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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Grisly race to identify the Philippines' typhoon dead
by Staff Writers
Tacloban, Philippines (AFP) Nov 20, 2013


Interpol team in Philippines to help identify victims
Lyon (AFP) Nov 19, 2013 - Interpol said Tuesday it had sent experts to the Philippines to help identify victims of the deadly typhoon that killed thousands and left up to four million displaced.

The experts are drawn from Canada, South Africa and the International Commission on Missing Persons, and include DNA and computer specialists, the Lyon-based organisation said in a statement.

"Clearly, one of the main priorities for the Philippine authorities is to find and rescue as many living victims as possible and for the humanitarian relief operations to continue," said Interpol's Director of Operational Support Michael O'Connell, who is leading the team.

"But what is also important is the swift and accurate identification of thousands of victims, which is where international support and coordination is essential and where Interpol can unite the global community in such efforts," he said.

The team will assess challenges including the "possible need for temporary mortuary sites equipped with refrigerated containers and mobile forensic laboratories or work facilities," the organisation said.

Thousands of people died when Haiyan -- packing some of the strongest winds ever recorded -- smashed into the Philippines on November 8, generating tsunami-like waves that flattened entire communities and left up to four million people displaced.

The country, which is hit by an average of 22 typhoons per year, has been described as one of the nations most vulnerable to extreme weather.

Clouds of flies rise as forensic pathologist Cecilia Lim opens body bags one-by-one, in a grim but crucial search for the identities of unknown typhoon victims in the Philippines.

"Some of these remains, their faces are gone. We're trying to do it as fast as we can before we lose everything," says Lim, as a truck unloads 80 more dead at her workspace -- the edge of a mass grave outside the storm-shattered city of Tacloban.

A putrid stench rises from the giant pit where around 700 unevenly stacked bodies lie six deep, some of them having lain in the tropical heat for a week-and-a-half.

Scores more lie on the side of the road, lined up in bags and awaiting processing by small, overworked teams.

Lim says the aim is to record rudimentary details before they are buried in the hope that at some point, the bodies can be identified and placed in a proper grave.

"We are trying to do some initial victim identification and post mortem gathering of evidence before the bodies really decompose," she says.

Many were recovered after being submerged for days in pools of water left by the tsunami-like storm surge that crashed into Tacloban when Super Typhoon Haiyan made landfall on November 8.

Logging the dead

As her assistant lifts the limp, wet clothes of each cadaver, Lim takes notes in neat cursive script in a reporter's notebook, recording the sex and describing distinguishing marks.

Each hand is lifted to check for rings and the pockets are emptied, their contents inspected, logged and photographed.

Long, matted hair is scraped from one woman's face, exposing her teeth so Lim can take a picture.

Crouching over the bloated body of one man, her knees just above the remains of his face, Lim unfolds a pair of spectacles taken from his shirt pocket, looking for a brand name on the arm before she refolds and photographs them.

"We document the clothes they are wearing, as well as any jewellery, tattoos or scars; something distinctive that people remember," she says.

Cesar Pretencio rode his motorbike up from Tacloban in the search for his mother's body.

"We had identified her and she was left in the chapel, but now she is gone," he says.

"We want to know where she is so we can give her a proper burial."

Lim nods sympathetically and tells Pretencio she will "keep an eye out" for his mother.

With the disaster known to have left more than 5,500 people dead or missing, the authorities are overwhelmed and Lim is just one of a handful of forensic pathologists who have been called in to help.

Those that are identified can be claimed by family and interred with the usual ceremony. The rest are taken to one of three pits like this.

A grim search

The corpses are brought by firefighters who drive around the ruined city collecting the dead from among the debris of the storm surge.

"Yesterday we went out on the truck around Tacloban picking up bodies. We got 92," Gallie Encabo tells AFP.

He is part of a group of 15 firemen who have come from the southern island of Mindanao to help with the recovery after one of the most powerful storms ever recorded.

The teams are being rotated among body collection, mass grave duty and water distribution.

"When the doctors have recorded the marks on the bodies for identification, we will put them in the ground," he says, gesturing to the pit where a yellow excavator is digging a second trench.

This is the first time they have done body recovery on such a scale, says fellow firefighter Edgar Reyes.

"There are so many," he says. "Yesterday when we stopped for one body, people would be shouting: 'Hey, there's one over here'."

Lim, who trained in Detroit and Singapore, says that since she and other professionals started work on Monday, they have been trying to impose order on the burial process.

"Normal practice in a disaster like this is for the bodies to be buried in a single line, each one numbered so that they can be located easily," she says.

"But lots of these have just been dumped in on top of one another. That will mean that we could have to dig up a lot of the grave to get at one body."

Ideally, she says, they would like to do DNA tests so that scientists can match the dead with those looking for them. But the tests are not cheap, and with cadavers in such an advanced state of decay, not straightforward either.

"Because of the state of the bodies, we will have to get DNA samples from bones, and that isn't easy."

Despite a long medical career, Lim admits that dealing with so many corpses after a calamity like this is harrowing work.

"You go through all the training for a mass disaster," she says. "But nothing can prepare you for this."

.


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China sends rescuers to Philippines after criticism over aid
Beijing (AFP) Nov 20, 2013
China was Wednesday sending an emergency response crew to the Philippines nearly two weeks after super typhoon Haiyan wreaked devastation, following staunch criticism over meagre assistance from the world's second largest economy. Foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said in a statement that the first batch of Chinese Red Cross relief workers will depart for the Philippines on Wednesday, and ... read more


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