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TOUGH TO ‘I.D.’ PINOY VICTIMS IN MAUI FIRE
THE Philippine Consulate General described Saturday the difficulty in identifying the people who died in the wildfires that ripped through the island of Maui in Hawaii.
Consul General Emil Fernandez said authorities had to get DNA samples from people who said their relatives were still missing from the fires.
“A big part of the operations is gathering the remains and painstakingly identifying them kasi ito ay burnt victims,” Fernandez said in a radio interview.
“Unless you have DNA samples, if (the subject) doesn’t have a fingerprint or dental (records)... you have to rely on their DNA. That is why they are soliciting DNA from those who are missing loved ones,” he added.
At least 111 people are known to have died in what was the deadliest wildfire in the United States in over a century, including an elderly Filipino.