India has released its first-ever
Guidelines and Standard Operating Procedures for Disaster Victim Identification
through the National Disaster Management Authority
India has released its first-ever Guidelines and
Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) for Disaster Victim Identification (DVI)
through the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA).
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The guidelines aim to
ensure systematic identification, registration, and dignified handover of human
remains to families during mass fatality incidents.
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They were formulated in
response to repeated cases where disaster victims remained unidentified or were
extremely difficult to identify, leading to prolonged distress for families and
delays in legal closure and compensation.
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The framework seeks to
integrate multiple forensic disciplines under a unified command structure to
address fragmentation and coordination failures observed during past disasters.
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The guidelines
incorporate lessons from the Ahmedabad AI-171 plane crash, highlighting the
critical importance of forensic odontology and DNA analysis, and stress the
need for establishing a National Dental Data Registry.
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The approved DVI methods
include forensic odontology, DNA analysis, forensic nursing, post-mortem
fingerprinting, humanitarian forensics, virtual autopsy, and forensic
archaeology.
Disaster Victim Identification (DVI)
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Disaster Victim
Identification (DVI) is a structured, multidisciplinary, medico-legal, and
humanitarian processused to identify deceased persons following mass fatality
incidents.
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It relies on
scientifically validated identifiers and follows internationally accepted
standards, particularly those laid down by Interpol.
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National Dental Data
Registry
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As per Interpol DVI
Guidelines (2023), fingerprints, dental examination (forensic odontology), and
DNA profiling are the three primary scientific identifiers, while tattoos,
scars, and ornaments are considered secondary and less reliable.
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During the AI-171 plane
crash in Ahmedabad, nearly 260 charred and commingled bodies could not be
identified using conventional methods such as visual identification or
fingerprinting.
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Authorities relied
primarily on forensic odontology and DNA analysis in accordance with Interpol
standards to establish identities.
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Drawing from this
experience, the NDMA guidelines recommend creating a National Dental Data
Registry to enable systematic comparison of ante-mortem and post-mortem dental
data during future disasters.
Four Stages of the DVI Process
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The guidelines clearly
define stakeholder roles and emphasise the need for a unified DVI commandto
manage the four stages of the identification process:
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Scene Phase: Systematic
recovery of human remains from the disaster site with proper documentation,
tagging, mapping, and preservation.
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Collection of Post-Mortem
Data: Medico-legal examination and forensic documentation, including
fingerprints, DNA sampling, dental examination, and virtual autopsy.
¨ Collection of Ante-Mortem Data: Collection of personal, medical, dental records, photographs, and DNA samples from families and relevant authorities.
¨ Reconciliation: Scientific comparison of ante-mortem and post-mortem data forconfirmation of identity, certification of death, and dignified release of remains to families.