The Hon. Bruce Billson, MP
Minister Assisting the Minister for Defence
A bid to identify the remains of an unknown sailor, almost certainly
from the HMAS Sydney II, with DNA
testing of samples provided by the relatives of three short-listed sailors has
been unsuccessful in finding a match.
Minister Assisting the Minister for Defence Bruce Billson said while the
tests had not achieved a match with the three sailors initially short-listed
through research and some educated assumptions, the fact useable DNA had been
extracted from the remains of the unknown sailor meant further testing could be
conducted in a bid to find a match with other remaining possibilities.
The sailor's remains were recovered from
Last month Minister Billson announced that a short-list of three possible
HMAS Sydney II officers had emerged
as potential matches.
Those officers were Lieutenant Allen James King, Lieutenant Allan Wallace
Wilson and Sub-Lieutenant Frederick Harold Schoch. While relatives for all three of these
officers were located, none of their DNA samples were matches for the remains.
Lieutenants King and
Wilson and Sub-Lieutenant Schoch have therefore been excluded as possible
matches.
They join more than 500 of the crew of HMAS Sydney II who have now been excluded as matches on the basis of
forensic dental and anthropological analyses. HMAS Sydney II was lost with all 645 crew in November 1941 off the West
Australian coast following a World War II engagement with the German raider Kormoran.
Following the latest developments, there remains over 100 crew members who
have not been categorically excluded on scientific grounds as potential
matches. To reduce this number to a manageable level for the purposes of DNA
testing, the outcomes of analyses conducted on artefacts found with the remains
in the grave were also considered.
In particular, Australian War Memorial (AWM) analysis of cloth fragments
caught within press-studs resulted in the assessment that the man had been
buried wearing white coveralls. While initial historical research by the AWM
and the Navy's Sea Power Centre-Australia concluded that the sailor was most
likely to be an Officer or Warrant Officer from one of the technical
categories, DNA testing has shown that this may not be the case.
"The DNA matching process was a test of the set of assumptions we
had made in coming to the short-list," the forensic team leader, Commander
Matt Blenkin, said. "The personnel initially identified as the most likely
candidates for a match against the remains have now been ruled out, and we must
now widen the net slightly to consider the next most
likely."
The next phase of the search will concentrate on the 11 officers and Warrant
Officers who have not already been excluded on dental or anthropological
grounds. This short-list has been arrived at on the basis that only officers
and Warrant Officers were entitled to wear
white coveralls. Additionally, two civilian canteen workers will be considered
as potential matches due to uncertainty as to what they would have been wearing
during battle stations.
Work is now underway to locate surviving relatives of the following 13 crew-members:
It is hoped that relatives may be able to provide additional
biographical, physiological or medical information that could further assist
the identification process.
Any person having knowledge of the whereabouts of surviving family members
of the above HMAS Sydney II crew members is asked to make contact with the
Christmas Island Investigation Team by email on xmasisland.generalenquiries@defence.gov.au, or by letter
to: Christmas Island Investigation Team, R1-4-C070, Russell Offices, Canberra,
ACT, 2600.
Mr Billson said despite the presence of a DNA sample, it must be
stressed that the prospects of individual identification remains low.
"The process to date has been extremely thorough in order to ensure
the integrity of the findings, and to provide the greatest possible chance of
success in finally identifying the unknown sailor," he said.
"I am encouraged by the fact that we have DNA for the sailor, but whether
we can use this to make a positive identification very much depends on the
information we are able to obtain from surviving relatives. It remains my
sincere hope that we will be able to identify
him."
Media Information:
Cameron Hill (Mr Billson)
03 9781 2333 0408 239 521
Defence Media Liaison (Defence) 02 6265 3343 0408 498 664
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