WORLD NEWS
New Zealand volcano: Death toll rises to 16 as two remain missing
A person who was being treated in hospital after the eruption of New Zealand’s White Island volcano has died, bringing the official death toll to 16, police say.
The victim, who has not been identified, died in Australia after being repatriated for treatment.
About 20 people remain in intensive care with severe burns.
Meanwhile, recovery teams returned to the volcanic island on Sunday but were unable to locate two remaining bodies.
Eight police search and rescue personnel were deployed for 75 minutes to an area in which at least one of the bodies was believed to be. “We have found no further bodies in that area,” Deputy Police Commissioner Mike Clement told reporters.
Police said they remained committed to retrieving the bodies and that police and military divers would continue to search the waters around White Island, also known by its Maori name of Whakaari. On Saturday, teams faced contaminated waters and poor visibility after one body was spotted in the water.
“There was every chance that the second body was also in the sea,” Mr Clement said, “but we wanted to clear the area today [Sunday], which is effectively what today’s exercise was about.”
There had been no further significant activity in White Island since last Monday’s eruption but the risk of eruption remained, Geoff Kilgour, a volcanologist with GNS Science, was quoted by AFP news agency as saying.
What about the identification of the victims?
The identification process is being carried out in Auckland by experts including a pathologist, a forensic dentist and a fingerprint officer.
Four more victims were named by police on Sunday, including 24-year-old New Zealand tour guide Tipene James Te Rangi Ataahua Maangi.
The other three, all Australians, were 15-year-old Zoe Ella Hosking and her 53-year-old stepfather Gavin Brian Dallow, as well as 51-year-old Anthony James Langford.
On Saturday, 21-year-old Krystal Eve Browitt, also from Australia, was the first person identified.
Police are gathering information about possible victims, such as descriptions of appearance, clothing, photos, fingerprints, medical and dental records and DNA samples. These details will then be matched to the evidence gathered in the post-mortem examination.
Out of the 47 people on the island when the eruption happened, 24 were from Australia, nine from the US, five from New Zealand, four from Germany, two from China, two from the UK, and one from Malaysia.
On Monday, a minute’s silence will be observed in New Zealand at 14:11 local time (01:11 GMT) to mark one week since the eruption.
BBC
-
Lifestyle1 month ago
Road Safety Authority narrates how buttocks causes road accident
-
GENERAL NEWS2 months ago
Why 15 police officers stormed Owusu Bempah’s church – Kumchacha narrates
-
GENERAL NEWS1 month ago
Watch how Ibrahim Mahama rode Honda superbike to pay last respects to late friend
-
GENERAL NEWS2 months ago
How Offinso residents storm destooled queen mother’s house, demand for new chief
-
South Africa News2 months ago
Woman thrown out of a speeding taxi while on her way to work
-
GENERAL NEWS4 weeks ago
Deadly clash between youth and navy personnel results in two deaths at Tema Manhean
-
SHOWBIZ KONKONSAH4 weeks ago
Junior Pope’s Death: Video of John Dumelo refusing to join canoe for movie shoot over safety concerns resurfaces
-
News Africa2 months ago
‘Satanically dubious’ – SCOAN releases statement on BBC’s report about TB Joshua, church