Africa Map

African Press Agency

African Press Agency Logo
   

 Home
 Country Profile
 Useful Links
 Contact us

Home

Libya/ConflictBack
[Published: Sunday August 30 2020]

 Rights group says thousands missing in Libya

 
TRIPOLI 30 Aug (ANA) - Libya has faced a tidal wave of internal conflict that has claimed thousands of lives since Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's overthrow in 2011.
 
Between civil wars, the Abu Salim prison massacre, Gaddafi's regional conflicts and a tendency to "disappear" political dissidents during his reign, many thousands of Libyans have lost loved ones to political conflict and instability.
 
This is the reality of war and dictatorship. But the widespread disappearance of human beings is often overlooked as a consequence.
 
Sunday marks the International Day of the Disappeared. Each year August 30 draws attention to those who have gone missing and the resulting suffering of their families and friends.
 
Across the African continent, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has recorded 44,000 people as missing. Shockingly, almost half of these people were children at the time of their disappearance.
 
But the ICRC only records a missing person when a family member opens a case with the organisation.
 
"This caseload is a drop in the ocean," said Sophie Marsac, ICRC's regional adviser for the missing and their families in Africa.
 
In Libya, for instance, the ICRC has registered more than 1,600 people as missing. But according to the International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP), which aims to keep a record of every disappearance, some 10,000 people are currently missing in Libya alone.
 
It is not an unusual number after such a long period of conflict and instability. The conflicts and atrocities that accompanied the breakup of Yugoslavia, for example, are estimated to have seen 40,000 people go missing. While in Syria and Iraq, the ICMP's estimates start at 100,000 and 250,000 people, respectively.
 
Largely, these numbers comprise those who went missing during years of dictatorship and conflict. But, in Libya, a significant portion can also be attributed to slavery, human trafficking and Libya's position on the migration route to Europe.
 
The moral importance of these findings cannot be overstated. Every missing person leaves behind a family, often with little support, facing psychological, legal and economic challenges for years after their loved ones disappear.
 
"I hardly sleep," said Kaltum, from Nigeria, whose daughter went missing nine years ago. "I feel it in my heart that my daughter is alive. I still have hope."(ANA)
FA/ANA/30 August 2020------
 

North South News website

Advertise banner

News icon No Alcohol/Healthy
News icon China/Fintech
News icon US/Africa
News icon US/Africa
News icon Prostate/Cancer/Screening
News icon IATA/Passengers
News icon Israel/Mercenaries
News icon Israel/Gaza Massacre
News icon Asa/Hotter
News icon Africa/US/China

AFRICAN PRESS AGENCY Copyright © 2005 - 2007