh, who has undergone major surgery and is said to be critical.

Though rescue operations have been ended, two people are still missing. Ashok. K, a resident of Warasiguda, and Ramesh from Maharashtra, both City Light Hotel employees, are not yet traced. The family members of Ashok have lodged a complaint with the Mahankali police.

Officials said that there is no possibility to find any more dead bodies.

Wednesday 10 July 2013

http://www.deccanchronicle.com/130710/news-current-affairs/article/city-light-crash-toll-17

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Thais spot four more bodies


Local fishermen have said they saw four bodies in life jackets off Koh Rok, off the coast of Krabi, south of Phuket, the Phuket Gazette says, but whether those were of the missing Bangladesh ship crew was not clear.

The Bangladeshi cargo ship MV Hope, which titled to one side in heavy seas south of Phuket last Thursday night, is expected to arrive at Langkawi, Malaysia, on Tuesday after being towed from its position south of Racha Noi Island overnight.

“After we called off our search mission (on Monday), we received a report from a fishing boat that four bodies were spotted near Koh Rok (Monday afternoon),” the Gazette quoted Captain Thammawat Malaisukkarin, Director of the Naval Civil Affairs of the Royal Thai Navy, as saying.

Chittagong ship owners’ P&I Club representative Mahiuddin Abdul Kader told bdnews24.com they heard about the bodies being spotted. "We are not sure if they are the missing sailors of MV Hope.”

The Koh Rok Islands, a popular day-trip destination for tourist snorkellers and divers, are located about 100 kilometres southeast of Phuket.

Langkawi, Malaysia’s northernmost island along the Andaman Coast, lies a further 100km south of Koh Rok.

“The crew said the bodies they saw were wearing life jackets, but they did not recover them because they were afraid they would become involved in a crime that had been committed,” he explained.

The Royal Thai Navy alerted the local Marine Police and the Thailand Maritime Enforcement Coordinating Centers (Thai-MECC), which effectively operates as the naval coast guard unit, along the southern Andaman coast.

However, the Navy said it will not dispatc any ships or aircraft to recover the four bodies.

“We will not be dispatching a search and rescue team. If we did, by the time we reached the site, the wind and current could have moved the bodies far from where they were last seen,” Capt Thammawat said.

Nine of the 17 people on board the MV Hope were rescued during the four-day search for survivors.

The two bodies recovered during the search and rescue efforts on Friday have yet to be identified, staff at Vachira Phuket Hospital on Tuesday morning confirmed to the Gazette.

Capt Thammawat explained that the MV Confidence, commissioned by insurance company responsible for MV Hope to recover the stricken vessel, began towing MV Hope toward Langkawi at about 10:30pm on Monday.

“It should be there by now,” he said.

“The Royal Thai Navy will not be involved in any further efforts involving the MV Hope as it is now out of Thai waters,” the Gazatte quoted Capt Thammawat as further saying.

Wednesday 10 July 2013

http://bdnews24.com/bangladesh/2013/07/09/thais-spot-four-more-bodies

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Uttarakhand missing declared dead tomorrow


Nearly 4,000 people missing in the Uttarakhand disaster will be declared dead by the state tomorrow, a senior official said this evening.

“There are 3,975 people missing, including 975 locals. The number of dead (after the missing are included) is likely to be between 4,000 and 5,000,” the official said.

The missing count — and hence the casualty figure — contrasts sharply with a recent report by a UN disaster management team that put the number at 11,600.

Of the over 3,000 people from other states who have not been traced, 35 are from Bengal, according to an official from the eastern state who confirmed one death.

Over 700 of the missing are from Uttar Pradesh — among the largest batches of victims from outside the hill state. Death certificates have to be issued by Uttarakhand government agencies.

With wood dropped in Kedarnath and other affected areas soaked in the rain, debris is not being removed as cremation of bodies found underneath the debris cannot take place in this climate.

To help National Disaster Response Force and state government teams, the army is opening an alternative route to Kedarnath from Sonprayag via Gomkar, Dev Vishnu and Dhungaj Giri.

Away from the number crunching, the task of rebuilding loomed. Power has been restored to over 1,000 villages near Kedarnath and Badrinath. The connections were snapped by flash floods from the Mandakini and Alaknanda rivers.

The next step for the government is reconstruction of the state’s devastated infrastructure. The Uttarakhand government has announced the establishment of a Punarvas and Punarnirman Pradhikaran (Rehabilitation and Reconstruction Authority) which will be financed by the Centre. The Planning Commission is estimating losses through state’s inputs.

The Vijay Bahuguna-led Congress government had earlier set the July 10 cut-off to officially declare those missing as dead.

Officially, the number of dead stands at 580, including the 20 air force and other personnel who died in the crash of the Mi-17 V5 rescue helicopter near Kedarnath days after the June 15-17 calamity.

Officials said the number of dead may also include names of people included in the list of missing.

The findings on the missing have been mentioned in a report sent to Union home minister Sushil Shinde and UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi by V.K. Duggal, a member of the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) that is part of the rescue and relief operations.

The figure has been collated after reconciling 10 sets of numbers on missing people gathered by various agencies. This includes Google, which created one such database by collecting details from loggers as well as reports from officials of various states.

But many names have figured on the lists of those missing as well as dead, posing a needle-in-a-haystack challenge for the officials trawling through the minefield of data.

A team of software experts removed duplications from the databases before reaching the figure of the nearly 4,000 people missing, home ministry sources said today.

One way of checking information was making a list of all mobile numbers used on the Kedarnath and Badrinath routes. “The state government has made one lakh calls to collect information about missing people or those who have reached their destinations safely,” said an official.

Duggal, the NDMA member, said around 170 bodies had been cremated so far. Sources said fresh rain had hampered the process of clearing debris and extricating bodies

Wednesday 10 July 2013

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1130710/jsp/nation/story_17100916.jsp#.Ud0a_ndy5uQ

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Tuesday, 9 July 2013

Two bodies found; believed to be crew of Bangladeshi ship


Two bodies have been retrieved from the Andaman Sea near Krabi province. They are suspected to be members of the missing crew of the Bangladesh-registered MV Hope cargo ship that capsized yesterday.

The Third Naval Area Command said however that as the bodies were not yet able to be identified, it cannot be officially stated that they were members of the missing 11-man crew.

The bodies were taken aboard the HTMS Pattani, an offshore patrol vessel, for autopsy.

Authorities are still searching for the other missing crew by water and by air, but strong waves are an obstacle.

Another meeting of the search and rescue team is being held this evening. The Bangladeshi ambassador and consul to Thailand are scheduled to attend the meeting at the Third Naval Area Command.

Tuesday 9 July 2013

http://www.pattayamail.com/news/two-bodies-found-believed-to-be-crew-of-bangladeshi-ship-28061

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Drowned N. Korean freighter crew members found holding portraits of 'Dear Leaders'

Most of the bodies of dead North Korean sailors who washed up on Japanese shores earlier this year after their freighter sank in the Sea of Japan had portraits of the late North Korean President Kim Il Sung and his son, the late Kim Jong Il, according to a police investigation.

In December, the 6,587-ton freighter, the Taegakbong, sank off the northeastern coast of North Korea. The Russian government picked up the SOS distress signal and offered assistance, which the crew of the Taegakbong rejected.

The 24 crew members of the stricken vessel took to lifeboats, only to go missing. North Korean media has yet to report the sinking.

From February to May, six bodies washed ashore along the coasts of Niigata, Akita and other prefectures. Most had red canteens, which contained the portraits of North Korea's founder and his son wrapped delicately in plastic.

In North Korea, portraits of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il are required in all houses and public spaces. If citizens facing a disaster fail to take portraits with them while making their escape, they face possible severe punishment, including being sent to a concentration camp.

If they protect the portraits at the risk of losing their lives, they are praised by the authorities and lauded with heartwarming stories. The crew members of the Taegakbong apparently took the portraits with them, thinking not only of themselves but also their family members.

Because the bodies have yet to be identified, the police say they cannot return them to their bereaved families.

Local organizations of the pro-Pyongyang General Association of Korean Residents in Japan (Chongryon) made inquiries to police and other government organizations about the accident. They have not yet offered to serve as mediators between the governments of Japan and North Korea to help identify the victims.

Tuesday 9 July 2013

http://ajw.asahi.com/article/behind_news/social_affairs/AJ201307090055

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Rescuers in Kedarnath run out of supplies, hit by diseases


A team of 74 members of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) has run out of food and medicines in Uttarakhand's Kedarnath after repeated attempts to airdrop supplies for them failed due to inclement weather, officials said Tuesday.

The NDRF team, which is in Kedarnath Valley after the mid-June flash floods and landslides, is left with just one day's ration and some of the members have taken ill in the past one day, official sources said.

The rescue team has not received supplies for the last five days owing to poor weather. Several attempts by the state government to airdrop supplies were aborted Monday as inclement weather and continued rains grounded air traffic, added the sources.

KK Tamta, nodal officer of the health department stationed in Guptakashi, said that doctors with the NDRF team told him about outbreak of diseases. Of the 74 members, at least 40 were suffering from diarrhoea and gastroenteritis (inflammation of the stomach and intestines), he said.

"At Guptakashi, ration and medicines are awaiting to be airdropped to Kedarnath for the past two days," an official said.

"Two special planes full of ration, medicines and other material were not able to fly out Monday owing to poor visibility and bad weather," said Subhash Kumar, chief secretary of the hill state.

The weather can imperil the team's wellbeing, admitted an official, adding that a 15-member team of the army's Sikh Regiment has been sent from Rudraprayag to help the rescuers in Kedarnath Valley.

A team of trained mountaineers will also be dispatched to the valley from the Kalimath-Ukimath side Tuesday.

Officials said that 93 bodies have been cremated so far but lack of wood for funeral and inclement weather has been delaying the cremation of the remaining bodies.

"Several tonnes of wood, ghee and other things required to perform last rites of Hindus were to be airdropped in the Kedar Valley but the operations have been hit by fog and rains," an official involved in the operations said.

Meanwhile, torrential rains have killed at least seven people in other parts of the hill state in the last two days. Apart from this, cloud bursts have flattened over a dozen houses in Chamoli. Four bridges have also been washed away, officials said.

Four people, all labourers, were killed in Dwarikhal area of Pauri Garhwal when they were clearing a road, while three people -- two children and a woman -- died when a wall of a house in Vikas Nagar area of the state capital Dehradun collapsed. The Mandakini river also washed away five shops in Agastyamuni.

The Ganga river is in spate in Haridwar and Rishikesh and many villages are flooded. The Rishikesh district administration has alerted people living on the riverside of an impending flood as the Ganga is flowing well above the "warning mark" of 339 metres and is likely to breach the 339.70 metres danger mark Tuesday.



Authorities have ordered evacuation of people from the Chandrabhaga and Mayakund areas. The Met department has forecast heavy rains in the state Tuesday.

Hundreds were killed and thousands went missing after torrential rains battered Uttarakhand last month.

Tuesday 9 July 2013

http://www.dnaindia.com/india/1858930/report-uttarakhand-floods-rescuers-in-kedarnath-run-out-of-supplies-hit-by-diseases

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