Tuesday 3 December 2013

Biggest exhumation underway from Peru conflict


Valentin Casa can't shake the recurring nightmares. And this day certainly isn't helping.

The 36-year-old farmer looks on as forensic investigators unearth a pair of finger bones and two copper rings from a mass grave in the village of Huallhua on the eastern steppes of Peru's Andes. The grave contains the long-buried remains of two women and 13 children, and Casa believes the bones and rings belonged to his mother.

As a boy 27 years ago, Casa watched from behind trees as soldiers and their paramilitary allies dismembered and killed his mother and other women and children left behind by fleeing Shining Path rebels. Civilians suspected of backing the rebels were hunted down and killed. Two weeks later, troops and their civilian confederates caught and killed men from Casa's village, including his father, whose throat they slit.

Three decades later, this isolated corner of Peru is witnessing the biggest exhumation to date of victims of the nation's 1980-2000 internal conflict. The worst of its carnage occurred on these hills between the Andes ridge and Amazon jungle.

"Everybody here is traumatized," Casa says as he watches the work underway. "Whoever says he isn't is lying."

Authorities in distant Lima have been painfully slow to dispatch teams to dig up the dead from a brutal conflict that, according to a 2003 truth commission report, claimed an estimated 70,000 lives. Just over half were slain by Maoist-inspired rebels, over a third by security forces, the commission found. Human rights activists blame politics, including resistance from the military, for the delay in exhuming the bodies. Fifty criminal investigations were only launched into the killings in 2011, said the prosecutor in charge, Gloria Pareja.

In November, forensic anthropologists began their work in the Chungui district and expect to remove 202 bodies in all — mostly women and children. At least 1,384 people were killed in Chungui, which is slightly larger than Hong Kong geographically but has only 6,000 inhabitants.

People there are constantly uncovering bones but very few graves have been exhumed by professionals.

The killing fields are an 18-hour walk from the nearest road in a region known as "Oreja de Perro," or Dog's Ear. It is a place where health care, schools, police and other state institutions barely exist. There are no roads, electricity or phones. The hills are still patrolled by Shining Path rebels, and drug traffickers flaunt the state's absence.

At the edge of a shallow pit, Casa provides security for the forensic team while armed with a worn Mossberg 500 shotgun. He watches the technicians uncover a skull here, a swath of clothing there and finds himself overwhelmed by memories.

"I drank my own urine to survive," Casa remembers after his mother was killed and he fled into the forest.

The exhumers gather the diminutive bones of children, 26 found so far in the district, in boxes made to hold sweet bread.

Tuesday 3 December 2013

http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/dec/02/biggest-exhumation-underway-from-peru-conflict/

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Clutha pub disaster bodies recovered after helicopter wreckage is winched clear


The remaining two bodies from the Glasgow helicopter tragedy were ­recovered yesterday after the mangled wreckage was winched from the roof of the Clutha Vaults pub.

Rescuers used a crane to remove the shattered aircraft, whose crew – two police officers and a civilian pilot – were killed along with six people inside the building in Friday night’s disaster.

The rotor blades and part of the tail had been taken away on Sunday but yesterday the fuselage was secured and winched slowly off the roof.

The wreckage was taken by lorry to the Air Accidents Investigation Branch base in Farnborough, Hampshire.

Removing the Eurocopter EC135 T2 allowed the rest of the devastated building to be searched. Last night police announced that the search and ­recovery operation had concluded, with no further victims inside.

Police Scotland Deputy Chief ­Constable Rose Fitzpatrick said: “I can confirm that the search and recovery operation has now concluded and we are satisfied there are no further ­fatalities at the scene.”

The pub had been packed with revellers enjoying a local ska band. Only five of the nine dead have been formally identified.

Some relatives told yesterday of their anger at the length of time it has taken to recover and identify the bodies.

John McGarrigle, 38, whose father, John senior, 59, is thought to be among the dead, said: “What about the dignity for the human beings underneath that police helicopter? I want my dad out of there. I know he was in there. It’s like a piece of machinery is more important than the people underneath there.”

Mark O’Prey, 44, is also among the missing. His father Ian and sister ­Louise criticised the delay.

Ian said: “If they had made a better attempt on the Saturday, they could have got them out a lot earlier.”

Louise added: “We just need to know. We feel as a family that the ­priority is given to keeping that helicopter intact, which is no use to us.”

Louise said she continues to call Mark’s phone in the hope he will pick up. Police boss Ms Fitzpatrick said: “We are working hard to formally identify the remaining victims as soon as ­possible in order to bring some ­certainty to the families who have been waiting for news since the tragic incident on Friday. As many have acknowledged, it has been a difficult and complex recovery operation.”

Captain Dave Traill and officers Kirsty Nelis, 36, and Tony Collins, 43, died on board when the aircraft hit the pub as it returned from a police operation. Gary Arthur, 48, from ­Paisley, and Samuel McGhee, 56, from Glasgow, were among those killed in the pub. Eleven people remain in ­hospital, three in intensive care.

Tuesday 3 December 2013

http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/446453/Clutha-pub-disaster-bodies-recovered-after-helicopter-wreckage-is-winched-clear

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Namibia: Investigating team sent to Bwabwata plane crash site, DNA tests conducted


Prime Minister Hage Geingob has officially dispatched the team of investigators to dig deep into the Mozambican flight disaster, which killed 33 people in Kavango East on Friday.

Geingob briefly told the media that he had been assigned by President Hifikepunye Pohamba to ensure that the team is sent off. The team consists of experts from Botswana, Angola, Mozambique, Brazil, China, the USA and Namibia, who is leading the probe.

The Namibian understands that the premier was briefed by the investigators on their preliminary findings. It is believed the plane crashed a few minutes after 13h00 in Bwabwata National Park, while en route to Angola from Mozambique. Among those on board were six crew members and 27 passengers, of whom 10 were Mozambicans, nine Angolans, five Portuguese, one Portuguese-Brazilian, one French and one Chinese. By yesterday afternoon, only 31 bodies had been found and airlifted to Windhoek. Paul Ludik, the Director of the National Forensic Science Institute in Namibia, who is part of the DNA testing team said they were busy at work but declined to give more details.

"The media will be informed later. We are are still busy and it will be difficult to say what time we will finish, considering the bodies and processes involved," he said.

Officials in the ministry of works also said they are going to comply with the International Civil Aviation Organisation rules, which state that a preliminary report should be compiled within 30 days after the accident. It is not yet clear what caused the accident but officials said the plane, an Embraer SA 190, went missing on Friday in bad weather, which caused poor visibility.

DNA tests

Experts carried out DNA tests Monday to identify the 33 people who were on a Mozambique Airlines plane that crashed in Namibia killing all on board, an official said.

Thirty one bodies had by late Sunday been pulled from the charred wreckage of the plane in the swamps of northern Namibia's Bwabwata National Park.

“We are still busy,” Paul Ludik, director of the Namibia's national forensic science institute, told AFP, adding “it will be difficult to say what time we are going to finish, considering the processes involved.”

The institute is leading the probe into the crash and the processes to identify the victims.

“Namibia, as the country where the accident occurred, will lead the investigation,” the airline said in a statement.

Other investigators will be drawn from Angola, Brazil Mozambique and the US National Transport Safety Board.

The plane's black boxes have also been recovered along with two voice recorders, Captain Ericksson Nengola, director of aircraft accident investigations at the Namibian transport ministry, told AFP on Sunday.

Mozambique was to declare a national period of mourning for the victims, who came from Mozambique, Angola, Brazil, China, France and Portugal.

The crash was one of the worst incidents in Mozambique's civil aviation history.

The passenger craft came down in torrential rains on Friday in the remote Namibian region killing its six crew and 27 passengers.

The victims' bodies were transferred by helicopter to the Namibian capital Windhoek from the crash site some 1,000 kilometres (600 miles) to the northeast.

The plane, which went down en route from Mozambique to Angola, was a Brazil-manufactured Embraer 190 aircraft and the newest plane in the airline's fleet.

“We have also begun making arrangements for a memorial service for the families, loved ones, friends and colleagues of everyone who was on board,” the airline said

Tuesday 3 December 2013

http://allafrica.com/stories/201312030357.html

http://dawn.com/news/1060014/tests-begin-to-identify-mozambican-plane-crash-victims

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‘Yolanda’ death toll at 5,680; 1,779 still missing


Almost a month after Supertyphoon “Yolanda” (Haiyan) ravaged Eastern Visayas and nearby provinces, the death toll continues to rise, with 5,680 bodies recovered as of Tuesday morning.

The National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) in its latest report said 1,779 people remained missing, especially in Leyte and other areas hit by the deadly storm surge.

Most of the fatalities were from Eastern Visayas, with 2,077 coming from Tacloban City in Leyte alone. This was followed by the municipalities of Tanauan and Palo which recorded death tolls of at least 1,000 each.

Retrieval and clean-up operations in the last few weeks have contributed to the death toll increase as bodies were continuously recovered underneath debris left by the typhoon.

The NDRRMC has also been able to issue a detailed list of fatalities on their website with the names of the victims and their cause of death. Many drowned or died from injuries after being hit by debris at the height of the typhoon last November 8.

With 587,035 houses totally destroyed and another 593,802 houses damaged, the government is shifting its focus to the rehabilitation and reconstruction of typhoon-hit areas.

On Monday, former senator Panfilo “Ping” Lacson spoke with media on his plans as the “rehabilitation czar” for areas affected by the super typhoon.

The total cost of damages to infrastructure and agriculture has been pegged at P34 billion, with roads, bridges and other structures sustaining P14 billion worth of damages.

Also pressing is the lack of electricity in many provinces under Regions IV-B, V, VI, VII and VIII.

Tuesday 3 December 2013

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/539469/yolanda-death-toll-at-5680-1779-still-missing

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