Families Caught in Painful Limbo Awaiting IDs of Nice Dead

Families Caught in Painful Limbo Awaiting IDs of Nice Dead
Relative of the victims of the Bastille Day attack confort each other as they gather in front of Pasteur Hospital in Nice, southern France, Friday, July 15, 2016. A large truck mowed through revelers gathered for Bastille Day fireworks in Nice, killing more than 80 people and sending people fleeing into the sea as it bore down for more than a mile along the Riviera city's famed waterfront promenade. AP Photo/Claude Paris
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NICE, France—The painstaking process of identifying the victims of the Bastille Day truck attack in Nice dragged into its third day Sunday, adding to the anguish of family members caught between uncertainty and grief.

Eighty-four people were killed in the Thursday night attack on the Promenades des Anglais, which happened as they were making their way home from a waterfront fireworks display. But just 35 bodies had been identified definitively by Sunday afternoon, according to the Paris prosecutor’s office.

The excruciating delay is adding to the suffering of survivors.

One family spent days canvasing hospitals and office for news of a 4-year-old boy whose mother perished, their frustration boiling over into a confrontation with a regional official. University of California, Berkeley students plastered flyers around the city asking for any information on the whereabouts of three classmates at a technology entrepreneur education program. Several imams stepped into the official breach, posting themselves outside the Pasteur Hospital on Sunday to help family members visiting the injured or looking for confirmation of their worst fears from the hospital morgue.

“It puts them in extreme angst, and extreme tension,” said Brigitte Erbibou, a psychologist who has been counselling family members at center helping victims and family members.

Tahar Mejri, center, who lost his wife and his son during the deadly attack, is conforted by relatives outside the Pasteur hospital in Nice, southern France on July 16, 2016. (AP Photo/Claude Paris)
Tahar Mejri, center, who lost his wife and his son during the deadly attack, is conforted by relatives outside the Pasteur hospital in Nice, southern France on July 16, 2016. AP Photo/Claude Paris