Grieving relatives collect body of aunt, victim of train-bus collision, transport remains to temple for merit-making ceremony
Relatives collected the body of a 66-year-old woman killed in a May 16 train-bus collision near Bangkok, transporting her remains to a temple for a merit-making ceremony as four victims' families claimed their loved ones from the forensic i
On May 19, relatives of victims from the May 16 train-bus collision near the Asoktdindan railway crossing gathered at the Police Hospital's Institute of Forensic Medicine to claim bodies for religious merit-making ceremonies. At 2:30 p.m., family members of 66-year-old Euang Manocharm, known as Aunt Eiang, submitted documents to claim her remains for a ceremony at Namdan Temple in Samut Prakan. Throughout the document submission process, family members wept openly as they prepared to take her body away. Today, four victims' relatives visited Makkasan Police Station to collect documentation and retrieve remains from the forensic institute. The confirmed victims include: 1. Thanatphipat Khiaowwijit, 21, a third-year computer science student at Silpakorn University in Nakhon Pathom; 2. Vibharaksa Phaoprui (nicknamed Rose), 25, a former mass communications graduate from Kasetsart University currently working as a graphic designer and operating a pub in the Bangna area; 3. Thiam Puangyod, 57, a company housemaid in the Phra Tuklom area; 4. Euang Manocharm, 66, a housemaid at a company near Chulalongkorn Hospital. Remaining identified victims' relatives will gradually retrieve bodies from the Police Hospital's Institute of Forensic Medicine.