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Remains of suspected WWII US airmen repatriated from Myanmar

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Mandalay (Myanmar), March 12

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The remains of suspected US airmen killed in Myanmar during World War II were repatriated on Thursday, as American officials continue searching for 500 unaccounted servicemen in the country.

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Myanmar was a key battleground between the Allies and Japan during the war.

The remains are thought to be those of some of the seven servicemen in a B-25G aircraft downed in February 1944 in northern Salingyi.

Although the wreckage was located two years later, it was not until 2019 that the US Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) found possible remains in the same region and returned this year to continue the search.

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On Thursday, a ceremony was held in honour of the lost servicemen at Mandalay airport as white-gloved US guards carried the coffins draped in the American flag into a C-17 military plane.

The remains will be taken for further analysis at a Hawaii laboratory.

“Brave Americans gave their lives on a river bank in Sagaing, fighting for peace, justice and freedom far from home,” said Deputy Chief of Mission George Sibley in a statement.

“Today we recommit to those noble values as we repatriate the possible remains.” There are still 505 US service members unaccounted for in Myanmar from WWII. — AFP

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