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Judi Lynn

(160,542 posts)
Thu Aug 30, 2018, 04:41 PM Aug 2018

Red Cross bashes Colombia for still not searching for its 80,000 missing persons


by Adriaan Alsema August 29, 2018

The Red Cross (ICRC) asked Colombia’s government on Wednesday to prioritize the search for 80,000 people who were forcibly disappeared during the country’s armed conflict.

In a press statement ICRC Colombia director Christoph Harnisch urged the government to comply with promises made to victims in a 2016 peace agreement with Marxist FARC guerrillas.

According to Harnisch, ‘more must be done in the search for missing persons.” The ICRC chief urged “more speed and more efficiency” to find the tens of thousands who went missing.

More:
https://colombiareports.com/red-cross-bashes-colombia-for-still-not-searching-80000-missing-persons/
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Red Cross bashes Colombia for still not searching for its 80,000 missing persons (Original Post) Judi Lynn Aug 2018 OP
Lets see. Doreen Aug 2018 #1
This article is helpful, although the number of the disappeared people rose since it was written: Judi Lynn Aug 2018 #2

Doreen

(11,686 posts)
1. Lets see.
Thu Aug 30, 2018, 04:55 PM
Aug 2018

The people are still trying to get back on their feet. It is hard for that many people to go out and search when most do not have the means or time to do it. A lot of people are still sick and injured and can't and those taking care of them can't leave them. Last but not least is that the help they should be receiving has been taken away or greatly reduced. Do I have any of this right? Am I missing something?

Judi Lynn

(160,542 posts)
2. This article is helpful, although the number of the disappeared people rose since it was written:
Thu Aug 30, 2018, 06:37 PM
Aug 2018

THE BLOG 12/09/2010 11:42 am ET Updated May 25, 2011
Disappearances in Colombia on a Scale Never Imagined

By Lisa Haugaard

“Disappearances.” When you mention the word in the Latin American context, most people think of Argentina, where 30,000 people were disappeared during the dirty war, or Chile, where 3,000 people were killed or disappeared. But the magnitude of the tragedy in Colombia may be even greater.

More than 51,000 people are registered by the Colombian government as disappeared or missing. Those who were forcibly disappeared — what we might think of as political disappearances — range in official statistics from over one quarter of that total to more than 32,000, as detailed in the report, Breaking the Silence: In Search of Colombia’s Disappeared, just released for Human Rights Day by the Latin America Working Group Education Fund (LAWGEF) and the U.S. Office on Colombia (USOC). But the real total is likely to be much higher, as new and old cases are entered into a consolidated government database. And many cases are never registered at all.

Today, the problem is far from solved. More than 1130 new cases of forced disappearance have been officially registered in the last three years, but from what I hear from Colombian human rights groups in areas like Antioquia and Buenaventura, the total is likely to be higher.

. . .

Who disappeared them? All armed actors, including the Colombian armed forces, right-wing paramilitaries and left-wing guerrillas, are responsible for forced disappearances, but the paramilitary role in this crime is especially pronounced. Paramilitaries often destroyed the bodies of their victims, burning them or cutting them with chain saws, sometimes alive, burying the bodies in unmarked graves on ranches, riverbanks or cemeteries, or throwing them into rivers.

The highest number of forced disappearances in Colombia occurred from 2000 to 2003, the first four years of U.S.-funded Plan Colombia, according to Colombian government statistics. Many of those were committed by paramilitaries, but the U.S.-trained and -funded military aided and abetted these abuses. Another gruesome kind of forced disappearance escalated from 2005 through 2008. All over Colombia, army soldiers detained people, then killed them and dressed them in guerrilla uniforms and claimed them as killed in combat. Cases involving more than 3,000 people disappeared and killed allegedly by soldiers are now winding their way slowly through Colombia’s civilian justice system. Those U.S. policymakers, military leaders and analysts who paint a pretty picture of Colombia’s security progress in the past decade might want to search their souls about this somber cost. And remember it the next time the U.S. government considers escalating aid and training to another abusive military force.

More:
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/lisa-haugaard/disappearances-in-colombi_b_794054.html

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