Thursday 17 April 2014

S. Korean military begins excavating Korean War remains


The South Korean military has begun a seven-month project to excavate remains of fallen soldiers who fought in the 1950-53 Korean War, the defense ministry said Thursday.

About 100,000 soldiers will dig out sites in 74 regions across the nation until the end of November to find remains of missing servicemembers, the ministry said.

The excavation team will analyze the registry of missing soldiers and conduct DNA tests to trace their families after retrieving their remains, it said.

Since 2000, the South Korean military has yearly conducted the excavation project based on records of former battle sites and registered soldiers during the three-year conflict to repatriate the remains to their family.

A total of 8,744 bodies have been recovered, with 7,658 of them identified as South Korean soldiers, according to the ministry.

Thursday 17 April 2014

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/yonhap-news-agency/140417/s-korean-military-begins-excavating-korean-war-remains

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S Korea ferry: Bad weather hampers search for survivors


Bad weather, murky water and strong currents are hampering the search for survivors of the South Korean ferry disaster.

Emergency services are still searching for nearly 300 people missing after a ship carrying more than 470 people sank.

Officials say 179 people have been rescued. Most of the passengers were pupils at the same high school.

South Korea's president visited the wreck and urged rescuers to hurry.

Park Geun-hye said that time was running out and that every minute and every second was critical.

At least nine people are confirmed to have died, with dozens more injured.

Military divers have been fighting high wind and waves to try to access the vessel. Three divers were swept away in recent attempts but rescued by a fishing boat.

Naval and coastguard vessels used floodlights and flares, to maintain a search now involving more than 500 divers, 169 vessels and 29 aircraft.



But distraught relatives gathered in a gymnasium on nearby Jindo island insisted more should be done, and vented their grief and frustration to anyone who would listen.

"Get my child out of that ship! Dead or alive," one distraught father repeatedly shouted to rescue and local government officials."

The vessel was travelling from Incheon port, in the north-west, to the southern resort island of Jeju.

Some reports say the ferry went off its course and passengers' relatives are also questioning the role of the captain, who's being interviewed by police.

It is not yet clear what caused the ship to list at a severe angle and flip over, leaving only a small part of its hull visible above water, but some experts have suggested the ship may have hit an underwater obstacle.

The captain was being questioned, Yonhap news agency reported. "I am really sorry and deeply ashamed. I don't know what to say," Lee Joon-seok was shown saying on television.

Yonhap said the nine dead include four 17-year-old students and a 25-year-old teacher as well as a 22-year-old female crew member. Identities of the other three were not immediately known.

The latest figures say 475 people were on board, with 287 still unaccounted for. Figures issued by the government have changed several times, prompting criticism.

Efforts are concentrated on the ship, which sank in about 30m (100ft) of water.

"We carried out underwater searches five times from midnight until early in the morning, but strong currents and the murky water pose tremendous obstacles," said Kang Byung-kyu, minister for security and public administration.



Privately, some officials admit it is unlikely the remaining passengers will be found alive.

"Honestly, I think the chances of finding anyone alive are close to zero," a coastguard official told an AFP journalist on a rescue boat.

The US Navy has sent an amphibious assault ship, the USS Bonhomme Richard, to assist with the search.

Captain Joey Tynch told the BBC conditions were difficult.

"We found ourselves in challenging weather conditions today - very low cloud ceilings and reduced visibility and rain, and we're working a search area around the site in close co-ordination with the South Korean on-scene commander," he said.

The ferry sent a distress call at around 09:00 local time (00:00 GMT) on Wednesday, about 20km (12 miles) off the island of Byungpoong. It sank within two hours, reports said.

At least 325 of the passengers on board the ship were students from Danwon high school in Ansan, near the capital, Seoul.

The students, aged 16 and 17, were heading on a field trip to Jeju island with about 15 teachers.

Survivors say they heard a loud thud, before the boat began to shake and tilt.

Some of the passengers managed to jump into the ocean, wearing life jackets, and swim to nearby rescue boats and commercial vessels.



But several survivors have said that they were told by crew members not to move.

"We must have waited 30 to 40 minutes after the crew told us to stay put," one unnamed rescued student was quoted as saying by AFP news agency.

"Then everything tilted over and everyone started screaming and scrambling to get out," he said.

Koo Bon-hee, 36, told the Associated Press that the rescue was not "done well". "If people had jumped into the water... they could have been rescued. But we were told not to go out."

Some of those trapped managed to send text messages to their relatives.

"Dad, don't worry. I'm wearing a life vest and am with other girls. We're inside the ship, still in the hallway," one girl told her father, AFP news agency reported.

But in a subsequent message she said she could not get out. "The ship is too tilted. The hallway is crowded with so many people."

Police, meanwhile, were investigating a text message reportedly sent to a relative of a missing student claiming some passengers had survived in an air pocket, Yonhap news agency said.

Police said they had not ruled out the possibility that the message was a prank, the agency said. There are no verified reports of communication from inside the sunken ship.

Kim Young-boong, an official from the company which owns the ferry, has apologised.

Japan's prime minister offered "heartfelt sympathy" to the victims and their families, and his government offered help with the search - a rare moment of detente between the feuding neighbours.

Shinzo Abe, whose strident nationalism has raised tensions between the two countries, said his thoughts were with those caught up in the tragedy.

The vessel - named Sewol - is reported to have a capacity of up to 900 people and is 146m (480ft) long.

Correspondents say this could turn out to be South Korea's biggest maritime disaster for more than 20 years.

Major maritime accidents in South Korea

1970: Sinking of passenger vessel Namyoung leaves 323 dead
1993: Sinking of passenger vessel Seohae Ferry leaves 292 dead
2007: Sinking of freighter Eastern Bright leaving 14 sailors missing
2009: Sinking of cargo ship Orchid Pia after a collision leaves 16 sailors missing

Thursday 17 April 2014

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-27056653

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Chitradurga bus fire: With no passenger records, cops left in the dark


Identification of the six bodies stored at the Chitradurga government hospital morgue has become virtually impossible for police, as they are no records of the passengers travelling on the sleeper bus from Davanagere to Bangalore.

Police initially planned to compare the list of passengers with the injured, and those who escaped, thus identifying the bodies. However, while questioning of bus driver Firoz, police learnt that many of the passengers had not reserved their seats, which were filled up as the bus made multiple stops during its journey.

Officers at Hiriyur police station said not all passengers were going to Bangalore; some were to disembark at Chitradurga and Tumkur.

Police officers said the bodies had been sent for a DNA test to help identify them, though they had not heard from anyone yet, and no one had come forward to claim any of the bodies. "We're not sure if the families are aware of the accident, and the deaths. It might take them a couple of days to realize their family members are missing. Only after they make any claims can we compare the DNA samples," Chitradurga police said.

Enforcement officials in transport department rubbished rumours that it was a 'non-booked trip'. The third such bus accident in the state, which left six persons charred to death and several others injured, has raised several questions on the compliance of safety directives and enforcement by the transport department.

Sources told TOI the bus is not a factory product, that it was locally built by coach builders, and the engine could have been assembled. An executive with SPR Travels also said the bus was scrapped seven months ago, but the actual owner, Santosh, chose to operate it by picking up passengers without proper bookings.

But the transport department said there were no such violations. "The vehicle is insured and has a valid fitness certificate too. The driver has a valid driving licence too," an official told TOI. However, investigations to ascertain the reason behind the fire in the engine are directed by the transport department. The officials are also trying to get details of the vehicle from the owner and operator of SPR Travels.

The department said a list of passengers is available at the starting point of the journey in Davanagere. The list was being sent to the department headquarters in Bangalore, officials said.

Despite this claim, no passenger records were found in the operator's Bangalore office on Dr Rajkumar Road in Rajajinagar. "No one is available in the booking offices in Bangalore and Davanagere," he said.

As per the order issued on November 17, after two bus infernos in Mehbubnagar and Haveri rocked the state, a copy of the passenger lists should be available at the starting and destination points, and one copy with the crew. Copies of the vehicle's documents should also be available with the crew and at the operator's headquarters.

Wednesday 17 April 2014

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bangalore/With-no-passenger-records-cops-left-in-the-dark/articleshow/33836142.cms

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Bosnians make pilgrimage to see new mass excavation of graves


Denisa Hegic pulled her scarf around her nose to guard against the stench and drew back the plastic shroud. Shaking, she reached down to touch her mother’s skull and caressed it.

The last time she touched her mother she was bleeding on the floor of the family home, slain by Bosnian Serb soldiers storming their tiny village in northwestern Bosnia. On Wednesday, mother and daughter were reunited in a cavernous building used to house the remains of victims newly excavated from the mass grave in Tomasica, 125 miles northwest of Sarajevo.

“I found her body,” said Hegic, who is now 30.

Hegic’s experience is being repeated by many survivors of Bosnia’s 1992-1995 war this week, as experts begin allowing families to view the remains meticulously pulled from the earth and identified through DNA analysis. Hundreds of families are expected to make the sad pilgrimage to see the dead.

So far, 430 victims have been found in the Tomasica grave, a vast pit about 30 feet deep and covering 54,000 square feet. The mass grave contains victims of Bosnian Serb military units who killed Muslim Bosniaks and Roman Catholic Croats in hopes of creating an ethnically pure region.

Many believe more people were originally buried there. Diaries confiscated from former Bosnian Serb Gen. Ratko Mladic suggest that some of the bodies in the Tomasica pit were dug up and moved.

But some progress has been made. Family members coming to view remains are also offering statements to local prosecutors to assist in efforts to prosecute Mladic, who is being tried on war crimes charges at the U.N. tribunal in the Netherlands.

On July 20, 1992, when Hegic was 8, people in Biscani heard the Bosnian Serbs were coming. Her parents hid their only child in the basement. When the soldiers came, they shot her mother, her father, her grandparents, her three uncles and her three cousins.

Hegic and an aunt, survived. She eventually settled in Germany and married a boy from her village that she knew as a child.

They both gave DNA samples to identify relatives who died in the attack. They were called Tuesday and drove back to Bosnia as soon as they heard.

Here, at the Sejkovaca Identification Center, they bring the families in one at a time, where they are faced with bodies placed on shelves, preserved in salt and covered in plastic.

Most people spend only a short amount of time with the dead. They will wait to mourn, gathering for a mass funeral in July.

Wednesday 17 April 2014

http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20140416/NATION/304160138

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Number of missing in Washington mudslide drops


The number of people missing in the massive Washington state landslide has dropped to six.

The Snohomish County sheriff’s office said Wednesday it has removed one name from the missing list. Earlier Wednesday, officials announced that the death toll had risen to 39.

The Snohomish County medical examiner’s office said it was identifying the three bodies most recently discovered and notifying families. They could be among those listed as missing, but officials didn’t say if one of them led to the list being whittled down.

Incident management team spokeswoman Koshare Eagle says one body was found Monday and two were found Tuesday in the southeast corner of the debris field where the Corps of Engineers erected a berm last week.

Wednesday 17 April 2014

http://koin.com/2014/04/16/number-missing-washington-mudslide-drops/

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