Identifying Maui wildfire casualties a tall order --- PH consul
By Raymund Antonio and Raymund Antonio
As firefighters and first responders work around the clock to contain the wildfires in the island of Maui, the Philippine consulate in Hawaii has been undertaking the “painstaking” process of identifying the casualties through fingerprint, dental, and other DNA records.
Taylor Ganer and Hano Ganer search for their belongings in the ashes of their family's burnt-down house in the aftermath of a wildfire in Lahaina, western Maui, Hawaii on August 11, 2023. (Photo by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP)
Consul General Emil Fernandez of Philippine Consulate General in Honolulu, Hawaii talked on Radyo 630 on Saturday, Aug. 19, to give an update on the progress of the consulate’s efforts to locate missing Filipinos after at least one casualty was earlier reported.
“A big part of the operations is gathering ‘yung mga (the remains and painstakingly identifying them dahil syempre ito ay (because, of course, these are) burnt victims,” he said.
Burned bodies are harder to identify because of the lack of fingerprints and dentals, which meant that identifying then would depend on DNA samples.
Officials in Hawaii, where Maui is, are “soliciting DNA” from those who reported about their missing loved ones, Fernandez shared.
“Ang officials dito (The officials here) they really pleaded for patience from the public public because itong (this) painstaking process in identifying the casualties,” he added.
The consul general also said that the consulate has been receiving 10 to 20 calls a day since they posted an advisory.
So far, the consulate has replaced the lost Philippine passports of those who came to them for help seeing as these are “important means of identification.”
Fernandez hopes to accomplish more as power and communication lines are being restored in Maui.
On Friday, Aug. 18, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) confirmed that one Filipino died of the more than 100 casualties due to the Maui wildfires.
The consul general said the elderly Filipino was born in the Philippines but became a naturalized US citizen after migrating to Hawaii.
“We have to keep in mind that many Filipinos here are already permanent residents. So far, we have not received any request for repatriation,” he added.