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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted at 11:50 a.m., Monday, November 24, 2003

Laos hands over likely remains of Howard Dean's brother

By David Lovering
Associated Press

VIENTIANE, Laos — A 12-year search for the missing brother of presidential candidate Howard Dean came close to an end today when Laos handed over to U.S. authorities what are believed to be his and his Australian friend's remains.

The remains of two U.S. soldiers who went missing during the Vietnam War were also returned at a ceremony at the Vientiane airport.

"I am pleased to hand over to you the remains. ... Without the cooperation of the local people they would not have been able to find the remains," Laotian vice minister of foreign affairs Phongsavath Boupha said in a speech.

He called the ceremony "a symbolic victory" in relations between the two countries.

The likely remains of Charles Dean and Australian Neil Sharman were exhumed earlier this month in central Laos following a tip by a Laotian villager.

The other two sets of remains were excavated from other sites in northeastern Laos.

Howard Dean, who is seeking the Democratic nomination in next year's U.S. presidential election, said last week his family is convinced the remains belong to his brother.

He said they include bones, a sock, a pair of shoes and a bracelet his brother had with him.

The four sets of remains were transferred to aluminum caskets brought by a U.S. military C-130 cargo plane.

An honor guard draped one casket in an Australian flag and the other three in U.S. flags before loading them on the plane, which flew to Hawai'i, where a forensic lab will identify the remains.

"Today marks another special day for repatriation of remains from the Indochina war," said U.S. ambassador to Laos Douglas Hartwick.

"This cooperation is a key element in bilateral relations," he said.

The remains of the two bodies will be repatriated at a ceremony at Hickam Air Force Base on Wednesday, along with the other remains, believed to be of two U.S. soldiers killed during the Vietnam War.

Charles Dean went missing in 1974, when the 24-year-old University of North Carolina graduate was traveling through Southeast Asia with Sharman.

Both are believed to have been imprisoned and killed by communist insurgents who took control of Laos in 1975.

An investigation into their disappearance began in 1991, and the first of two joint U.S.-Laotian excavation teams began digging in August.

A Laotian villager led the investigators to a site near a boulder in a rice paddy near the town of Lakxao, about 25 miles west of the Vietnamese border in Bolikhamxai province.

The site was pocked with bomb craters and had to be cleared of Vietnam War-era ordnance, excavation team leader Elizabeth Martinson said yesterday.

She would not give any other information about the villager or the remains.

The remains of 182 Americans have been recovered in Laos since U.S.-sponsored recovery teams began operating in the country in 1992.

Some 387 Americans are still missing in Laos from the Vietnam War era.

Phongsavath, the Laotian minister, expressed the hope that the handover would persuade the U.S. Congress to establish normal trade relations with Laos.

The United States has diplomatic ties but no trade links with Laos because of concerns about the communist governmentâs human rights record.

"We hope that this will help the American people and the Congress to understand that we have also shown our goodwill to cooperate" on the issue of missing Americans, Phongsavath said.