Search for 9/11 body parts resumes in New York
US: Criminal investigators combed for human remains Tuesday in a
narrow gap between two Manhattan buildings where a piece of plane
wreckage from the 9/11 attacks 12 years ago was unexpectedly discovered
last week.
Dozens of firefighters and investigators in white suits were on hand
for the search two blocks from the World Trade Center, where on
September 11, 2001 two hijacked airliners smashed into the Twin Towers,
causing massive destruction and nearly 3,000 deaths.
Last week a large chunk of one of the Boeing airliners used in the
attacks was found jammed into the passageway and was later identified as
being part of a rear wing flap system. The discovery recalled the
incredible chaos of 9/11 in the heart of the world's biggest financial
center and prompted authorities to expand their off-and-on, often
fruitless effort to identify the remains of those who died.
Of the total 2,753 people reported missing in the Twin Towers
attacks, 1,118 literally vanished in the inferno and have not been
matched to the large quantity of bone fragments or other human remains
collected from the area.
Despite the seeming futility of the search, families of the victims
have kept steady pressure on the authorities not to give up. So far
they've found about 74 pieces of what may be human remains.
"We are sifting to see if we see any human remains. If we find
anything that looks like it could be human remains, we take it over to
our office and we have our anthropologist take a look. If they believe
they are human they will photograph them, give them separate numbers,
and then send them to our DNA lab, to see if they can extract DNA... and
try to identify to whom the remains belong," she said. The latest person
to be identified was a 55-year-old man on April 17.
AFP
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