Thursday 27 November 2014

Unidentified corpses pile up in Baja


Between 2013 and June of this year, Baja California medical examiners have been unable to identify more than 1100 cadavers presented to them for autopsy.

Most of the unclaimed bodies have been buried in unmarked common graves in the cities where they were found, Dr. Francisco Acuña Campa, chief of the state forensic medical service, told the regional daily El Mexicano.

Baja California ranks first in Mexico in the number of unidentified corpses, he told the newspaper.

Of the unidentified corpses, 784 were from Tijuana, 248 from Mexicali, and 100 from Ensenada, Acuña Campa said.

In an effort to resolve the problem, the state Forensic Medical Service has developed a program that aims to reduce the number of unidentified bodies, he said.

A website has been set up for unclaimed bodies — 1132 in 18 months.

Pathologists will keep detailed records of exactly where the bodies were found and four or five identifying characteristics of the corpses when possible. Relatives who believe they may have lost a family member in Baja California and have been unable to locate him or her can contact the state forensic service in Mexicali, the state capital, Acuña Campa said.

A website with a link to the program should be functioning soon, and through it, relatives from anywhere in the world can provide identifying information about missing family members. The agency will then try to match the information with data collected by pathologists. If a match is confirmed, family members will be permitted to claim the remains.

Acuña Campa speculated that many of the bodies are likely from Central America, noting that one body has already been identified by family members from Honduras.

Thursday 27 November 2014

http://www.sandiegoreader.com/news/2014/nov/21/stringers-unidentified-corpses-piling-baja/#

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Archaeologists to exhume the bodies of over 100 unidentified Argentine soldiers on Falkland Islands


Archaeologists in Argentina are set to exhume the unidentified bodies of over 100 Argentine soldiers who were killed during the Falklands War.

The Argentine Group of Anthropological Forensics (AGAF) has been preparing for a year for their chance to dig up the 123 unidentified bodies buried on the Falkland Islands, and it seems now that the group will finally been given the green light to begin their work.

As part of their preparations, the group has contacted 78 families who have agreed to give blood samples, as well as provide information on the appearance of their loved ones, so that these details be placed into a database.

It is hoped that this information can then be used to help identify the dead soldiers.

Member of the AGAF, Luis Fondebrider, said that their preparations had taken painstaking efforts over the last year to obtain the information and they are now fully ready to exhume the bodies, take the samples back to Argentina for examination and attempt to match them up with the information they have already.

He said: “From the technical point of view, we are ready to launch the operation in the Falkland Islands when it is requested.”

He added: “We believe in eight weeks’ time, we can exhume the bodies, analyse them, take the samples and rebury them in the Darwin cemetery.”

The group has said that they must carry out the work before March 2015, as the weather after that period will make digging nearly impossible.

The 123 bodies make up nearly 20 per cent of the 649 Argentines that died during the war between the South American nation and the UK that took place between April and June 1982 – 258 British soldiers were killed.

Thursday 27 November 2014

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/archaeologists-to-exhume-the-bodies-of-over-100-unidentified-argentine-soldiers-on-falkland-islands-9880080.html

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Lagos church collapse: Nigeria DNA samples difficult to match


Genetic testing to identify the remains of 84 South Africans killed in the Nigerian building collapse was extremely difficult, the Saturday Star reported.

Dr Munro Marx, head of Stellenbosch University's Unistel Medical Laboratories genetic testing centre that conducted the testing, said it was "by far...most difficult matchings we have been expected to do".

"In the temperatures and humidity of Lagos, decomposition happens pretty fast," he told the newspaper.

Recovery of the bodies only began four or five days after a guest house belonging to the Synagogue Church Of All Nations in Lagos - headed by preacher TB Joshua - collapsed on 12 September, killing 116 people.

"So when they recovered the bodies they embalmed the bodies."

The chemicals used, however, penetrate tissues and bone meaning that "obtaining DNA is extremely difficult".

"The 116 samples that we got were really not at all of a good quality."

The samples were numbered, but to identify the remains, DNA samples needed to be taken from the victims' family members.

The state disaster management team, made up of health department and police officials, would be responsible for taking DNA from the families.

Marx described the task of the five geneticists working on the DNA tests as "extremely stressful".

"We were working almost around the clock every day".

Thursday 27 November 2014

http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/Report-Nigeria-DNA-samples-difficult-to-match-20141122

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Debate over fate of sunken corpse ship from 1902 with 499 bodies on board continues


The S.S. Ventnor sank 112 years ago off the northern New Zealand coast, bearing unusual cargo: the exhumed bodies of 499 Chinese miners, some in wooden coffins and others in sealed zinc caskets.

They had tried their luck in New Zealand’s gold rush, and had paid in advance to ensure their bodies would go back to China, no matter what. A wreck believed to be the ship was discovered in 2012, raising the possibility that someday, the remains might go home.

Now the question is: Should they?

The wreck was found by a team led by John Albert, an amateur New Zealand filmmaker. He says he was drawn to the Ventnor’s story after standing at a bluff overlooking the Hokianga Harbour – near its final resting place – and feeling a chill, like a spirit had entered him.

But his work, including a news conference publicly announcing the wreck’s discovery last week, has upset some members of New Zealand’s Chinese community, who say he removed artifacts from the wreck without consulting them and against their wishes.

“I went to the media conference and had no idea what was going on. I was shocked and disappointed that we hadn’t been consulted and hadn’t been informed beforehand,” said Virginia Chong, the previous president of the New Zealand Chinese Association. “The bodies and bones on that ship are our ancestors, our people.”

Albert said he did speak to a number of people in the Chinese community, but couldn’t consult with everyone. He plans to make a documentary about the Ventnor, but said he never intended to profit from his activities, as some have assumed.

“I’m hurt,” he said. “Everything I have done was done above-board and legally, and with the best intent.”

The story of the Ventnor has its roots in the 1860s, when thousands of Chinese miners came to New Zealand seeking their fortunes. Most left their families behind, hoping to return to China as wealthy men. Many ended up dying in poverty.

Many of the miners took a type of insurance policy to have their remains returned to China should they die in New Zealand. They paid money into a charity run by Choie Sew Hoy, a successful merchant who sold supplies to the miners and owned mining ventures.

Sew Hoy in 1883 organized the repatriation of 230 bodies to China and planned an even bigger shipment for 1902.

Miners who had been buried for up to 20 years were disinterred. The North Otago Times wrote in 1902 that the bones were washed by a Chinese man “who calmly smoked a cigarette the while, and scrubbed away all the adhering matter with a scrubbing brush.”

Such remains were dried, tied in calico bags and placed in small wooden coffins. Intact bodies, on the other hand, were placed in zinc caskets that were immediately sealed, the newspaper said.

Sew Hoy died before the Ventnor left, and joined the other corpses aboard.

After leaving New Zealand’s capital, Wellington, bound for Hong Kong, the Ventnor struck rocks off the Taranaki coast and limped to near the Hokianga Harbour before sinking in about 150 meters (500 feet) of water.

The captain and 12 crew members died, while other crew members made it ashore in lifeboats. Some body parts drifted ashore and were buried by indigenous Maori.

The manifest of the corpses went down with the ship. That meant for more than a century, Sew Hoy was the only person whose corpse was known to be aboard.

Chong said Chinese researchers in recent months have been able to get preliminary identification of most of the miners from exhumation records. She said the researchers are still working to identify their descendants.

Albert said that with his own money and, later, backing from a New Zealand Chinese businessman, he began chartering a boat and divers to search for the ship.

He said they found a wreck in 2012, but weren’t certain it was the Ventnor. He said he went to China and met with officials, including those from a museum in Guangzhou, who wanted to see physical proof.

He said that among the objects the divers took were a porthole, a lamp, a small bell and an engine order telegraph, used to deliver instructions on the ship’s speed from the bridge. None provide slam-dunk proof the wreck is the Ventnor, though Albert and authorities are convinced it is because of its size and location.

Peter Sew Hoy, the great-great grandson of Choie Sew Hoy, said that while his family gave Albert their blessing to send down a remotely operated underwater vehicle to film the wreck, he had never mentioned taking artifacts.

“It’s a gravesite. It’s a spiritual site,” Peter Sew Hoy said. “From a moral point of view, it would have been nice to have been contacted.”

The Sew Hoy family and others in the Chinese community successfully petitioned to have the site protected in May. The heritage protection order prevents the wreck from being further touched but allows divers to observe it.

Chong, the New Zealand Chinese Association official, said she and about 100 other Chinese representatives, including Sew Hoy family members, traveled last year to the area to formally bless the souls lost on the Ventnor, to ensure they were at rest.

But it turned out that wasn’t the final chapter. Albert’s news conference last week prompted excitement and distress and raised thorny questions about what should happen next.

Albert said the search has cost about 300,000 New Zealand dollars ($236,000) so far. He said that while it will be up to officials, local Maori and Chinese family members to decide the fate of any remains, he thinks the bodies should go to China because that is what the miners had wanted.

Chong, however, said it would likely be impractical to identify individual remains after so many years at sea, and they should probably be left alone.

How New Zealand’s government will respond remains unclear. One lawmaker’s suggestion that the site could have tourism potential earned a swift rebuke Monday from the nation’s race relations commissioner, who said Chinese families needed to be consulted.

Peter Sew Hoy said he’s not sure what should happen.

“The thing is, my family needs to be happy, and other Chinese groups also need to be happy,” he said. “We can’t agree to anything at this stage. We need to talk.”

He added that he’s certain of one thing: His great-great-grandfather should remain with the other bodies, whether in their watery grave or in the ground in China. He said his ancestor was a leader among the deceased men and would never have wanted to leave them.

Thursday 27 November 2014

http://wkbn.com/2014/11/25/in-new-zealand-feud-over-fate-of-1902-corpse-ship/

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HMS Bulwark explosion centenary marked in Portsmouth


The 100th anniversary of a massive explosion that killed most of the 750 sailors on a Royal Navy battleship has been marked in Portsmouth.

The huge blast ripped through HMS Bulwark in the Medway Estuary shortly after dawn on 26 November 1914.

Conducting a remembrance service earlier, naval chaplain the Reverend Bernard Clarke, described it a "terrible tragedy".

Cordite charges are believed to have caused the blast.

The explosion was so cataclysmic parts of Bulwark were hurled up to six miles and the pier at Southend shook.

Personal effects were reported raining down on the town of Sheerness.

Bodies were still being washed up on the Kent coast two months after the disaster.

Navy investigators at the time quickly discounted theories of a U-boat attack or a Zeppelin raid and focused on ammunition stored in cross-passages.

It is thought cordite charges left next to a boiler bulkhead ignited and caused the blast.

The wrecked segments of the port and starboard bow remain on the Medway seabed.

The remembrance ceremony was held at HMS Excellent where a plaque commemorates the loss of the 15-strong HMS Excellent Royal Marines Band in the tragedy.

Mr Clarke said: "The ceremony was all about marking this terrible tragedy and reflecting on the wider sacrifices made by not only the Royal Marines Band Service but the wider naval family and the whole of humanity during the First World War."

Thursday 27 November 2014

http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-30209368

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Argentine forensic specialists identify three of the 30 bodies found in the mass graves


The Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team, or EAAF, that is collaborating with the Mexican Government in the Ayotzinapa investigations, said Tuesday it identified three more bodies found in clandestine graves in the southern Mexican state of Guerrero, but they are not the remains of any of the 43 students who disappeared in the city of Iguala on Sept. 26.

The EAAF, which participates in the investigation for the request of the relatives, said in a statement that these remains, found in the area of Pueblo Viejo, belong to “three people missing in Iguala in recent months.”

The remains found in the Pueblo Viejo area are those of "three people who disappeared in Iguala in recent months," the EAAF, which is assisting with the investigation of the disappearance of the Ayotzinapa Normal School students at the request of the families of the missing, said in a statement.

"The families of the three people identified have already been informed by the EAAF and its legal representative, the Jose Maria Morelos Regional Human Rights Center," the specialists said.

The examination of the remains and evidence found in Pueblo Viejo, located in the La Parota area, and in the San Juan River and the dump in Cocula, a city near Iguala, is continuing, the EAAF said.

The EAAF said Nov. 11 that DNA tests performed on 24 of the 30 bodies found in Pueblo Viejo confirmed that the remains were not those of the missing education students.

The specialists are still trying to identify three of the bodies found in Pueblo Viejo and nine other bodies found in La Parota and the Cerro de Lomas de Zapatero in Iguala.

The remains found near the river and in the dump, where the students were presumably murdered and burned, were turned over to the School of Medicine of the University of Innsbruck in Austria between Nov. 13 and Nov. 17, the EAAF said.

An EAAF specialist, Foreign Relations Secretariat personnel and Attorney General's Office employees turned the remains over to the Austrian university.

"The laboratory was suggested by the EAAF to the AG's office since it is one of the best-equipped and most experienced in the world in handling extremely deteriorated remains," the EAAF said.

A confidentiality agreement was signed Nov. 17 covering findings in the case and giving the Argentine specialists access to results obtained by the AG's office, the EAAF said.

"The laboratory in Innsbruck is now studying the samples," but due to "the difficulty of the job, timeframes cannot be provided at this time on when results will be available," the EAAF said.

The 43 missing students from Ayotzinapa Normal School, a teacher's college, were detained by police on the night of Sept. 26 and handed over to the Guerreros Unidos drug cartel, which killed them and burned the bodies to eliminate all traces of the victims, Mexican officials say, citing statements by suspects in the case.

The parents of the missing young people, however, say they will not accept the official explanation without solid proof.

Thursday 27 November 2014

http://www.laprensasa.com/309_america-in-english/2812963_argentine-specialists-identify-3-more-bodies-found-in-southern-mexico.html

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Death toll rises in Nepal bus crash


The death toll from a bus crash in western Nepal has risen to 47, making it one of the country's deadliest road accidents in years, police said.

Emergency workers pulled the bodies of 44 victims from the wreckage of the overcrowded bus over the weekend after it plunged into the deep Bheri river in mountainous Jajarkot district on Thursday.

The bodies of three other victims had earlier been found, and police said rescuers were still searching for more victims in the deep, fast-flowing river, 400km west of the capital, Kathmandu.

According to local news website Nepal News, around 32 bodies have been identified, while the remaining 15 are yet to be identified.

Deadly crashes are relatively common in the Himalayan nation because of poor roads, badly maintained vehicles and reckless driving.

"The confirmed death toll so far is 47," said Jajarkot police chief Dinesh Raj Mainali.

"We have recovered all the bodies that were trapped inside the bus wreckage. Now we are searching for any bodies that may be outside the bus."

Police believe the accident happened when the bus driver saw a tractor approaching from the opposite direction and swerved to avoid it, sending the vehicle off the narrow road, Mainali said.

There were only 45 people on the official passenger list, but police believe the driver stopped along the route to pick up extra travellers without registering them.

"There are 42 seats inside the bus so it was somewhat overloaded," Mainali said.

Ten injured passengers were taken to a nearby hospital for treatment after the bus plunged into the river.

Distraught families packed the hospital Monday morning, anxious for news of their loved ones.

The country's road network has seen a four-fold expansion over the last three decades, but that has been accompanied by a rising death toll.

According to official figures, 1,816 people lost their lives in accidents in a one-year period between 2012-13, up from 682 deaths ten years ago.

Thursday 27 November 2014

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/asia/2014/11/death-toll-rises-nepal-bus-crash-2014112474518905272.html

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