Internet home of Philippine news
Back to homepage
| Bacolod | Baguio | Cagayan de Oro | Cebu | Davao | Dumaguete | General Santos | Iloilo | Manila | Pampanga | Pangasinan | Zamboanga |
 
online flower gift shop to Philippines
 
 
 

Google
Web
www.sunstar.com.ph

  Local News
Firm to pay $315M
Tomas slams bid to sail ships again under present managers
Union to stage protests to force Marina to lift suspension on Sulpicio
Specialist in victim identification expected today
House ‘welcomes’ critics of bill
‘I want Roy Fernandez to rot in jail’
La Nueva suspect says he got P120T as share of loot
Bernard Liu stabbed after mediating conflict
Baquerfo sues VM for assuming post as Tudela mayor
Saavedra wants Byron to say sorry for carpet bagger tag
Suspect asks judge to back off
Tanod boss’ ‘not guilty’ plea angers parents of slain teen
Jail managers recognize Lapu, Talisay cities

TigerDirect



Friday, July 18, 2008
Specialist in victim identification expected today

AN expert in identifying disaster victims is expected to arrive in Cebu today.

Slatan Bajunovic, a disaster victim identification (DVI) specialist from the International Commission of Missing Persons (ICMP) headquarters in Sarajevo, Bosnia, is expected to stay in the country throughout the identification process.

“Slatan Bajunovic will oversee the entire DVI process,” said Supt. Anthony Obenza, chief of the Philippine Center on Transnational Crime Visayas Field Office (PCTC-VFO).

Preparation

Preparations for the arrival of the mobile morgue from Norway continued yesterday.

The DVI team yesterday measured the Cebu International Port (CIP) grounds in preparation for the arrival of the facility.

The mobile morgue was expected yesterday but Obenza said it was still in transit and would arrive either today or tomorrow. As of yesterday, it was still in Thailand.

Obenza told Sun.Star Cebu that Kiki Wong, another Interpol official, arrived from Hong Kong to work with the DVI team at the Information Management Center.

Along with Wong was a private contractor of Normeca, a Norwegian company that specializes in mobile laboratories, who will work on the installation of the mobile morgue.

With 500 bodies expected to arrive in Cebu once the mv Princess of the Stars is refloated, DVI teams from all over the world will be coming to Cebu to assist in the identification of bodies.

DVI experts from Canada, Singapore, Thailand and Indonesia have already agreed to help.

Yesterday, 46 more bodies were expected to arrive in Cebu.

Instead of leaving for Cebu yesterday, the vessels carrying the bodies remained docked in the islands near Romblon, awaiting more corpses.

“Still waiting for more bodies to be loaded,” according to a text message sent to Sun.Star Cebu by Sulpicio Lines Inc. assistant vice president Ryan Bernard Go.

Search

Go said the mv Cebu Princess was already carrying 37 bodies from the island of San Pascual and there were plans to send it to Claveria to try to retrieve more bodies.

“mv Panama 17 at San Fernando, Sibuyan Island, continuing the search,” Go said in his text updates.

Go said retrieval operations slowed down because of Typhoon Helen. (EPB)

For Bisaya stories from Cebu. Click here.

(July 18, 2008 issue)
Write letter to the editor.Click here.




ENETWORK HEADLINE
Specialist in victim identification expected Friday
ENETWORK NEWS
Arroyo amends order on land conversion
Gov't, MILF agree to expand Muslim territory
Bandits kidnap 2 Globe sub-contractors in Basilan


[return to top] [home] [network page]


Sun.Star Network Online

LOCAL NEWS
BUSINESS
OPINION
SPORTS
LIFESTYLE
FEATURE

SUPERBALITA
WEEKEND

RSS Feed RSS Feed


Classified Power Ads

Past Issues

Western Union

I © Copyright 2007 Sun.Star Publishing, Inc. I Contact the website at sunnexatsunstardotcomdotph I