Français
LOGIN
Logo

The Search Doesn’t Stop | International Day of the Disappeared 2022

DOTD entry 1 Landscape

Foto: ICRC, Dia Internacional de los desaparecidos 2021: El tiempo no cura, solo las respuestas lo hacen

Latin America is one of the 6 out of 10 countries with the highest number of enforced disappearances between the years 1980 and 2020, according to the Report of the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances of the United Nations (UN). These heartbreaking losses also occur in other situations of violence, in disasters and on migration routes.

As part of our tribute to all the Victims of Enforced Disappearances and in partnership with the International Committee of the Red Cross, we want to raise awareness and create consciousness of this situation by taking a deeper look inside the countries with the highest disappearance rates.

Central America

DOTD entry 2 portrait

Mujer maya Ixil mirando fotos de civiles desaparecidos en una pared en Nebaj, Guatemala.

Fotografía: Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images

In Guatemala there are 45,000 registered cases of enforced disappearances and 15,000 politically motivated murders.

In El Salvador, these disappearances were a way of erasing crimes, according to an investigation carried out by the National Commission for the Search for Disappeared Adult Persons in the Context of the Armed Conflict in El Salvador (CONABÚSQUEDA).

According to an investigation provided by the Institutional Coordinator for the Promotion of Children's Rights, another important concern for illegal migration in El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala is human trafficking. It is reported that 8 out of 10 unaccompanied minors detained at the border are victims of this crime.

Want to know more? Watch this documentary on the Central American Caravan for the Disappeared, about a caravan of Honduran, Guatemalan, and Nicaraguan families heading north towards Mexico, looking for lost and disappeared loved ones, seeking to reunite families.

Source: The Real News Network

Mexico

En Perú al 31 de julio de 2021, 21.918 personas desaparecidas durante el período de violencia (1980-2000) se encontraban inscritas en el Registro Nacional de Desaparecidos y Sepulturas (RENADE). De 2002 a 2022 se recuperaron los cuerpos de 4,179 personas, se identificaron 3,010 y se devolvieron a sus familias 2,858 restos, según cifras del Ministerio Público, 39 personas fueron encontradas vivas.

México

DOTD entry 3 Landscape

Familiares de desaparecidos protestan en Ciudad de México, 10 de mayo.

In Mexico, more than 85,000 victims, according to official figures, are attributed to organized crime.

Even with the outgrowing numbers and numerous police reports, the exact causes for disappearances in Mexico are still unknown to the public. Some of the country’s NGOs like the ICRC, the Mexican National Registry of Missing or Disappeared Persons (RNPED), the National Human Rights Commission, among other associations do have access to most of these reports, but one of the explanations for why the causes are so vague and important chunks of information remain unfilled, is the lack of communication and poor data management between the law enforcement and these institutions, in addition to impeding political corruption in the country and the influence of organized crime.

Want to know more? “Cuartos Vacíos” (Empty Rooms) is a website dedicated to the memory of the disappeared children in Mexico.

According to an investigation in 2022 from Animal Politico, 40% of the causes are unknown, 30% are unidentified disappearances and the remaining are related to organized crime and enforced or voluntary disappearances.

Disappearances in Mexico - A documentary by The San Diego Union Tribune

Colombia

DOTD entry 4 Landscape

Jesús e Ismael Rodríguez buscan a su hermano Arnulfo, desaparecido en 1996 en Norte de Santander. Créditos: Laura Aguilera Jiménez / ICRC

Information from Missing persons: a humanitarian tragedy that must not be forgotten

10 years ago, the numbers on forced disappearance in the country were dispersed in various institutions and social organizations. One of the tasks of the National Center for Historical Memory (CNMH) was to consolidate those numbers and so, in 2016, they published the report “Until We Find Them: The Drama of Enforced Disappearances in Colombia,” which revealed that between 1970 to 2015, 60,630 people were registered as forcibly disappeared persons in the country.

Recommended: The true stories of ten families’ journeys to find out what happened to their missing loved ones.

Today we know that there are, not only direct victims (the disappeared), but also indirect victims (their families and relatives), and they are so diverse (trade unionists, students, population from vulnerable and marginalized sectors) that it is very difficult to establish a specific profile.

Searching for the 80,000 Disappeared in Colombia's Brutal Civil War

Venezuela

ICR photo ven

Together with the National Society of the Venezuelan Red Cross, the ICRC accompanies the families in the search process so that they can receive information about the fate and whereabouts of their loved ones.

The ICR also supports the strengthening of the Venezuelan medical and legal system to guarantee the dignified management of the deceased, the restoration of the identity of unidentified corpses, and the dignified restitution of their remains to their loved ones.

The search for answers: separated, missing and deceased people in international armed conflicts.

A Preventable Tragedy | Reuniting Families | ICRC

The International Humanitarian Law contains a broad set of rules with a purpose to help provide answers about people who are in the hands of the enemy, prevent the separation of family members and the disappearance of people, ensuring that deceased people are treated with dignity and duly identified in the contexts of war.But in order to deliver what they promise, many of these rules must be made effective in law and practice long before a war begins. To achieve an effective implementation of the standards, it is essential to know them and understand the system.

The ICRC Central Tracing Agency: A help engine for those who need answers

For more than 150 years, the CPF, together with Restoring Family Links of the Red Cross, has been the driving force behind efforts to keep families together, reunite them and help them stay together or stay in contact, prevent the disappearance of persons, search for missing persons, protect the dignity of the deceased and ensure that the rights and needs of relatives are respected.

Until recently, this "hidden tragedy," as the ICRC has called it, did not attract sufficient attention from the international community. It was for this reason that the ICRC organized an international conference in 2003 to tackle the problem of missing people and seek ways to help the families and communities affected.

Government, humanitarian and human rights organizations, the Red Cross and Red Crescent, experts and, most importantly, missing family associations all attended the conference, recognizing the vital role of networks that restore family links in which the ICRC, the Red Cross and Red Crescent and many family associations are involved.

The ICRC continued its work after the conference. It participated in the drafting committee that led to the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearances adopted by the UN General Assembly in December 2006. The ICRC's president publicly welcomed the preventive framework put in place by the convention and its recognition of the importance of justice.

#TheSearchNeverStops

Get to know the ICRC efforts in order to aid families to reunite with their missing members.

(FULL TRAILER LINK)

To honor the memory of the people who are lost and the tireless struggle of their families to find them, we created a new Song Around The World, premiering on August 30th during the International #DayOfTheDisappeared.

Donate to the International Committee of the Red Cross here.

People have the right to know what happened to their missing relatives. Governments, the military authorities and armed groups have an obligation to provide information and assist efforts to put families back together.

Hundreds of families reunited
Thousands of people cooperating
A Million more hearts to reach…

Donate here

Become a member or login to comment