The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Anguished families of crash victims find nothing to bury

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HEJERE, ETHIOPIA — It was too much to bear. She feared she would have nothing of her loved one, no body, no remains to bury.

She took handfuls of dirt and flung it in her own face, overcome.

More families arrived Thursday at the site of the Ethiopian Airlines crash that killed 157 people. They came with the hope they could bring some trace of their loved ones home.

Some fell to their knees in grief when they learned there was nothing left. Others hurled themselves forward, wailing, or staggered in relatives’ arms.

The mourning was mixed with frustratio­n. For some, their beliefs dictated they must have something to bury.

“Big families, a lot of people and the full Israeli nation is waiting for these remains and we will not go out of Ethiopia until we find the remains to bury them,” said Moshi Biton of Israel, who lost his brother, Shimon Daniel Re’em Biton.

“Because if not, they will stay missing for the rest of the life and we cannot do that in our religion.”

Some Muslim families fretted. A body must be buried as soon as possible.

All gathered at the rural, dusty crash site outside Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa. The dead came from 35 countries.

Some families, including that of the flight’s senior pilot, Capt. Yared Getachew, came bearing large framed photograph­s of the dead. In one, a victim wore a graduate’s cap and gown, a source of immense pride.

Others arriving wore black T-shirts printed with a photo in remembranc­e. They held sticks of incense, the flames flaring in the wind.

One man held a tiny, torn scrap of document showing a photo of one of the dead.

Some relatives at the scene expressed frustratio­n, saying authoritie­s were not sharing the informatio­n they badly needed.

An airline spokesman said some remains had been found and were in a freezer awaiting the forensic DNA work needed for identifica­tions.

On Thursday it was no longer clear how long that work, once estimated at five days or more, would take.

Meanwhile, the flight recorders for the Ethiopian Airlines flight arrived in France for analysis Thursday.

 ?? JEMAL COUNTESS / GETTY IMAGES ?? Mourners visit the crash site of Ethiopian Airlines Flight ET302 on Thursday in Ejere, Ethiopia.
JEMAL COUNTESS / GETTY IMAGES Mourners visit the crash site of Ethiopian Airlines Flight ET302 on Thursday in Ejere, Ethiopia.

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