INTERPOL media release
05 January 2005 |
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International police meet at INTERPOL on Asia disaster issues.
Ways sought to further assist victim identification efforts.
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| Deputy Commissioner General
of the Royal Thai Police, Nopadol Supsomboon (left), INTERPOL Secretary
General Ronald K. Noble (centre) and Dutch DVI team member, Jan van Manen
during the meeting at the INTERPOL General Secretariat to discuss recommendations
on further assistance for victim identification teams following the Asian
earthquake and tsunami disaster. |
LYON, France - Senior police officials from 26 countries who gathered at the
INTERPOL General Secretariat on 5 January have agreed on steps to further support
disaster victim identification efforts following the Asian earthquake and tsunami
disaster and to address related law enforcement issues.
The meeting endorsed Secretary General Ronald
K. Noble's proposal to immediately create a Crisis Management Support Group,
consisting of INTERPOL staff and officials from member countries, to assist
in the co-ordination and support of international disaster victim identification
efforts in Asia.
Detailed recommendations on how to further assist the multinational Disaster
Victim Identification Command Structure already in place in Phuket, Thailand,
will be evaluated as soon as possible by members of the new crisis management
unit, INTERPOL member countries and DVI teams in the field.
Among the recommendations are the need for a centralised storage point in affected
countries for DNA profiles, fingerprints and other victim identification data,
and national processes for matching samples to unidentified victims' bodies.
The Head of the International Disaster Victim Identification Command Structure
in Thailand, General Nopadol Supsomboon of the Royal Thai Police, and a member
of the Netherlands Disaster Victim Identification team, Jan van Manen both gave
detailed presentations to the meeting.
General Nopadol said that no additional DVI teams were immediately required
in Thailand but new teams needed to be identified to replace those leaving when
the first rotation occurs. INTERPOL Secretary General Noble commended Thailand
for accepting DVI teams from more than two dozen countries and for their adoption
of the internationally accepted INTERPOL standard for disaster victim identification.
INTERPOL has sent its own Incident Response Team to set up an emergency logistics
and communications centre for the DVI command structure in Phuket.
'The many countries affected, the many sites where disaster victim identification
is proceeding and the sheer number of victims all require clear agreement on
processes if we are to be effective and bring this task to a conclusion,' Mr.
Noble said.
'DVI is of vital importance for police investigations and we owe it to countless
families who are currently missing loved ones and who wish them to be identified
and brought home to be laid to rest, to identify and repatriate the victims
of this tragedy.'
Last week's tsunami disaster represents the largest ever displacement of DVI
teams by INTERPOL member countries and the largest effort of this kind by INTERPOL's
Command and Co-ordination Centre in Lyon.
INTERPOL Secretary General Ronald K. Noble travelled to Phuket on 31 December
2004 to make a first hand assessment of the additional support needed for the
DVI teams there. He will make similar fact-finding trip to Sri Lanka and the
Maldives next week.