Human remains found near Costa Concordia
Divers spotted human remains near Italy's Costa Concordia cruise ship and DNA tests will determine if they are the last two bodies missing among the shipwreck's 32 victims.

Divers spotted human remains yesterday near Italy's Costa Concordia cruise ship and DNA tests will determine if they are the last two bodies missing among the shipwreck's 32 victims.
The search for the remains of an Italian female passenger and an Indian waiter resumed after the capsized luxury liner was rotated upright last week in an unprecedented marine salvage operation 20 months after it crashed into a reef off Giglio Island.
Civil Protection chief Franco Gabrielli said he immediately notified the victims' relatives, who had travelled to the island in hopes their loved ones' remains could be found.
Coast Guard and Customs Service divers located the remains near the central part of the ship, where survivors said the two were last seen.
Italian news agency ANSA said the remains found were bones and that special permission was required from prosecutors to bring them to the surface.
Specialised police divers will go into the sea to remove the remains, which will be examined by forensic experts in Tuscany. DNA testing could take a few days, authorities said.