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International Day of the Dissappeared marked today

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  • International Day of the Dissappeared marked today

    INTERNATIONAL DAY OF DISSAPEARED MARKED TODAY

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    | 12:23:04 | 30-08-2005 | Politics |

    Today, on the International Day of the Disappeared, the International
    Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) calls for renewed attention to one
    of the most serious humanitarian problems caused by armed conflict -
    the fate of missing persons and the suffering of their families.

    Today, hundreds of thousands of families around the world remain
    without any news of their relatives who went missing in situations
    of armed conflict or internal violence. Whether people go missing on
    the battlefield or are the victims of forced disappearances, their
    relatives have a right to know what has happened to them.

    More than 10 years after Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a ceasefire
    agreement ending the conflict over Nagorno Karabakh, during which
    thousands went missing, many families are still uncertain about
    the fate of their loved ones. The ICRC is keeping up its efforts
    to help the authorities of both countries fulfil their obligations
    under international humanitarian law to find out what happened to
    those people.

    In February 2004 the ICRC submitted to the authorities of Armenia
    and Azerbaijan, and to the de facto authorities of Nagorno Karabakh,
    a list of persons unaccounted for in connection with the conflict. The
    updated version of this list contains 3,165 names. In January 2005
    the ICRC further submitted to the parties a memorandum encouraging
    them to help elucidate the fate of these people and proposing that
    specific activities be undertaken to obtain information on the missing
    and make it available, to recover and identify human remains and to
    support the families involved.

    The ICRC is continuing to collect tracing requests from the families
    of missing persons and it plans to step up this activity in 2006,
    when it will begin gathering personal information (ante-mortem data)
    that might help the authorities identify the remains of those who died
    during the conflict. This will be done in close cooperation with the
    respective State commissions on POWs, hostages and missing persons.

    At the same time, the ICRC is encouraging the authorities to record
    and protect burial sites believed to contain the remains of people
    who died during the conflict with a view to their future possible
    recovery and identification.

    The ICRC is also strongly urging the authorities to provide
    psychosocial assistance for the families who require it and is
    supporting them in their efforts to do so.
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