Wednesday, 4 June 2014

Bosnia floods unearth wartime mass grave


Floods in Bosnia last month have unearthed a secret mass grave containing corpses with hands tied behind their backs, apparently Muslim Bosniak victims of the country's 1992-1995 war, an official said on Tuesday.

"We unearthed four complete bodies whose hands were tied behind their backs and two incomplete bodies today," said Lejla Cengic, spokeswoman of the government's Institute for Missing Persons, adding that exhumations will continue.

Forensic experts are combing the banks of the Bosna river for another six victims still missing from a group of 16 killed by Bosnian Serb forces nearby, Cengic said. Four other victims from the group were found nearby during earlier exhumations.

Devastating floods across Bosnia, Serbia and Croatia last month struck particularly hard in the central and northern parts of impoverished Bosnia, submerging completely the central towns of Doboj and Maglaj and northern towns of Samac and Orasje.

"We assume the victims are Bosniaks from the nearby village Jablanica, the men aged from 19 to 57," Cengic said as bulldozers removed mud from the river bank and forensic experts cleared garbage and branches from the site.

Electricity workers repairing power lines on the outskirts of the town found some victims' remains after flood waters that reached up to three metres high in Doboj receded.

Some 35,000 people went missing in Bosnia during the war. About 8,000 are still unaccounted for while 1,000 have been found but not identified yet, Cengic said.

Doboj is located on the border demarcating Bosnia's two autonomous regions established after the war, the Serb Republic and the Federation dominated by Bosniaks and Croats.

The town belongs to the Serb region but its southern part is in the Federation. When the Bosna river burst its banks, the first help came from the nearby towns in the Federation spared from the flooding. At least nine people drowned in the flooding.

Wednesday 04 June 2014

http://www.independent.ie/incoming/bosnia-floods-unearth-grim-wartime-mass-grave-30326308.html

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11 die in Niger boat mishap

The Niger State Disaster Management Agency has confirmed the death of 11 persons in a boat mishap between Garafini-Kodo and Garafini in Borgu Local Government Area.

The Special Adviser in charge of the agency, Mohammed Shaba, said the accident occurred on Monday.

Shaba said 18 passengers were aboard the ill-fated boat when the accident occurred between 5pm and 6pm.

He said seven persons survived while the bodies have been buried.

Governor Mua’zu Babangida Aliyu has condoled with the Emir of Borgu, Senator Haliru Dantoro and the people.

Aliyu said: “This is no doubt a dark moment for us here in Niger State. These were people who were hale and hearty, pursuing various legitimate courses until they met their untimely death.

“I see this as a personal loss not just in my capacity as governor, but first as a human being who attaches much premium to human life and dignity.”

Wednesday 04 June 2014

http://thenationonlineng.net/new/11-die-niger-boat-mishap-2/

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Analysis: Over 100 climbing deaths on Mount Rainier


The six people lost on Mount Rainier last week adds to the growing number list of people who've died climbing the mountain, with 91 people perishing while either attempting to reach the summit or on the way down, and another 25 dying while climbing on the mountain, according to an analysis of National Park Service records.

While it's still unknown how the six died - they're believed to have fallen or been swept off the mountain while trying to climb the difficult Liberty Ridge route - the review of the NPS database reveals the dangers of the mountain itself and the surrounding environs.

Falling is the leading cause of fatalities on the mountain, with 90 people dying in falls while climbing, hiking or taking part in other activities on the mountain or in the park since its inception.

Occasionally, victims are never found, as in the case of 11 people swept to their deaths in an ice fall in 1981 in Mount Rainier's deadliest accident. The same is true of a non-alpine accident in which a cargo transport plane crashed into the mountain in 1946 - the bodies of 32 Marines remain entombed.

"The mountain is so inaccessible and can be inhospitable. We can't always retrieve everybody who is lost there, unfortunately," said Patti Wold, a spokeswoman with Mount Rainier National Park.

The bodies of the two guides and four climbers who fell to their deaths last week on the 14,410-foot glaciated peak may never be recovered because of the hazardous terrain, authorities say.

"The degree of risk in that area, due to the rock fall and ice fall that's continuously coming down from that cliff onto the area where the fall ended, we cannot put anybody on the ground," Wold said.

It's unclear whether the climbers were moving or camping at the time of the accident, Wold said this past weekend. Searchers located camping and climbing gear and detected signals from avalanche beacons buried in the snow at the top of the Carbon Glacier at 9,500 feet in elevation.

The most recent reported missing is Gerge Merriam, who disappeared in September 2013 on a day hike on the Pinnacle Peak Trail. He's believed to have fallen to his death.

The elements have claimed a number of victims over the years, with 11 people killed by hypothermia after getting lost or trapped on the mountain. The most recent happened in December of 2011 when snowshoer Brian Grobois became disoriented and descended into Stevens Canyon, where his body was found just above 4,600 feet.

The area will be checked periodically by air in the coming weeks and months, Wold said. They will also evaluate the potential for a helicopter-based recovery as snow melts and conditions change.

In 2012, park rangers recovered the bodies of three climbers about eight months after they disappeared during unrelenting storms on Mount Rainier.

In 2001, the body of a 27-year-old doctor was discovered more than two years after he vanished while snowboarding on the mountain. Also that year, the remains of three men were removed from the mountain after being entombed there for nearly 30 years after their small plane crashed. A hiker and former climbing ranger found the wreckage of the single-engine aircraft that crashed in January 1972.

In all, 411 people have died on the mountain or in the Mount Rainier National Park since federal government records were first kept.

The first death in the park was recorded in January, 1897, but it had nothing to do with climbing. E.H. Hudson died from "traumatic injuries" after a gun fell from his pocket and he was shot in the neck.

Wednesday 04 June 2014

http://mynorthwest.com/11/2535818/Analysis-Over-100-climbing-deaths-on-Mount-Rainier

http://www.komonews.com/news/local/Massachusetts-native-among-missing-Rainier-climbers-261556801.html

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Chaiyaphum crash victims pose ID challenge; Charred bodies prove beyond recognition


Forensic experts are stepping up efforts to identify the charred bodies of 12 Vietnamese nationals killed in Monday's road accident in Chaiyaphum province, after visual identification proved futile.

The bodies of the victims have been transferred from Kaeng Khro Hospital in Chaiyaphum to Khon Kaen University's Srinagarind Hospital for identification.

But forensic expert Viruj Khunkitti said all of the bodies had been burned beyond recognition, making it difficult for doctors to even identify their gender.

Identification documents such as passports and other necessary documents were all burned, meaning forensic evidence and accounts from relatives would have to be used to identify the dead, Dr Viruj said.

The 12 Vietnamese nationals and their Thai driver were killed and four others injured when the passenger van they were travelling in collided with an 18-wheel truck in Chaiyaphum on Monday morning.

Authorities have the names of all those on board, but have been unable to match them to the individual bodies.

The van veered into the wrong lane and smashed into the truck loaded with cassava. Both vehicles overturned and the van burst into flames. Thirteen people were trapped inside the burning vehicle.

The van had been hired to take a group of Vietnamese Catholics from Bangkok to Nong Bua Lam Phu province for a church activity. Police believe the van driver fell asleep at the wheel.

Dr Viruj said eight of the dead were believed to have died from injuries sustained in the crash, while at least two had died from smoke inhalation.

Relatives and friends of the victims arrived at the hospital yesterday to view the bodies, but were unable to identify them.

In one case, relatives told the hospital that a 25-year-old man who was among the passengers often wore a wristband. It was found that one of the bodies had a blue and yellow wristband which had survived the flames.

So far, only some of the relatives had given specific information about the victims, Dr Viruj said.

Forensic examinations would have to be conducted and there must be confirmation from police handling the case before the bodies of the victims are released to their families. DNA tests would be conducted if relatives were unable to identify their loved ones.

A source said relatives of van driver Veerachai Promsakul had gone to the hospital to pick up his body for funeral rites. They told the hospital that Veerachai, 35, a native of Phatthalung, often wore a silver ring studded with a yellow gem on his ring finger.

In Nong Bua Lam Phu, Thai and Vietnamese Catholics laid wreaths in front of Akkhara Thewada church in Muang district and performed prayers for the victims, who were on their way to the church when the crash occurred.

Church training coordinator Pornpan Inthisenpho said the church has so far managed to contact relatives of 10 of the victims.

A source said one of the surviving Vietnamese passengers being treated at Chaiyaphum Hospital could be discharged within five days after undergoing surgery.

Ngian Huming, 20, was admitted on Monday with two broken legs.

He was among three Vietnamese passengers who survived the road accident. The two others were being treated at Khon Kaen Hospital.

Trailer truck driver Prayuth Leesui sustained minor injuries.

Wednesday 04 June 2014

http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/local/413457/crash-dead-pose-id-challenge

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Coal mine accident in China kills 22 people


Twenty-two people have been killed at a coal mine in China in what local authorities are calling a “gas incident”.

The accident occurred at the Yanshitai coal mine in China’s south-western municipality of Chongqing at 5:40pm on Tuesday, state media agency Xinhua said.

A total of 28 people were working at the time of the incident, but six managed to escape.

Rescuers have recovered the bodies of the deceased miners, Xinhua said.

The mine is owned and operated by state-owned Nantong Mining Company.

China's mines are the deadliest in the world because of lax enforcement of safety standards and a rush to feed demand from a robust economy.

The accident comes after 20 people died in April when a coal mine in China's southwest Yunnan province suddenly flooded, leaving miners trapped.

Last year, China recorded 589 mining-related accidents, leaving 1 049 people dead or missing, according to the government.

But both the number of accidents and fatalities were down more than 24% from 2012.

Death figures for 2012 and 2011 stand at 1300 and 1973 respectively.

In an effort to lower numbers, the government launched a 'nationwide safety overhaul' to develop better working conditions on site and in turn prevent more deadly accidents.

As part of the plan it announced 2000 coal mine would be closed by the end of this year.

Wednesday 04 June 2014

http://www.miningaustralia.com.au/news/coal-mine-accident-in-china-kills-22-people

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Dana crash: Lagos Coroner laments missing bodies of pilots


A coroner's inquest into the ill-fated MD-83 Dana Plane crash at Iju-Ishaga, a Lagos suburb that claimed over 153 lives on has blamed the inconclusive report of the Accident Investigation Bureau (AIB) and the missing bodies of the pilots for the difficulties at unravelling the cause of the crash.

In a verdict delivered by Magistrate Oyetade Komolafe at the Ebute Meta Magistrates' Court two years after the crash, the coroner held that the AIB only submitted report of its preliminary investigation and was yet to conclude its findings with regards to the cause of the crash.

The coroner further stated that the missing bodies of the pilot and co-pilot, if found, would have been tested to determine if they were under the influence of alcohol.

In the course of the inquest, a witness who claimed to have arrived the crash scene told the court that he found the pilot's body lying on the ground after the mishap.

Notwithstanding his claims, consultant pathologist Dr. John Obafunwa had in his testimony, averred that nine bodies including the pilot and co-pilots were uncounted for at the hospital, while 144 were identified by or through their relatives.

According to Obafunwa, the unaccounted bodies could either be individuals other than those who bought the ticket or those who were completely incinerated.

Hence, Komolafe in his judgment held that "the missing bodies of the pilot and co-pilot was a lost opportunity to determine whether they were under the influence of alcohol.

"Had their bodies been identified, samples would have been taken and analyzed. The disappearance of their bodies has shut us out from finding out whether they were under the influence or not.

"I am not saying it is likely, but the opportunity was lost," said Komolafe.

On the cause of death of victims, the coroner held that most of them died from multiple injuries, blunt force trauma, air plane crash and fire.

He noted that from picture evidence, some of the passengers were alive after the crash but died from smoke inhalation, adding that 12 people died from suspected carbon mono oxide poisoning.

Quoting Obafunwa's findings, the coroner said: "A few died from heart failure, asphyxia (absence of oxygen), severe burns injury, soot inhalation, and severe crano-cerebral injury.

"I find that the commonest factor associated with death was multiple injuries - fractured arms and legs, fractured ribs, punctured lungs, fractured skull, and so on.

"You cannot attribute death to one single injury. Each one can individually cause death."

Komolafe who at the end, made nine recommendations, urged governments (federal states and local governments) to put in place effective emergency response structures.

He recommended the establishment of a national body for logistics and supply; body retrievals; body handlers as well as periodic meetings and rehearsals among the units.

Komolafe also noted the need for establishment of Forensic Science laboratories in each geo-political zone as well as the enactment of a National Coroner's Act.

"Public sensitization and provision of fire service stations in every local government across the country must be considered," he said.

Wednesday 04 June 2014

http://worldstagegroup.com/index.php?active=news&newscid=16023&catid=27

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Tuesday, 3 June 2014

Mull of Kintyre crash: Memorials mark 20th anniversary of RAF Chinook disaster


Memorial services have been held in Northern Ireland and Scotland to mark the 20th anniversary of an RAF air crash in which 29 people died.

A Chinook helicopter carrying 25 of the UK's most senior intelligence experts crashed on the Mull of Kintyre on the west coast of Scotland on 2 June 1994.

Leading security personnel from the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC), MI5 and the Army died, alongside the crew.

Some of their relatives have said the cause of the crash is still a mystery.

The passengers were travelling to a security conference at Inverness in Scotland from RAF Aldergrove in Northern Ireland when the aircraft ploughed into the hillside in thick mist.

The four crew members who died were from the Special Forces.

Reviewing the evidence of an initial 1995 RAF board of inquiry, two air marshals concluded that gross negligence on the part of the two pilots was to blame, but their families led a long campaign to clear their loved-ones' names.

Successive defence secretaries resisted pressure to reopen the case, but in May 2010, the then Defence Secretary Liam Fox announced he was ordering a review of the evidence.

The following year, pilots Flight Lieutenants Jonathan Tapper and Richard Cook were exonerated of any blame by the fresh review.

The original RAF verdict, which had already been criticised in separate House of Commons and House of Lords committee reports, was set aside.

Dr Fox also apologised to the families of both men who had been wrongly held responsible for the crash.

The Ministry of Defence (MoD) has insisted that mechanical failure was not to blame.

"Exhaustive investigations have been carried out, both by the MoD and independent bodies, and no evidence of technical or mechanical failure were identified, " a MoD spokesman told the BBC.

But Dr Susan Phoenix, who lost her RUC husband in the crash, remains unconvinced.

She criticised the MoD's handling of the case, adding she has spent 20 years not knowing what caused the crash.

"As far as I know, no official reason was given for the crash. The generic thing (reason) is that 'we may never know'.

"And it is true that we may never know. I think there will always be a mystery. It really is an enigma," Dr Phoenix said.

In 2001, the RUC was disbanded and replaced by the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI), as part of the Irish peace process.

Memorial services were held to mark the anniversary at PSNI headquarters in Belfast and on the Mull of Kintyre.

Another service was held at the headquarters of the Army's 38 (Irish) Brigade in Lisburn earlier on Monday.

At the Mull of Kintyre Memorial Garden in the city, representatives from several of the families took part in a private ceremony alongside senior representatives of the military and MoD.

The names of those who died were read out by Lt Colonel Nick Ilic and a wreath laid by Brigadier Ralph Woodisse, commander of 38 (Irish) Brigade.



Tuesday 03 June 2014

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-27655435

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More bodies pulled from Murmansk Lake after Russian helicopter crash


Rescue services in Russia's Murmansk region have pulled the 15th body from Lake Munozerzo on Monday following a Russian helicopter crash on Saturday, local media reports said.

The efforts to recover the 16th and the final body are set to continue over the coming hours and days.

The helicopter was carrying 18 people on board while the crash happened on Saturday, killing 16 people and injuring two others.

Official investigation has yet to determine the cause of the accident, although negligence, gear failure and poor visibility due to heavy fog remain the likeliest scenario.

The Mi-8 helicopter crashed while delivering Deputy Governor of Murmansk Region Sergey Skomorokhov, Regional Minister of Natural Resources Aleksey Smirnov and Director-General of Apatit JSC Aleksey Grigoryev, according to the Itar-Tass news agency.

The regional government said the helicopter belongs to Apatit JSC, a manufacturer of chemicals and fertilizers.

The Russian Investigative Committee had also begun a criminal inquiry into the crash on suspected breaches of air safety rules.

Meanwhile, a fundraiser has been announced in Murmansk for the families of the victims. Local authorities are also covering food and hotel costs as relatives wait for the return of their loved ones' remains.

Tuesday 03 June 2014

http://www.shanghaidaily.com/article/article_xinhua.aspx?id=222084

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At least 12 Vietnam students killed in Thai van crash


Twelve Vietnamese students and a Thai van driver died after their chartered vehicle collided head-on with an 18-wheel truck in Chaiyaphum's Kaeng Khro district yesterday morning. The van burst into flames after the smash.

Three other students travelling in the van were seriously injured while the truck driver, Prayuth Leesui, 35, was also injured. They were taken to Kaeng Khro Hospital.

The van was part of a five-vehicle caravan that departed Bangkok on Sunday night for a seminar and youth camp at a church in Nong Bua Lamphu's Muang district, Kaeng Khro Police chief Colonel Panas Boonyanyao said.

The four other vans had already past Chaiyaphum province when the last one, driven by Weerachai Phromsakul, 36, collided with the truck, he said.

Police suspect that Weerachai fell asleep at the wheel at about 7am on road number 201 (Kaeng Khro-Phu Khieo).

The charred bodies of the students are being kept at the Sawang Phutthatham Sathan Foundation in Kaeng Khro, pending identification so authorities can contact their families.

But the other Vietnamese students and their teachers contacted police and asked them to move the bodies to Khon Kaen's Srinakarin Hospital for DNA tests.

The Ban Kijjanukhroh Church's three-day youth camp is an annual event for 120 Thai and Vietnamese students from Bangkok, Khon Kaen, Udon Thani and Sakhon Nakhon. This year's event was cancelled following the tragedy.

In related news, a separate accident in Samut Prakan's Bang Bo district yesterday afternoon saw a pickup overturn at a curve in tambon Bang Na-Trat, killing two Myanmar workers and injuring 15 others. The truck driver fled the scene.

An initial probe by police found that the truck with 24 Myanmar workers on board was speeding and the driver lost control, slamming into an oncoming van.

Tuesday 03 June 2014

http://www.phuketgazette.net/thailand-news/At-least-12-Vietnam-students-killed-Thai/29658

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Monday, 2 June 2014

15 killed in road accident near Gulbarga


Fifteen persons including five women and three children were killed and 11 others injured in an accident involving a Mahindra Bolero Mini Truck and a NEKRTC bus on the Waghdhari-Ripponpalli inter state highway 6 km away from Aland town near Kodalhangarga village in Gulbarga district in the early hours of Monday.

All the victims hailed from Tadwal village, 25 km from Akkalkot, in Maharashtra and were travelling in the mini truck. The victims included the driver of the mini truck. While 13 persons were killed on the spot, one died on the way to the Government General Hospital in Gulbarga and another died in the government hospital.

The condition of one of the 11 injured was stated to be very serious. The injured included the driver and the conductor of the NEKRTC Bus.

Municipal Administration and Waqf Minister Qamar ul Islam who was in the town rushed to the spot and also visited the Government Hospital at Aland, where the bodies of the 13 of the victims were kept, and consoled the family members of the victims. Rs 1 lakh each to the family of the victims from the state was announced as compensation. Besides this the NEKRTC has released a sum of Rs 15,000 to family of each of the victims as funeral expenditure and another Rs 35,000 would also be paid to each of the victims family immediately by the NEKRTC.

Mr. Islam who spoke to the Chief Minister Siddaramaiah over the accident. The Chief Minister while expressing his grief over the accident announced the compensation from the Chief Minister’s Relief Fund. The Minister said that he would also speak to the Maharashtra Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan and the Minority Affairs Minister in Maharashtra and would appeal to them to announce adequate compensation to the family of the victims.

According to the relatives who were brought by the police from the Tadwal village to identify the victims, the victims numbering more than 26 were on their way to perform “Haqeeqa”(Tonsoring ceremony) of a child at the famous Khaja Banda Nawaz Darga in Gulbarga City on Monday. They had left the village at 1.30 am and the accident took place around 4.35 am.

Sunday 02 June 2014

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/15-killed-in-road-accident-near-gulbarga/article6074783.ece

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Death toll in Pyuthan bus accident rises to 16


At least 16 people were killed when a bus carrying Hindu pilgrims, including Indians, fell into a river in western Nepal today.

Unconfirmed reports said that 11 Indians were among those killed when the bus rolled down a mountain road while returning from Pyuthan district, 250 kms from Kathmandu at about 5:30 pm (local time).

The bus was returning to Kapilavastu from the Swargadwari temple. Police said it was carrying around 60 passengers, the Himalayan Times reported.

Rescue teams recovered at least 10 unidentified bodies from the accident site. Seven of the deceased are women.

Around 20 persons were rescued alive from the accident site and were taken to different hospitals in the area.

Police say that the death toll may rise.

Presently, locals and police personnel are carrying out rescue operations.

Sunday 02 June 2014

http://www.outlookindia.com/news/article/16-Killed-in-Nepal-Bus-Accident-Indians-Feared-Dead/842987

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Officials say search for missing Mt. Rainier climbers too risky


Park officials say it's currently too risky to send people in search of six climbers who likely fell thousands of feet to their deaths while attempting to scale 14,410-foot Mount Rainier.

Under safer conditions, crews could go in after the bodies. "The families, I'm sure, would like that closure," park spokeswoman Patti Wold said Sunday. But continuous falling ice and rock make the avalanche-prone area too dangerous for rescuers.

"People are very understanding that we cannot risk another life at this point," she said.

Park officials say that as in the case of some others who have died on the mountain, there's a possibility the two guides and four climbers believed to have fallen 3,300 feet from their last known location may never be found.

The climbers were last heard from at 6 p.m. Wednesday when the guides checked in with their Seattle-based company, Alpine Ascents International, by satellite phone. The group failed to return Friday as planned.

They are presumed dead in one of the worst alpine accidents on Rainier since 1981, when 11 people were struck and killed by a massive ice fall on the Ingraham Glacier.

Family and friends of the dead climbers arrived at the mountain Sunday to meet with park officials, but declined to speak with media that had gathered at the park's headquarters.

"They're just devastated," Wold said.

It's unclear whether the climbers were moving or camping at the time of the accident, Wold said. Searchers located camping and climbing gear and detected signals from avalanche beacons buried in the snow at the top of the Carbon Glacier at 9,500 feet in elevation.

It's also not known what caused the climbers to fall from their last known whereabouts at 12,800 feet on Liberty Ridge, whether it was rock fall or an avalanche.

Glenn Kessler, the park's acting aviation manager, said "they are most likely buried," making recovery efforts even more challenging. They may be in an area too hazardous for rescuers to reach on the ground.

The area will be checked periodically by air in the coming weeks and months, Wold said. They will also evaluate the potential for a helicopter-based recovery as snow melts and conditions change.

Wold initially said that the park on Sunday would release the names of the six who died but later said the park cannot release the names for privacy reasons.

Rob Mahaney told The Associated Press that his 26-year-old nephew, Mark Mahaney, of St. Paul, Minnesota, was among those presumed dead. He said the climber's father and brother flew to Seattle on Saturday after learning what happened.

Mahaney said his nephew had climbed Rainier before.

"He just loved to climb, he loved the outdoors, he loved the exhilaration of being in the wide open," Rob Mahaney said. "Even as a toddler he was always climbing out of his crib. His parents couldn't keep him anywhere -- he'd always find a way to get out of anything."

Last year, about 10,800 people attempted to climb the 14,410-foot glaciated peak southeast of Seattle, but only 129 used the Liberty Ridge route, according to park statistics. The vast majority use two other popular routes.

Gordon Janow, director of programs for Alpine Ascents International, said the group was on a five-day climb of the Liberty Ridge route.

The climbers had to meet certain prerequisites, and their ice and technical climbing skills as well as their biography were evaluated by a three-person team, Janow said.

The company's brochure says, at a minimum, those interested in the guided climb were required to be able to physically carry a 50-pound backpack on steep snow and icy slopes, ranging from 30 to 50 degrees in slope.

The guiding service lost five Nepalese guides in a deadly avalanche on Mount Everest in April that killed 16 Sherpa guides.

Sunday 02 June 2014

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2014/06/02/officials-say-search-for-missing-mt-rainier-climbers-too-risky/

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12 confirmed dead, 3 missing in Russian helicopter crash


Russian rescuers retrieved 12 bodies while three remained missing on Monday after a helicopter carrying senior regional officials crashed into a remote northern lake.

The Mi-8 helicopter carrying 17 passengers and crew including top regional officials and businessmen, crashed into the Munozero lake in the far northern Murmansk region on Saturday.

Two survived the crash.

"There were 17 people on board. The bodies of 12 dead have been raised to the surface, the fate of three people remains unknown," the head of the emergency ministry's national crisis management centre, Viktor Yatsutsenko, was quoted as saying by the ITAR-TASS news agency.

The two survivors were in a "satisfactory condition" in hospital after being found floating in the lake still strapped to their chairs, Yatsutsenko said.

Ten out of the 12 dead have been identified, including the deputy governor of the Murmansk region, Sergei Skomorokhov, the RIA Novosti news agency reported, citing a law enforcement source.



The search for the missing was hampered by poor weather conditions with high winds and waves, rescuers told RIA Novosti.

The number of people on board was initially reported as 18, but fell to 17 as it emerged that one crew member did not board the helicopter.

"According to updated data, one of the crew members, a technician... did not fly," a source from law enforcement told ITAR-TASS.

Investigators said that possible causes of the crash were aircraft malfunction and bad weather conditions.

"The pilot found himself in difficult meteorological conditions, lost his sense of direction and hit the surface of the water," the Investigative Committee said in a statement.

PhosAgro, one of the world's top producers of phosphate fertilisers, said that the trip was organised by one of its subsidiaries to help regional authorities to develop the region's tourism potential and attract investors.

Ten victims of the crash of a helicopter Mil Mi-8 on Verkhneye Munozero Lake in northern Russia’s Murmansk Region have been identified, the Russian Investigative Committee (IC) told ITAR-TASS on Monday.

“Twelve bodies were recovered, and ten of them have been identified as of now,” the IC said.

Official identification procedure will be finalized when helicopter crash victims are brought to the city of Murmansk.

Sunday 02 June 2014

http://www.thesundaily.my/news/1066280

http://en.itar-tass.com/russia/734285

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Saturday, 31 May 2014

WW II aircraft and remains recovered from Vancouver Island mountainside


A Second World War training aircraft and the remains of four airmen who went missing in 1942 have been recovered from a remote logging site on Vancouver Island.

The Avro Anson aircraft went missing on Oct. 30, 1942, after it left the air force base at Patricia Bay in Sidney on a navigational training flight.

After the aircraft failed to return to the base as planned, searches failed to locate any wreckage.

Last October, a logging crew working for Teal-Jones Cedar Products on a remote mountainside on the west coast of Vancouver Island near Port Renfrew came upon the wreckage.

vancouver island plane recovery

The B.C. Coroners Service and the Department of National Defence were able to recover the bodies from the remote mountainside earlier this month.

The Department of National Defence surveyed the site and discovered the remains of the four airmen, but conditions at the time made it too difficult to recover them.

This month, specialists from the B.C. Coroners Service returned to the site with DND personnel and were able to recover and eventually identify the remains.

The surviving family members were then contacted to let them know of the discovery.

Aircrew included 1 Canadian, 3 Brits

The four airmen included Sgt. William Baird from the Royal Canadian Air Force, and three members of the British Royal Air Force: Pilot Officer Charles Fox, Pilot Officer Anthony William Lawrence, and Sgt. Robert Ernest Luckock.

All four were members of the Royal Canadian Air Force 32 Operational Training Unit, and after they were presumed dead, their names were listed on the Ottawa memorial for the missing.

The Avro Anson was a twin-engine aircraft used for training bomber crews throughout the Commonwealth during the war. They remained in use by the Canadian military until 1952. (L-Bit/Wikimedia Commons)

In statement issued on Friday, the Defence Minister Rob Nicholson said officials were working with their counterparts in the U.K. to provide a final resting place for the men's remains in a Commonwealth war graves plot.

"Our government makes every effort to honour those who have made the ultimate sacrifice for their country, irrespective of the length of time that has passed. This recovery, and subsequent burial, will provide closure to the families and give these fallen service members the dignity and respect they deserve," said Nicholson.

DND says more than 100 aircrew lost their lives while flying out of Patricia Bay during the Second World War.

“We will never forget the sacrifice of those who came before us and the importance of recovering our fellow airmen cannot be understated. No matter how much time passes, doing the right thing for our people and for their families is an air force priority," said Lt.-Gen. Yvan Blodin, the commander of the Royal Canadian Air Force, in the statement.

The Avro Anson was a twin-engine aircraft used for training bomber crews throughout the Commonwealth during the war. They remained in use by the Canada military until 1952.

Saturday 31 May 2014

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/ww-ii-aircraft-and-remains-recovered-from-vancouver-island-mountainside-1.2659691

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Friday, 30 May 2014

14 die in Edo auto crash


No fewer than 14 persons lost their lives yesterday in an auto crash on the Benin-Okene Expressway.

According to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), the incident, which occurred around the Ewu slope in Esan Central Local Government Area of Edo State, involved a 15-seater Toyota Hiace bus belonging to Edo City Transports Service and an articulated vehicle.

The truck, which was said to be coming from Abuja ran over the bus, resulting in the death of all passengers on board.

A witness, Mr. Ben Omoede, said the incident occurred when the brakes of the articulated vehicle failed.

“The truck’s brakes failed and it ran over the Toyota bus coming from the opposite side and killed the 13 passengers and the driver,’’ he said.

Officials of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) and the Nigeria Red Cross Society evacuated the corpses to Irrua Specialist Hospital in Edo State.

Chairman of Edo Central branch of the Red Cross, Mike Odiahi, who was at the scene, confirmed the incident to newsmen.

He said: “14 dead bodies have been recovered and they have been taken to the mortuary at Irrua Specialist Hospital.’’

Odiahi, who lamented the frequent accidents around the Ewu slope, advised road safety officials to ensure regular patrols in the area to prevent further accidents.

Friday 30 May 2014

http://sunnewsonline.com/new/?p=65638

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2nd diver dies in search of South Korean ferry


A diver has died during the search for people still missing inside a sunken South Korean ferry.

It’s the second such death among divers mobilized since the ferry sank on April 16, leaving more than 300 people dead or missing.

Government task force spokesman Ko Myung-seok says the diver fell unconscious when he was pulled to the surface by fellow divers Friday.

The diver received CPR and was taken to a hospital on a helicopter but was declared dead there. The exact cause wasn’t known.

Ko says the diver was cutting open parts of the ship exterior to make searches easier.

Since the sinking, 288 bodies have been recovered but 16 people are still missing. No new body has been retrieved since May 21.

Friday 30 May 2014

http://time.com/2796620/2nd-diver-dies-in-search-of-south-korean-ferry/

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Thursday, 29 May 2014

‘Forgotten Empress’ sank 100 years ago, took 1,012 lives


It took only 14 minutes for the storied steamship to sink near Rimouski, Canada’s deadliest maritime disaster during peacetime, yet many have never heard the chilling tale.

It was May 29, 1914, and Mary Dale was bringing her baby daughter Reta back to Buxton, England, to show her off to relatives. The two would have been fast asleep in their second-class cabin on the RMS Empress of Ireland as it sailed past Rimouski in the calm waters of the St-Lawrence. They may have been startled from their slumber when the ship’s alarm bells and foghorn blasted into the dead of night. But there was no time to escape.

The Empress, en route from Quebec City to Liverpool, was broadsided by the 6,000-tonne Norwegian freighter SS Storstad, which was loaded with 11,000 tonnes of coal. And water was flooding through the huge gash in the Empress’s hull. The Empress went down in 14 minutes.

Mary and Reta were among the 1,012 passengers and crew who perished at about 2 that morning in the river. Only 465 survived. “My great uncle Jack, who was working as a carpenter in Toronto, went to search among the bodies. They said he went grey overnight,” said Anne Polewski, Mary’s great-niece.

This week, Polewski and her husband will travel from Ancaster, Ont., to Rimouski to mark the centenary of Canada’s deadliest maritime disaster during peacetime. Though the Empress of Ireland went down long before Polewski was born, she has thought a lot about the accident, imagining herself in her great aunt’s place. “They would have been wearing long nightgowns, which would have made it difficult to escape,” Polewski said.

Few Canadian schoolchildren learn the story of the Empress and those who were aboard when it sank. The sinking of the glamorous Titanic two years earlier made bigger headlines. And when the First World War broke out in July 1914, the Empress was all but forgotten.

“The ship is often called ‘The Forgotten Empress’ — but not in the Lower St-Lawrence region,” said David St-Pierre, a maritime historian who grew up in Rimouski and now lives in Quebec City.

As a child, St-Pierre recalls seeing an early exhibit in Rimouski about the Empress, but he says interest in the ship’s story was sparked in 1985, when oceanographer Robert Ballard discovered the wreck of the RMS Titanic. “People started to remember that a ship had sunk in the St-Lawrence. That was the first time the Empress became popular,” St-Pierre said.

When St-Pierre describes the accident, it’s as if he was there. “It was a sad accident. Both ships confused the signals — foghorns and bells — sent in the fog. Neither knew where the other ship was as they were navigating through the St-Lawrence. By trying to avoid each other, the Storstad rammed the Empress,” said St-Pierre. The collision crippled the Empress’s main dividing watertight bulkhead between its two boiler rooms. Because the ship’s watertight doors were open, water moved quickly from one compartment to the other. It is estimated that the ship filled with 60,000 gallons of water per second.

“The majority of those who died probably drowned in their sleep,” said St-Pierre.

Among the passengers on the Empress was a large contingent of members of the Salvation Army, bound for England for an international congress. Ernest William Aldridge’s body was the last to be found — three months after the Empress sank. According to St-Pierre, the remains of some 800 of those who perished were never found. A carpenter by trade, Aldridge played the trombone and was a member of the Salvation Army’s Grand Staff Band. He was 30, and he left behind a wife and three children.

Aldridge’s grandson David Whealy, 75, a retired high school teacher and counsellor who lives in Toronto, says the grandfather he never knew had an important influence in his life. “There was always the vacuum of not having him there, yet I constantly heard about him. His life was lived with a strong purpose — building houses and working for the church. That same desire to have a purpose has stuck with me. That’s why I ended up in teaching,” Whealy said.

Like Whealy, June Ivany had family aboard the Empress, also headed to the Salvation Army congress. Ivany’s grandparents, an uncle and an aunt were among the 465 survivors of the accident, but another uncle, Leonard Delamont, who was in his 20s, perished. “When I was growing up, nobody talked about the details. I’ve learned by doing research,” said Ivany, who is 60.

The 167-metre-long Empress, which left Quebec City for Liverpool on May 28, 1914, had dropped off a river pilot and turned northeast toward the Gulf of St. Lawrence.The ship that collided with it, The Storstad, bound for Montreal, was cruising full speed toward shore to pick up a pilot.

After the collier smashed into its hull, the Empress listed and sank in only 14 minutes amid the screams of terrified crew and passengers. Only a few lifeboats could be launched and most of the people travelling below deck in third class were thought to have drowned in their bunks.

A front-page story in the Toronto Sunday World on June 2, 1914, described the “butchery” of the mad scramble to escape the lower decks. The headline read: Steerage Passengers Slain by Comrades in Scramble for Life; Wounds of Victims Tell Tale of Frenzied Struggle for Life in Empress’ Steerage Quarters; Knives and Dirks Were Apparently Plied by Crazed Passengers Battling Way Thru Crowded Mass in Fore-hold.

Loved ones from across Canada headed to Quebec to conduct the grim duty of trying to identify the dead.

Though Ivany’s grandparents died before she was born, she knew her Aunt Lizzie and Uncle Arthur. “At the time no one talked about post-traumatic stress disorder, but my Aunt Lizzie was afraid of water. She didn’t like to take baths.”

Ivany’s Uncle Leonard died heroically. “When he realized his mom didn’t have a life-jacket, he gave her his. Then he jumped overboard so she couldn’t object,” said Ivany. Delamont’s body was never found.

Ivany and her husband will make 10-hour drive from their home in Toronto to Rimouski to mark the centenary. “Realizing you’re directly connected is kind of an awesome feeling,” she said. Ivany wishes Canadians knew more about the Empress. “Everybody knows about the Titanic. This is an important part of our Canadian history.”

It is not only historians like St-Pierre and descendants of those who were aboard the Empress who want to keep the ship’s story alive. Philippe Beaudry has devoted more than 40 years of his life to the Empress. A retired business consultant, Beaudry, who divides his time between his home in Longueuil and a boat he sails around the world, owned the largest private collection of artifacts from the site of the shipwreck. In 2012, after several years of negotiations, Beaudry sold most of his collection, valued at more than $3 million, to the Canadian Museum of Civilization, now the Canadian Museum of History, in Ottawa.

A longtime scuba diver, Beaudry, now 69, estimates he dove to the site of the wreck of the Empress more than 600 times. He first made the dive in 1970 after hearing about the site from another diver. “When I got to the bottom, there was no light. By pure chance, I found the wheelhouse. That weekend, I started to salvage some pieces such as the magnifier from the main compass,” he said.

The dive, which has claimed the lives of six divers, is considered dangerous because of unpredictable currents, low visibility and frigid water. But none of that deterred Beaudry. “It was an obsession. I was addicted to that work.”

In the 1970s, Beaudry met U.S. divers who were taking major artifacts from the Empress back to the United States. “I thought, ‘These things have to be protected. They have to remain in Canada and the story of the Empress has to be known around the world,” he said.

Compared to the famous story of the Titanic luxury liner that sank two years earlier, the Empress of Ireland’s tale has remained in the shadows. But experts on the ship’s history believe the Empress is finally getting its due as the 100th anniversary of the tragedy approaches.The vessel will be commemorated with the release of Canada Post stamps, a pair of silver coins from the Royal Canadian Mint, the launch of a Museum of Canadian History exhibit, the unveiling of a monument and several memorials around the country.

In Rimouski, the Pointe-au-Pรจre maritime museum, which has a pavilion dedicated to the Empress, will host a banquet and unveil a monument. Churches in Rimouski and nearby Ste-Luce plan to pay homage by ringing their bells in unison at 1:55 a.m., the time of the disaster.

The Salvation Army, which dispatched 170 of its members on the ship to a rally in England, will hold its annual Empress ceremony Sunday at Toronto’s Mount Pleasant Cemetery as well as a reception May 31 in Rimouski. The organization lost 141 people.

The Maritime Museum of B.C. in Victoria has an exhibit of items from the shipwreck.

It was not until 1999 that the spot was declared a historical site. “Sports divers can go and look. But since 1999, if they take objects, they must be authorized. We want the objects to stay there,” said Euchariste Morin, cultural development officer with Quebec’s Ministry of Culture and Communications.

Until 2012, Beaudry stored his collection — which included everything from the ship’s bell to dinner plates and bottles of champagne — in his Longueuil home. “My basement was full and I had to build an addition to store the rest of the stuff. My wife, Gisรจle, never knew how much money I spent on this project — about half a million dollars.”

Beaudry’s interest extended beyond artifacts; he wanted to learn the stories of those who were aboard the Empress on its final journey, as well as the history of the ship, which made its maiden voyage in 1906. The Empress made 95 transatlantic crossings before it went down, bringing over some 120,000 European immigrants to Canada, many of whom settled in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. “It was an immigrant ship. The Empress is part of the story of Confederation,” Beaudry said.

In 1980, Beaudry travelled to England to meet Ronald Ferguson, the senior Marconi officer (as wireless telegraph officers were known at the time) who acted heroically during the collision. “Ferguson was one of the people who saw the Storstad hit the Empress. He knew something was very wrong, but because he was employed by Marconi and was not one of the ship’s officers, he was not authorized to make any decision on his own. He didn’t have the authority to send an SOS, so he sent a pre-SOS to nearby Pointe-au-Pรจre telling them to stand by for an emergency. When the ship’s chief officer gave Ferguson the okay to send an SOS, the ship was listing so badly that Ferguson sent the SOS with one foot on the deck of the Empress and his other foot on the bulkhead or wall of the ship,” said St-Pierre.

Ferguson was 87 when Beaudry met him. “He was like the father I didn’t have,” said Beaudry. “He died three or four years later. He felt the story should have been better known. He never got recognition for what he did.”

Since its 1914 sinking, the Empress of Ireland has continued to claim lives.Over the years, about a half-dozen sport divers have died near the wreck site, which is nearly 50 metres below the surface.

Derek Grout, who wrote two books on the Empress of Ireland, said the area around the wreckage is known for its poor visibility, strong current and dangerous entanglements, such as electrical wires.

“It’s not the place for the faint of heart,” said Grout, who authored “Empress of Ireland: The Story of an Edwardian Liner” and “RMS Empress of Ireland: Pride of the Canadian Pacific’s Atlantic Fleet.”

Even with the hazards, Grout said the Empress was accessible to divers and became one of the most-pillaged shipwrecks in the world. The ship also took many secrets to the riverbed and some believe it may have been cursed.

The Empress’s orange cat, Emmy, jumped off the vessel before it left Quebec City the day before the disaster. Someone caught her and brought her back to the ship, but she ran away a second time, leaving a litter of kittens behind, Grout said.

“Sailors regard that as a terrible omen,” he said of losing a ship’s cat.

A newspaper report also suggested the ship’s captain may have been cursed by a fugitive he helped authorities capture a few years earlier at Father Point, near the site of the Empress disaster.

Dr. Hawley Harvey Crippen, who was later executed after being found guilty of killing his wife, is said to have cursed Capt. Henry George Kendall upon his capture by a Scotland Yard inspector. At the time, the men were aboard the Montrose liner, which Kendall had captained before the Empress.

Ottawa-based young adult fiction author Caroline Cranny Pignat is also doing her bit to keep the Empress’s story alive. In 2012, Pignat, who won the Governor General’s Award for Children’s Literature in 2009, was approached by Penguin to write a historical novel set on the Empress. “I had never heard of the ship, which is really embarrassing as a Canadian,” said Cranny Pignat.

Cranny Pignat got hooked when she started reading newspaper articles from the time and survivor accounts. “Some of the details such as the people who were crushed by life boats and the naked, bloated bodies, were too upsetting to include in a novel for young adults,” Cranny Pignat said.

Cranny Pignat’s novel, Unspeakable, was released this month — in time for the centenary. Cranny Pignat says she has enjoyed learning the story of the Empress, and imagining what it would have been like to be aboard the ship. “It amazed me that this was something bigger than the Titanic and yet so few of us knew about it. Americans know their history. We don’t know ours. The ship was lost — and its story was lost, too,” she said. The Titanic sank on its maiden voyage and it took some two-and-a-half hours before the ship went down. Though there were more deaths when the Titianic sank — 1,517 — more passengers died on the Empress.

But St-Pierre says the centenary events are an important way for Canadians to learn and share the Empress’s story. On May 29, St-Pierre will be at the Maritime Museum of Quebec in L’Islet to participate in a panel discussion about the Empress and Canadian underwater heritage. The Canadian Museum of History launched its exhibit, which features the artifacts Beaudry collected, this week. There is another exhibit about the Empress at the Maritime Museum of British Columbia in Victoria.

“One thousand and twelve people died on the Empress. We should remember them, but we should also remember the Empress as being part of the broader picture of Canadian immigration and settlement,” St-Pierre said. “Her story is part of our collective history that we can remember and celebrate.”

Thursday 29 May 2014

http://www.canada.com/news/Forgotten+Empress+sank+years+took+lives/9885184/story.html

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Families of Colombia disappeared see little hope of justice


After 22 years, Mayerlis Angarita has finally given up hope and stopped searching for her mother, who disappeared one afternoon when Mayerlis was just 11.

“There comes a moment when you stop looking and searching for the truth. I know it will be difficult, if not impossible, to ever know the truth about what happened to my mother,” said Angarita, 33, who heads a women’s rights and land campaigning group, Network for Life.

“You learn with time that if a person doesn’t return home it’s because something has happened to them, that they’re dead,” she said.

Angarita blames her mother’s disappearance on right-wing paramilitary groups which were formed in the 1980s and backed by landowners and politicians to protect them from attacks by leftist rebels.

Around 35,000 paramilitary fighters demobilised as part of a peace deal with the last government, but thousands have since returned to crime and formed new gangs.

Angarita says her mother was last seen being grabbed while washing clothes in a river and bundled into a van by several paramilitary fighters near the town of Monteria in western Cordoba province, a paramilitary stronghold in the 1990s.

“When someone disappears it’s a permanent crime ... The worst thing is that at the time we couldn’t even say my mother had gone missing because it would have been seen as a rebellious act by the paramilitaries. I remember going to school and people asking where my mother was. I had to say she died of natural causes,” Angarita told Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Angarita is one of more than 30,000 people in Colombia whose relatives have disappeared without trace since 1977, victims of five decades of civil war between government troops, paramilitary groups and leftist guerrillas, according to government estimates cited in a new report on Colombia's missing people.

The four-volume report by the National Centre for Historical Memory says that all the warring factions were involved in forced disappearances from 1970 to 2012, but that state security forces, allied with paramilitaries and drug traffickers, played a “notable” role in forced disappearances from the 1980s onwards.

“An attitude persists that denies forced disappearances have been, and are, a reality in Colombia,” the report by the independent research group said.

Over the decades, tens of thousands of innocent people, including trade unionists, poor farmers and other civilians accused of being informers or of sympathising with rebel groups, were killed and dumped in mass graves around the country.

The report cites numerous cases where state security forces tortured civilians and hid their bodies to destroy the evidence, making it almost impossible to trace their crimes.

In 1998, for example, the report says government soldiers and paramilitary fighters were responsible for the torture and disappearance of 26 members of the Embera indigenous tribe and farmers, including nine women, who were suspected of collaborating with rebels from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guerrilla group.

One of the worst atrocities involving state security forces was the “false positives affair”, the report said. In 2008, security forces were accused of murdering civilians and passing them off as rebels killed in battle to inflate the body count in the government’s war against the FARC. The killings involved scores of innocent men, some as young as 16.

Dozens of army officials have been imprisoned for these crimes and investigations and trials of soldiers suspected of involvement in the scandal continue.

The report said families looking for missing relatives faced “massive obstacles from the state apparatus,” and that the authorities’ response to the families had been “defective, erratic and inadequate.”

Forced disappearance was only recognised as a specific crime in Colombia in 2000, even though the first case was officially registered in 1977, the report said.

Few families have found the truth about what happened to their loved ones.

Of the 28,000 cases of missing people being investigated by the attorney general’s office, only 35 have led to convictions, the report noted.

The attorney general’s office only set up a special unit to investigate forced disappearances four years ago, it said.

A government peace accord with the Marxist FARC rebels might help throw light on some of the forced disappearances. Peace talks between the two sides have been under way in Havana, Cuba, since November 2012, though fighting continues.

A peace accord might persuade FARC rebels to say where bodies are buried and might also encourage people who have never reported disappearances to come forward, rights groups say.

While the peace talks continue, forensic teams and around 20 state prosecutors from the attorney-general's office are searching for the disappeared and exhuming bodies.

State prosecutors say it could take 10 years to find and open the estimated 30,000 unmarked graves.

So far, around 4,000 missing people’s graves have been discovered and 5,000 bodies found, thanks to the confessions of scores of paramilitary warlords who laid down their weapons and received maximum 8-year prison sentences in exchange for confessing their crimes.

But Angarita has little hope of ever recovering her mother’s body.

“I’m still waiting but I've almost no hope left. It’s been known for the paramilitaries to cut up bodies and dump in them in rivers,” she said.

Thursday 29 May 2014

http://www.trust.org/item/20140528174236-km7tz/?source=hpeditorial&siteVersion=mobile

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Wednesday, 28 May 2014

Remains of 17 people exhumed in Rudnica


The remains of 17 people and a number of skeletal remains have been exhumed to date from a mass grave at the Rudnica quarry in the municipality of Raลกka.

This was announced on Tuesday by the Serbian Government Commission for Missing Persons.

It is believed that ethnic Albanian victims of the war in Kosovo were buried at the location, the Beta news agency reported.

According to the assessments of experts, the remains of 21 people have been exhumed, and their identity will be determined by the DNA analysis, reported Tanjug.

The exhumation at the Rudnica quarry started on April 23 upon the order of the War Crimes Department of the Belgrade High Court.

A number of exhumed remains are undergoing forensic processes and identification.

The field search and excavation now seek to broaden their scope so as to find other remains that are believed to be buried at this location, the statement reads.

Aside from the authorized state bodies and a team of expert witnesses from Serbia, which are in charge of the forensic aspect of the exhumation, officials of EULEX, the International Committee of the Red Cross, the International Commission on Missing Persons and delegations of the Working Group on Missing Persons from Priลกtina are also present at the site in the capacity of observers.

Wednesday 28 May 2014

http://www.b92.net/eng/news/crimes.php?yyyy=2014&mm=05&dd=27&nav_id=90473

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16 dead in Swat bus plunge


A family migrating from Mingora to Kalam met a tragedy Tuesday morning when the truck carrying them fell in the River Swat, leaving 16 of them confirmed dead and some others missing, police said.

Some others were injured in the incident. Search for the remaining bodies was continued till the filing of this report. "Sixteen members of the family died when their truck fell in the river (Swat) in Pashmal area," Behrain Police Station officer Tariq Khan said. Ten children, five women and a man were among those dead, the police officer said.

"Sixteen people have been killed in the accident including 10 children and five women. Seven other passengers have been injured," Mehmood Asalam, a senior administration official in Swat, told AFP.

"We don't know any reason for the accident at the moment. It may have been caused because driver slept while driving," said Aslam.

Shakeel Khan, a police official, confirmed the death toll and said that the injured had been shifted to Saidu Sharif Hospital for better health facilities.

All of the deceased belonged to one family, he added. According to some other reports, the truck had three families and the depilated condition of the road was the reason for the accident.

Local police official Shakeel Khan confirmed the death toll, and said that the injured had been taken to a local hospital. "The injured included three men, as many women and a child," said Khan.

Families in Swat's coolest areas such as Kalam and Behrain migrate in winter to hotter parts of the district and return to homes when summer falls.

When contacted, Swat Deputy Commissioner Mehmood Aslam Wazir said the accident occurred due to negligence of the driver and excessive speed of the truck.

It is pertinent to mention here that despite tall claims of both the provincial and federal governments to boost the tourism sector in the Swat valley, the roads of upper region were not constructed after the 2009 flash floods. The locals have urged the government to take immediate action and order early repair of the Swat valley roads.

Wednesday 28 May 2014

http://paktribune.com/news/16-dead-in-Swat-bus-plunge-269320.html

http://www.nation.com.pk/national/28-May-2014/10-kids-among-16-die-as-truck-falls-into-swat-river

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