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Abstract

Every year thousands of migrants die during the endeavour to reach the Italian coasts, making the Mediterranean the theatre of one of the greatest tragedies of mankind. Over 60% of these victims is buried unidentified: one of the reasons behind this is related to the specific difficulties and lack of strategies concerning AM and PM data collection. The present article describes how Italy is trying to face the problem of migrant identification, thanks to the collaboration between government, the Italian national police and universities. In particular, this is the first pilot study carried out to identify the victims of the second greatest tragedy of its kind off the Italian coast, near Lampedusa, on October 3rd 2013, which caused 366 victims. The present article shows the strategies conceived to collect postmortem and especially antemortem data and to compare them to identify matches, using medicolegal, anthropological, odontological and genetic approaches. Thirty-one victims out of 53 missing sought by relatives were identified (58.5%). The type and the quality of antemortem data available, generally photos and videos, pinpoints the importance of the face and the body for identification when the bodies are well preserved and how DNA analyses may at times present difficulties. In fact, critical points emerged concerning especially the lack of genetic information of the populations to which the victims belonged, the number of genetic markers needed to reach a statistical support for the identification and the need to adopt lineage markers such as mitochondrial DNA and Y-chromosome polymorphisms to identify parental relationships. This pilot study however has proven that families continue to seek their relatives and that it is possible, as well as mandatory, to identify migrant victims in spite of the difficulties in the collection of antemortem and postmortem data. In addition, considering the peculiar scenario, novel strategies for positive identification have to be defined in each field (anthropological, odontological and genetic) as well as in combination.

Details

Title
Challenges in the identification of dead migrants in the Mediterranean: The case study of the Lampedusa shipwreck of October 3rd 2013
Author
Olivieri, Lara 1 ; Mazzarelli, Debora 2 ; Bertoglio, Barbara 3 ; De Angelis, Danilo 2 ; Previderè, Carlo 3 ; Grignani, Pierangela 3 ; Cappella, Annalisa 2 ; Presciuttini, Silvano 4 ; Bertuglia, Caterina 5 ; Paola Di Simone 5 ; Polizzi, Nicolò 5 ; Iadicicco, Agata 6 ; Piscitelli, Vittorio 6 ; Cattaneo, Cristina 2 

 LABANOF (Laboratorio di Antropologia e Odontologia Forense), Dipartimento di Scienze Biomediche per la Salute, Sezione di Medicina Legale, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan, Italy; Fondazione Isacchi Samaja ONLUS, Milan, Italy 
 LABANOF (Laboratorio di Antropologia e Odontologia Forense), Dipartimento di Scienze Biomediche per la Salute, Sezione di Medicina Legale, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan, Italy 
 Dipartimento di Sanità Pubblica, Medicina Sperimentale e Forense, Unità di Medicina Legale e Scienze Forensi, Università di Pavia, Pavia, Italy 
 Dipartimento di Ricerca Traslazionale e Nuove Tecnologie in Medicina e Chirurgia, Università di Pisa, Pisa, Italy 
 Laboratorio di Genetica Forense, Gabinetto Regionale Polizia Scientifica di Palermo 
 Ufficio del Commissario Straordinario per le Persone Scomparse, Roma, Italy 
Pages
121-128
Publication year
2018
Publication date
Apr 2018
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
e-ISSN
18726283
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2014371964
Copyright
Copyright Elsevier Limited Apr 2018