Saturday 5 April 2014

DNA tests for 437 Chinese People's Volunteer soldiers' remains returned to China


DNA will be collected from the remains of Chinese soldiers killed in the 1950-53 Korean War, official sources have said.

The remains of 437 Chinese People's Volunteer (CPV) soldiers were brought from the Republic of Korea (ROK) to China last week to rest in a "martyrs' park" in Shenyang, capital of northeast China's Liaoning Province.

A database will identify the dead and DNA tests will be available on request from relatives of the soldiers, said an unidentified official with the veterans bureau of the Civil Affairs Ministry Saturday.

China has been working with the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) to protect (CPV) memorials in the DPRK. Renovation of CPV cemeteries in the DPRK will begin this year.

More than 2 million CPV soldiers fought alongside the DPRK army in the Korean War from 1950 to 1953. Some 180,000 of them were believed killed, with most buried in the DPRK or ROK.

Last year on a trip to China, ROK President Park Geun-hye offered to return the remains of 437 CPV soldiers to China. The two sides had an initial consultation in Seoul and reached agreement on the transfer in December of last year and excavation commenced. In Beijing in January, the protocol for the return of the remains was agreed and a transfer ceremony was held on March 28 at Incheon International Airport, when the coffins and belongings of the fallen were passed to a Chinese delegation.

The remains were previously buried at a cemetery in the ROK border city of Paju and most have not been identified. This is the first move in long-term cooperation on return of CPV remains from the ROK.

According to agreements between China and the DPRK, the bodies of soldiers killed and buried in the DPRK, including Mao Anying, son of Mao Zedong, will not be returned to China.

China has 25,000 domestic war memorials and others in 20 countries. More efforts will be devoted to protecting these war memorials, the official said.

Saturday 05 April 2014

http://english.eastday.com/e/140405/u1a8017407.html

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'River Monsters' - Sobral Santos II disaster in 1981


Who — or, more accurately, what — killed as many as 300 people in Brazil’s Amazon River in 1981?

In Saturday night’s episode of “River Monsters,” fresh-water detective (and extreme angler) Jeremy Wade tackles the monumental task of narrowing down the suspects in this real-life game of Clue.

The capsizing of the riverboat Sobral Santos II in 1981 was one of the worst maritime disasters in the Amazon’s history, resulting in a tremendous loss of life and earning the nickname “The Amazon Apocalypse.” Since it occurred before DNA testing, hundreds of dismembered bodies and body parts pulled from the river were never identified.

In Saturday’s episode, Wade travels to the port town of Obidos, the scene of the horrific tragedy, to uncover what answers may lurk in the deep murky waters.

Although the official loss of life can not be confirmed, since records only need to be kept for 10 years, published reports following the event said that only about 180 people survived among the estimated 500 passengers on board the Sobral Santos II — which was overcrowded with excess cargo when it crashed into an unlighted dock.

Even though the accident occurred 33 years ago, it’s still fresh in the minds of the residents of the small Brazilian town — and after speaking with eyewitnesses from that night, Wade is able to come up with quite a list of possible suspects.

As always, Wade gets a line in the water to narrow down what was responsible for the carnage.

With so many fish species living in the Amazon, the list of contenders is long — including the chomping Pirarara, known as the Amazon redtail catfish.

But it would take several big predators — or even more, smaller predators — to be responsible for the carnage that ensued after the boat sank.

Reports at the time blamed man-eating piranhas, but Wade has doubts that they are solely, if at all, to blame for the initial attacks that dragged so many under the water, never to be seen again.

Saturday’s special two-hour season premiere — during which fans can submit questions on Facebook and Twitter — starts at 9 p.m., followed by Animal Planet’s first-ever live aftershow, which starts at 11 p.m. and will continue online at animalplanet.com from 11:30 p.m.-midnight with host Lisa Lucas.

Saturday 05 April 2014

http://nypost.com/2014/04/05/river-monsters-uncovers-tale-of-deadly-amazon-fish-attack/

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Police in Somerset and Dorset trying to identify 17 bodies

Police are still trying to identify 17 bodies which have been found in Somerset and Dorset.

The UK Missing Persons Bureau has a list of all the human remains found stretching back to the 1960s which have never been given a name.

Both Avon and Somerset Police and Dorset Police have a number of clues but have many bodies remain unidentified.

Full details are given in each case of what the victim had been wearing and anything else which might give a clue to their identity.

A gallery has been provided featuring some of the information investigators have to go on but WARNING, there is some incredibly graphic content and readers of a sensitive nature may wish to avoid.

Cases include:

A human left foot was washed up on Clevedon beach in June 1993. The right foot was found in 1994 and all investigators have to go on is the Nike trainer found with it. A crash helmet, also though to belong to the victim was also recovered.

A man found in the toilets of a Bournemouth restaurant in February 2009. He was known in the local area for about 20 years as 'Charlie' and was believed to have been from Indonesia, possibly Sumatra. Scar indicates he had previously had surgery, and he suffered from an enlarged heart as well as showing signs he had suffered a stroke previously.

The skeletal remains of a man were found under a mattress in a dip on Parley Common in Dorset in 2006 but he could have been there since 2000. Experts reconstructed his skull using computers and created an image of what he may have looked like.

An “oriental man” was recovered from the sea at Weymouth in 2002. He had a curved spine and broken nose.

A white European man was found in the River Avon in 1996 and it is believed he fell from Clifton suspension bridge. A passport photo was found on his person along with a paperback book – The Greatest Batman Stories, maps, razors and a penny whistle.

A man’s body was found in a ditch near Manor Farm, Dorchester, in 1986. He had a holdall with him with a map of Weymouth and partially full box of Veginen tablets. An image of the corpse was released to aid the inquiry.

A man aged 20 to 50 was found at Yellowham Hill half a mile north of the A35 in 1975. He had died of amytal and mandrax poisoning and had been carrying a Yale type key with RST on one side and 8D on the other.

A female body was found in a beach hut at The Cobb in Lyme Regis in 1974. An image of her post-mortem was released. Eight of her teeth had gold fillings.


The full extraordinary details can be found by clicking this link.

Anyone who believes they may be able to help in any of the cases can email missingpersonsbureau@nca.pnn.police.uk or contact 0845 000 5481.

Saturday 05 April 2014

Read more: http://www.westerngazette.co.uk/Police-Somerset-Dorset-trying-identify-17-bodies/story-20915007-detail/story.html

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Number of missing in Oso mudslide drops to 13


he number of people listed as missing after the deadly March 22 Washington state mudslide has dropped from 15 to 13 on the latest list provided by the Snohomish County sheriff's office.

The Snohomish County medical examiner's office said Friday afternoon it had identified 75-year-old Jerry Halstead of Arlington as one of 30 people killed in the slide. He had been on the missing list.

A call to the sheriff's office for clarification on the reason for removal of a second name was not immediately returned.

The medical examiner's office said 29 of the 30 slide victims have been identified and the names of 28 have been released. Officials were trying to notify relatives of the 29th victim before releasing that name.

Crews continue to search for bodies in the landslide debris that buried the community of Oso, about 55 miles northeast of Seattle.

Saturday 05 April 2014

http://www.komonews.com/news/local/Number-of-missing-in-Oso-mudslide-drops-to-13-253980941.html

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Search for ship sunk off South Korea finds no trace of missing crew


An overnight search for a cargo ship carrying 16 North Korean crew that sank off South Korea killing at least two failed to find any signs of survivors or debris.

The 4,300-tonne Mongolian-flagged ship sent out a distress call from international waters off South Korea's southern island of Geomun shortly after 1:00 am Friday (1400 GMT Thursday).

The bodies of two North Korean sailors were recovered Friday and three other crew were rescued, with 11 people still missing mid-morning Saturday.

Eleven South Korean ships equipped with floodlights and night vision devices scoured the site overnight but found no traces of the boat or crew members, the South's coastguard said in a statement.

The coastguard resumed the search Saturday, mobilizing 12 vessels and seven aircraft to hunt for possible survivors.

The boat, carrying a cargo of iron ore and copper powder, had been sailing from North Korea to China on a sea route regularly used by North Korean freighters.

Sea currents were believed to have carried debris southeast towards Japanese waters, the coastguard said, as it asked for cooperation from Japanese authorities in searching for other survivors.

According to the South's Yonhap news agency, the surviving crew told rescuers that the ship had suddenly listed sharply to one side.

South Korea on Friday informed the North it would return the dead bodies and the rescued sailors at Panmunjom, on the border between the two Koreas, on Sunday, a Unification Ministry spokeswoman said.

Pyongyang's official Korean Central News Agency said Saturday the North asked for cooperation from "countries concerned' in rescuing survivors and helping them to return home.

Saturday 05 April 2014

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-04-05/an-nkorea-ship-sinks-off-south/5369790

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Dozens missing in Solomon Islands flash floods

Dozens of people are still missing after flash floods that have killed at least 12 people and left some 10,000 homeless in the Solomon Islands.

Local media said about 30 people remained unaccounted for following Thursday's flooding.

Much of the capital Honiara was inundated as thousands of people took refuge in emergency shelters.

A state of emergency has been declared amid concerns over food and water supplies and damaged infrastructure.

Solomons Red Cross Secretary General Joanne Zoleveke described the floods as "a tragedy none of us saw coming".

Honiara's main river, the Matanikau, burst its banks in the storm, sweeping away houses and bridges and flooding the downtown area.

"We were watching the river but never expected it to rise so fast. It took us by surprise. That is why there are deaths," Mr Zoleveke said.

Eleven evacuation centres have been set up at schools and at Honiara's international airport, the World Vision aid agency says.

It says that the domestic airport terminal is under water and there are fears about the spread of disease once the water subsides.

Other parts of Guadalcanal province - where the capital is located - have also been declared disaster zones, officials say.

"Clean water sources have been contaminated, sanitation facilities destroyed and there is a lack of medicines to treat people who get sick," said Lawrence Hillary, World Vision's emergency response manager in the islands.

While water levels were reported to be subsiding on Saturday, aid agencies have warned that police still face the unpleasant task of finding more bodies in seaside and river debris.

The official number of deaths was, however, lowered on Saturday to 12 from the previous day's toll of 16.

The impact of the flood was made worse because it struck so fast, giving people little time to escape from their homes.

"I witnessed a mother and two children swept away in their home," local resident Paul Lega told the Solomon Star newspaper. He described the devastation as "the worst disaster the nation has seen".

Save the Children said on Friday that the scale of the damage was still unclear outside Honiara as both bridges out of the city had been cut off. However, it says that in the city itself thousands of homes have been completely washed away.

Saturday 05 April 2014

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-26899336

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Soi Lat Plakhao WWII bomb explosion: Junk shop ignored granny's warning


The death toll in the World War II bomb explosion in Soi Lat Plakhao 72, Bang Khen, increased to eight on Thursday, while in Chon Buri experts are trying to defuse a similar bomb discovered in an industrial estate, ensuring there will be no repeat of Wednesday’s disaster.

Shomchin Janthachart says she was just moments away from being blown apart by a large World War II-era bomb which killed eight people at a scrap metal shop on Wednesday.

The 70-year-old, whose house is separated by just a narrow strip of land from the shop where the blast occurred, said she tried to warn workers of the imminent danger, but was ignored.

The workers proceeded to cut apart the bomb with a blowtorch, triggering a massive explosion with destroyed the scrap warehouse on Soi Lat Plakhao 72 in Bang Khen district.

"When I saw those men carrying that object, I immediately knew that it was a bomb. You could definitely see that it was a bomb," Mrs Shomchin told the Bangkok Post.

She said she saw four construction workers deliver a huge metal object to the scrap shop on the back of a pickup truck.

When she approached the truck to take a closer look at the item, she saw it was a 230-kilogramme bomb.

Mrs Shomchin said she told the men not to tamper with the object and to report it to police. But her warnings went unheeded, so she left the scene as quickly as possible.

She raced back to her house to inform her older sister, Pen Yingthong, 80, that a bomb was being carried into the junk shop next door. She asked her sister to immediately call the police.

But before Mrs Pen could reach for the phone, the bomb exploded.

Seven people were originally reported killed in the blast, but the discovery of the body of a three-year-old girl Thursday took the death toll to eight. The explosion also injured 20 and left surrounding homes badly damaged.

Investigators said the bomb dated back to World War II, when Allied forces flew bombing missions over Bangkok after Thailand's alliance with Japan.

"If I had not rushed to tell my elder sister, or if I had lingered around for three extra minutes, I would not be standing here right now," Mrs Shomchin said.

She said the worker who had cut the bomb was the husband of the junk shop owner. Both he and his son were killed in the blast.

The husband was a Cambodian immigrant, as were several of the other junk shop workers who also died.

The owner was not at the shop at the time of the blast, and has yet to be located.

Mrs Shomchin also said two of the construction workers who brought the bomb to the scrap shop died in the explosion.

"The site manager and another worker were standing near their pickup truck when the junk shop workers tried to cut the bomb open. The pickup was destroyed and the two bodies were found right next to it. Two other workers were lucky, because they walked over to my house to buy drinks and survived the explosion," she said.

Mrs Pen, known to locals as "Pa Toi", Thursday went to file a damage report at tents set up by Bang Khen police and district office officials to provide help to residents.

She had to take pictures of the damaged areas of her house and present them to police before she could file a damage report at the district office tent.

She said that as well as her ceiling being heavily damaged, all her windows had been shattered, and her mother, aged 99, had been injured by flying debris.

Another witness, Chuensuk Supattano, 70, said she would most likely have been killed had she been on the second floor of her house, next to the explosion site. The blast ripped apart much of her home's upper storey, but the ground level where she was staying at the time of the blast was left mostly undamaged.

She said she had lodged multiple complaints with authorities against the junk shop owner over pollution, but her complaints had never been investigated.

Marisa Utsa, 41, who rented a house near the scrap shop, said her Cambodian husband worked at the shop and was seen with his elder brother before the blast. Although his body had not been found yet, she believed her husband had died, raising speculation that the death toll may rise further.

Pol Col Kamthon Uicharoen, chief of the explosive ordnance disposal division of the Office of the Forensic Science Police, led his team to inspect the area again today to ensure safety and create confidence among residents.

He said the device was a 500lbs (227kg) general-purpose bomb air-dropped on Bangkok around 70 years ago, adding although it was buried underground for a long time, it could still function.

Many bombs were dropped on Bangkok and Thon Buri in 1944.

City Hall has announced it will offer 30,000 baht to residents whose homes had been entirely damaged, 10,000 baht for partially damaged homes and 10,000 baht for families of the dead for initial assistance.

Another World War II bomb is found at an industrial estate in Chon Buri on Thursday.

Meanwhile, another World War II-era bomb, weighing about 500 kg, was discovered in a reservoir at Hemaraj Eastern Industrial Estate in Si Racha district of Chon Buri.

A factory worker discovered the explosive device and alerted police after water levels in the reservoir receded due to extreme hot weather and exposed it.

Pol Lt Aumnart Planfaifa, deputy chief of the explosive ordnance disposal division of the Border Patrol Police in Chachoengsao, who inspected the bomb, said the device remained in functional condition and it could go off if exposed to vibration or high temperature.

The bomb, about 1.2 metres long and 30 centimetres in diameter, had a destructive radius of 500 metres.

Pol Lt Aumnart said his unit did not have the proper equipment to defuse the bomb and he would ask the air force's explosive ordnance team to handle it.

He said he would look into how the 70-year-old bomb had been able to remain undetected in the reservoir as the industrial estate had been operating for 30 years.

Saturday 05 April 2014

http://www.bangkokpost.com/breakingnews/403311/junk-shop-ignored-granny-warning

http://www.bangkokpost.com/print/403283/

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