Australian outlaw Ned Kelly's final wish granted

Infamous Australian outlaw Ned Kelly has had his final wish granted 131 years after being executed, with officials agreeing to release his remains so he can be buried with his family.
Anthony Griffiths, a grandson [url=http://en.trade2cn.com/companyShop/29041001.html]Heighten Ceramic[/url] of Kelly's sister, said Wednesday that Victorian state attorney general Robert Clark had decided to return his bullet-ridden bones to his descendants so they could meet his last request.
"That's very welcome news indeed," Griffiths told reporters.
"Our family, like every family, [url=http://en.trade2cn.com/companyShop/25966316.html]fujian Solar Lamps [/url] likes to be able to bury their own family members. Our aim is to give him a dignified funeral, like any family would."
Kelly's headless remains were finally [url=http://en.trade2cn.com/companyShop/26181950.html]fujian guandaxing hardware products co.,ltd[/url] identified in September, solving a long-standing mystery.
Considered by some to be a cold-blooded killer, Kelly was also seen as a folk hero and symbol of Irish-Australian defiance against the British authorities for taking on corrupt police and greedy land barons.