Tuesday 18 December 2012

13 killed in Pune building collapse, India


Thirteen labourers were killed and several others trapped when a slab of an upcoming college building collapsed in a village here Tuesday, police said.

The incident took place in Lonikand village, around 30 km from Pune city, where a new building of an ayurvedic medical college was being constructed.

"Many labourers were working on the fourth floor of the building when a slab gave way. We had initially pulled out bodies of four labourers. The toll has gone up to 13 now," a police official told IANS.

"Rescue operations are still underway and we are checking if there are more people trapped under the debris. However, most of them have been pulled out. One other labourer under treatment is in critical condition," he added.

Police said they were probing the reason behind the collapse of the cement slab suspected to be of an inferior quality.

However, the identities of those killed have not been ascertained yet.

Tuesday 18 December 2012

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/pune/13-killed-in-Pune-building-collapse/articleshow/17668224.cms

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Update: 3 more bodies found; typhoon toll at 1,046


Three more bodies were pulled out from the mud on Tuesday, bringing the total to 1,046 of those who died from Typhoon Pablo which wrought havoc in Visayas and Eastern Mindanao two weeks ago.

Retrieved were Titing Bragat of Monkayo, Army Private First Class Fermin Segapo of New Bataan and Eliza Gungob of Mawab town, all in Compostela Valley.

National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council Director Benito Ramos said they remain in a “search and retrieval mode” to look for 841 persons still missing.

He said that the United National Development Program had sent building materials intended for the construction of houses for thousands of the typhoon’s victims.

Tuesday 18 December 2012

http://manilastandardtoday.com/2012/12/19/3-more-bodies-found-typhoon-toll-at-1046/

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At least 18 Somalis die when boat capsizes off Puntland


At least 18 Somalis drowned when their boat sank and their bodies washed ashore near the port city of Bosaso in Somalia's northern breakaway region of Puntland, a government official said on Tuesday.

The Puntland official said authorities believed a boat carrying illegal Somali migrants had capsized, and that it was likely that the death toll could rise.

African migrants often use unseaworthy boats to try to reach Yemen, seen as a gateway to wealthier parts of the Middle East and the West. Hundreds of the migrants have perished at sea.

"Today we found 18 dead bodies of Somalis on a beach 17 km away from Bosaso," Seinab Ugas Yasin, the assistant health minister in the semi-autonomous region told Reuters.

"The dead bodies include those of 10 women, seven men and that of a baby. We also found 5 people alive," she said.

Yasin gave no further details, but said authorities were looking for more dead people. Residents said the ill-fated boat had been carrying about 80 people from Bosaso.

At least 27 people were believed to have died in April after two boats that had set out from Somalia sank off the coast of Yemen.

Tuesday 18 December 2012

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2012/12/18/uk-somalia-disaster-idUKBRE8BH0ZE20121218

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Sri Lankan floods, landslides kill nine, thousands affected


Heavy rains fell in parts of Sri Lanka as landslides and floods left nine dead and made hundreds of thousands homeless, a spokesman for the Disaster Management Centre said Monday.

Five more deaths were reported overnight from the weekend's floods and landslides mainly in the eastern, central and north central parts of the country.

'We are expecting more rains and the assistance of the navy, army and air force has been sought to help flood victims and supply food to them,' the spokesman said.

On Sunday, four people were buried in a landslide in central Sri Lanka's Kandy district while five others were killed in floods in separate incidents.

More than 4,000 houses have been damaged with 974 of them destroyed, the spokesman said.

The government put up 180 temporary camps to accommodate some 70,000 people who have been forced to leave their homes, but thousands of others were being accommodated in temporary shelters schools, temples and with relatives or friends.

Meteorological department officials said the weather conditions were unusual compared to previous years.

Residents in four districts were warned of possible landslides.

The United Nations stepped in with food aid for the flood victims in the Eastern Province by providing over 500 tons of dry rations including flour.

Tuesday 18 December 2012

http://news.monstersandcritics.com/southasia/news/article_1610526.php/Sri-Lankan-floods-landslides-kill-nine-thousands-affected

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18 Killed as Boat Sinks in River in Southeast Benin


Local officials reported on Monday that 18 people, mostly children, drowned to death after their boat sank in the Heelou River which is located north of Cotonou, the largest city and the economic hub of Benin.

The overloaded boat was transporting the passengers across the river to the town of Togba when it sank on Saturday night. According to Patrice Hounsou-Guede, the mayor of Abomey-Calavi district, the boat can only accommodate eight passengers but was carrying 27 along with their baggage and four motorbikes.

Meanwhile, Interior Minister Benoit Degla ordered the suspension of non-motorized travel on the river pending the result of an investigation into the tragic incident.

Boat mishaps are fairly common in West Africa, where the poor conditions of roads make travel on rivers the only feasible and practical means of transporting both passengers and goods.

However, the enforcement of safety rules and regulations is often lax.

Around 20 school children drowned in October when an overloaded ferry sank on the Okpara River in northern Benin.

Tuesday 18 December 2012

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/12/17/us-benin-boat-idUSBRE8BG0I020121217

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At least 26 people killed in traffic accident in Colombia

least 26 people died and 14 others were injured in an bus accident that occurred between Bogota and the southwestern city of Cali, local authorities said Monday.

A total of 24 people died on the scene and three more later in hospital, said Alvaro Escobar, a spokesman for the prosecutor's office in Cundinmarca department.

The bus was heading from Bogota to the city of Cali, some 500 kilometers (310 miles) to the southwest, highway police commander Francisco Patino said.

The bus veered off the road and overturned, Colombian TV footage showed.

The vehicle was part of a caravan of four that were traveling to Cali, returning people from a corporate convention in Bogota.

The bus carrying 40 employees of the company Gano Excel apparently lost it's brake system 20 minutes after leaving the Colombian capital.

Hector Pindda, an employee of the company and traveling in another bus, said the accident happened at the first hours of Monday morning.

People on some of the other buses said the driver of the one that crashed had complained about the brakes on the first leg of the journey but that the bus company failed to replace the vehicle.

Earlier this month eight people died and 11 were injured when a bus flipped over in Ibague, 200 kilometers (120 miles) west of Bogota, apparently after speeding.

Tuesday 18 December 2012

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gOZYfq-lG2pcsFD2qEzUtTCrM6Mw?docId=CNG.12a92d9c44608cdb8214ea0393d048e3.511

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3 Dead, 5 Missing as Ship Sinks Off Cabo Marzo, Colombia


The Colombian navy said three persons were killed, five others remain unaccounted for while 14 have been rescued after a Colombian-flagged ship sank in the Pacific Ocean.

The Claudia Alejandra went down on Thursday in the area of Cabo Marzo off the coast of Choco Province.

The ill-fated vessel was sailing between the municipality of Jurado and the port of Buenaventura in Valle del Cauca Province.

Authorities said the three casualties were crew members of the ship which was carrying both passengers and cargo.

The ship ended up adrift on Thursday apparently because of a mechanical breakdown in stormy waters and ultimately sank, navy officials say.

The survivors said five people were trapped in the ship when the tragedy struck.

On Friday, the navy rescued the survivors and found three bodies. The search operation being conducted by the Colombian navy continued on Saturday morning and deep-sea divers arrived to help. On Saturday, navy vessels and fishermen found five more bodies.

So far this year, the Colombian navy has rescued 331 people and saved 43 ships in the Pacific.

Tuesday 18 December 2012

Read more: http://www.news.com.au/breaking-news/world/dead-as-ship-sinks-off-colombia-coast/story-e6frfkui-1226537689379#ixzz2FPl1BlaL

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Six Killed in Central China’s Coalmine Explosion


Six people were killed, one was injured and another went missing after a blast rocked a coalmine in central China’s Hunan province, Xinhua news agency reported on Tuesday.

The explosion, which ripped through the Niulanchu Coal Mine in Zhongfang County on Monday at 3:00 p.m. local time, killed six miners at the scene and seriously injured one miner, who is currently in an intensive care.

Rescuers continue clearing the debris at the coalmine looking for one more miner, who was also working there at the time of the accident, but went missing after the blast.

According to the agency, preliminary investigation showed that the operator of the mine was to blame for the tragic accident.

The coal industry in energy-hungry China is one of the most dangerous in the world due to poor work safety standards and intensive work schedules. Hundreds of lives are lost annually in accidents at coal mines in the country.

Tuesday 18 December 2012

http://en.rian.ru/world/20121218/178232017.html

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Explosion kills eight in Iranian coal mine


Eight people were killed Tuesday in a coal mine explosion in central Iran, according to a report by the Iranian news agency IRNA.

At first only four people were confirmed as dead, with the additional four defined as missing, however their bodies were soon found and passed on to the Yaziz region's forensic institute

Tuesday 18 December 2012

http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4321525,00.html

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Tattooed body hints at foreign fighters in action


One of the 10 terrorists involved in Saturday night's brazen attack on Peshawar airport had Western-style "tattoos" on his body, raising questions about the identities of those behind the assault.

Security officials said at least five of the 10 attackers involved appeared to be Uzbek nationals. But counter-terrorism officials are perplexed by the discovery of a demonic "tattoo" on the back of one of the terrorists.

"It's the first time I have seen tattoos on the bodies of terrorists," added the official, who has been part of several counter-terrorism operations in the tribal regions.

The image, though incomplete, appears to be a rendition of a Boris Vallejo character. In the militant's case, the tattoo on his back is unfinished. One entire limb, strands of flowing hair and a smaller-headed monster appear to be missing.

Vallejo, a Peruvian-born American painter, works almost exclusively in the fantasy and erotica genres. Swords and monsters are some of his recurrent themes.

The outlawed Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has already claimed responsibility for the attack. That is why this aspect has now added significance because according to religious scholars having tattoos on the human body is against the spirit and teachings of Islam.

"You cannot perform religious duties if you have tattoos on your body," said Prof Khursheed Ahmed, who has written several books on Islam.

Associated with Jamaat-e-Islami, Khursheed maintained that the Peshawar airport attack confirmed "our fears that some foreign hands are carrying out these terrorist attacks in the name of Islam." "A practicing Muslim cannot have such images on his body," he argued. Mufti Naeem of Karachi's Jamia Binoria seminary told The Express Tribune that there was no exception to drawing tattoos in Islam as shariah has clearly imposed restrictions on it.

"Yes, you can offer prayers but Islam does not permit drawing tattoos on bodies and has banned it," he said.

The head of Pakistan Ulema Council Allama Tahir Ashrafi also endorsed the view. "It was astonishing to see the body with a horrible face tattooed on his body. Islam does not allow drawing tattoos," he added. "This cannot be the body of a Muslim."

But a security official pointed out that tattoos on the bodies of terrorists exposed the TTP claims that they were fighting for Islam.

"We know their (TTP) true face. We have raided their dens and even found pornographic films and male potency drugs from there," he said.

When approached, the director general of the Inter-Services Public Relations, Maj-Gen Asim Saleem Bajwa, said the authorities investigating the airport attack would certainly look into all possibilities.

"But it is premature to draw any conclusion at this point," Maj- Gen Bajwa said Tattoo experts say the image on the militant's body symbolises evil. "Skulls, in my opinion, are demonic representations, but only in visualisation. They represent strength, rebelliousness and serious drawbacks," said a Lahore-based tattoo artist.

"Mostly people who get such tattoos want to give out a message that they defy death, those who have seen death very closely, including criminals, gangsters and even rock stars," he said on condition of anonymity.

About the tattoo on the militant's body, he said, "It looks ten to 12 years old. The outlines, curves and shading clearly tell that it has not been made by an expert."

Tuesday 18 December 2012

http://www.timesofoman.com/News/Article-4048.aspx

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Number of missing in New Bataan may exceed figure on list, says mayor


Compostela Valley, Philippines–The number of missing persons here, many of whom now have slim chances of survival, could actually be more than what is reflected in the list of those who disappeared in the aftermath of typhoon “Pablo,” this town’s mayor said.

“What we have is the list of missing persons as reported by relatives, who were looking for them following the onslaught of the typhoon,” Mayor Lorenzo Balbin told the Philippine Daily Inquirer.

But Balbin said the local government learned that there were transients who arrived here to find work before Pablo made landfall and they too might be missing.

“We just don’t know because no one could make a report about them,” he said.

Balbin said to make the list of missing persons, currently nearing 400, as accurate as possible, the local government has been conducting a survey of each family, especially in hard-hit areas of the town, to find out if they have kin or neighbors who remained missing but unreported.

“We don’t want to make guesses,” he said.

Balbin said close to 500 dead victims had already been found and many of them remained unidentified.

“Our search and retrieval operation is still on going,” he said.

As to burial of the recovered unidentified bodies, Balbin said “we will give each a decent burial.”

He said they have constructed a large tomb, where the unidentified dead victims would be interred in individual coffins.

For those already identified, Balbin said their relatives would take care of burying them while the town government will provide them with free coffin and burial assistance.

In Sta. Cruz, Davao del Sur, relatives of at least 33 fishermen, who have disappeared at the height of Pablo’s wrath, have sought the help of local officials in a bid to locate them.

Adelaida Badilla, municipal social welfare officer, said the missing fishermen went out to sea hours before Pablo made landfall in Southern Mindanao.

Badilla said they had started coordinating with other local government agencies to trace the missing fishermen.

In General Santos City, the Task Force Search and Rescue-GenSan told relatives of the more than 300 fishermen–who went missing off Surigao del Norte and Davao Oriental when Pablo made landfall–that the chances of finding any of them alive had become so slim but that its operatives remained in “search and rescue mode.”

“We don’t want to give you false hope, but let’s keep on hoping and praying. The Task Force until now is still in search and rescue mode,” Navy Capt. Lued Lincuna, task force operation officer, told about 100 relatives of the missing fishermen during a debriefing on Monday.

Lincuna said the focus of the massive search and rescue operation is the sea area some 300 kilometers off Davao Oriental, or towards the Celebes Sea and the Indonesian waters.

“The chief of staff of the Armed Forces of Indonesia had given our search and rescue teams a clearance to operate even inside their territorial waters,” he said.

At least 22 boats from the Philippine Navy boats, the Coast Guard, the United States Navy and fishing group are involved in the effort, Lincuna said.

Out of the 372 reported missing in the seas off Surigao and Davao Oriental, so far only 25 had been found, 7 of whom are alive.

In explaining why the number of missing fishermen was so large, authorities said there were 47 fishing vessels composed of mother boats, carrier boats and light boats, which set out to sea from this city before Pablo made landfall. Out of the number, only three vessels had been retrieved.

“On Dec. 17, a US naval aircraft scoured the fishing grounds in the boundary of the Philippines and Indonesia but no sighting of survivor, only floating debris,” Lincuna said.

In Tagum City, the devastation wrought by Pablo to banana and mining industries in Compostela Valley could cause economic ripples in the city, Mayor Rey Uy warned.

Uy pointed out the massive loss of revenue and employment in these sectors, which the city’s economy was quite dependent on.

Tagum gets at least P5 billion in indirect revenues from these sectors annually, represented by purchases banana plantation and mining workers in Compostela Valley make from the city’s businesses, Uy said.

He said city economists had projected that the local economy would shrink by about 30 percent as a result of Pablo’s devastation of Compostela Valley.

“Those from Compostela Valley do their marketing here. Just imagine if that four people could no longer buy needed goods due to the loss of income

Tuesday 18 December 2012

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/326405/number-of-missing-in-new-bataan-may-exceed-figure-on-list-says-mayor

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Update: With 23 bodies found, ‘Pablo’ dead now 1,043


The death toll from Typhoon “Pablo” has reached 1,043 as government workers with the recovery of 23 more cadavers in Compostela Valley, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) said Monday.

In its latest report, the NDRRMC said the typhoon destroyed more than P24.1 billion worth of properties, including close to P16.4 billion in agricultural crops and products.

The agency said searchers found and identified 22 bodies in Monkayo town and another cadaver in Compostela town, both in Compostela Valley province.

Of the total number of recovered bodies, it said 645 had been identified.

Benito Ramos, NDRRMC executive director, said rescue teams were still searching for 844 people, among them over 300 fishermen, who went missing when the typhoon hit Mindanao on Dec. 4, flattening villages and plantations.

Ramos said 6,608 families composed of 25,953 persons were still staying in 63 evacuation centers in southern Mindanao.

He said 701,224 families, or 6,203,826 persons, in 40 cities and 34 provinces were affected by the typhoon, which also damaged 167,295 houses.

Tuesday 18 December 2012

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/326029/with-23-bodies-found-pablo-dead-now-1043

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