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Remains returned in New York

May 10, 2014

Unidentified remains of those killed in the September 2001 attack have been returned to the World Trade Center site in a solemn procession. A thousand victims have yet to be identified.

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Angehörige der Opfer des 11. Septembers protestieren am Memorial Museum
Image: picture alliance / AP Photo

Nearly thirteen years after the event, 7,930 fragmentary remains in sealed containers have been transferred from a Manhattan forensics laboratory to the repository at the site of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum.

The procession at dawn through the streets of New York on Saturday was escorted by fire, police and Port Authority vehicles with flashing lights and no sirens.

Some relatives of those killed protested the move saying it was wrong to store the remains at what is, essentially, a tourist site. They also said the underground repository could be subject to flooding. The demonstrators put black bands over their mouths in a silent protest as the procession rolled past (photo). Other family members have supported the move.

The repository where the remains are to be kept is sealed off from exhibition areas by a wall. It will only be accessible to the medical examiner's staff and family members of the victims. They will be able to visit the space even when the museum is closed, the city has said.

The chief medical examiner's office is to continue to try to match the fragments to the more than a thousand victims of the attacks who have yet to have any remains identified.

"Our commitment to return the remains to the families is as great today as it was in 2001," said Mark Desire, who heads the four-member World Trade Center team in the city's Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.

The death toll stemming from the attacks at the World Trade Center stands at 2,753. Of those, 1,115 victims, or 41 percent, have not been identified through a DNA match to items provided by families.

jm/kms (Reuters, AP)