Proposed law to help locate thousands still missing from Lebanon's civil war

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A new legal mechanism has been proposed to deal with the issue of thousands of people who went missing during Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war, including locating mass graves, and identifying and returning remains to families, according to local activists.

“The proposal features information on compensating families and mentions sanctions against those who are thwarting the process, without necessarily having a harshly punitive tone,” said Justine di Mayo, president of NGO Act for the Disappeared. “It is a platform on which to build, with a rather clear text that can be particularly helpful to politicians,” she told the IRIN.

Lebanon is a signatory to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and international treaties which recognize the victim’s right to know the truth regarding the circumstances of an enforced disappearance. But observers say it has failed to meet its obligations to reveal the fate of those who disappeared, leaving families in a state of “frozen grief”, whereas perpetrators benefited from a 1991 general amnesty.

Speaking at a recent seminar, the founder of the Committee of the Families of the Kidnapped and Disappeared in Lebanon (CFKDL), Wedad Halawi, explained the proposal drafted by lawyer and human rights advocate Nizar Saghieh at the request of CFKDL and NGO Lebanese in Detention and Exile. The International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) provided financial, technical and logistical support.

“There is progress: the draft was submitted and the current justice minister [Shakib Qortbawi] has promised to work on it, so I think there is an opening,” said Habib Nassar, director of ICTJ’s Middle East and North Africa Program. “It’s been part of the ministerial statement for three years, but now it needs to translate into concrete measures.”

The proposed mechanism is based on examples from war-stricken countries like Bosnia-Herzevogina, Guatemala and Argentina. It outlines how to collect and manage information; locate mass graves; implement exhumation, matching and identification procedures; and return the remains of casualties to the families while ensuring their involvement along the way.

It also calls for the establishment of an Institute for Missing Persons and Forcibly Disappeared which would collect and document information while supervising the exhumation process. A national commission, comprised of civil society groups, would monitor the Institute.

“The problem of missing persons is an obstacle to peace-building and reconciliation,” Andreas Kleiser from the International Commission on the Missing Persons said at the 24 February seminar in the capital, Beirut, where the proposals were presented.

Speaking in his capacity as an independent expert in the field, Jeremy Sarkin, chairman of the UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances, said transitional justice – based on five main pillars including truth, reconciliation, institutional reform, reparations, and accountability – lagged in Lebanon.

Failed commissions

An estimated 17,000 people went missing in Lebanon during the civil war. An official commission formed in 2000 to investigate the matter, and another in 2001 to receive complaints from victims’ families, bore no fruit.

After Syria’s withdrawal from Lebanon in 2005, a number of mass graves were uncovered, including in Anjar in the Beka’a Valley, near the Syrian army’s intelligence headquarters. A commission was formed to look into disappearances in both Lebanese and Syrian territories but never filed a report.

However, during his inaugural speech in 2008, President Michel Sleiman called for a comprehensive investigation and the closing of the file, but four years later the issue is still in limbo.

According to Amnesty International, previous investigations by the authorities have not been independent, transparent or effective, leaving families of the missing in anguish and uncertainty.

In a 2011 report entitled Never Forgotten: Lebanon’s Missing People, it said some of the missing disappeared after they were arrested or captured by parties to the conflict; others may have been killed during battles and massacres; while others vanished in unclear circumstances. It called for a programme to collect DNA from the families of the missing who wish it, and to ensure that DNA testing is done whenever human remains of those killed in the conflict are uncovered.

The civil war was a series of interconnected conflicts involving many different parties, including the Lebanese, Palestinians, Israelis and Syrians. It had nationalistic, ideological and sectarian dimensions, some of which initially coalesced around opposition to, or support for, the Palestinian refugee population. To some extent it also pitted Lebanon’s different faith communities against one another.

IRIN

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23 responses to “Proposed law to help locate thousands still missing from Lebanon's civil war”

  1. now most of you know that geo is a lover not the fighter type i try to stay on the light side of subjects but this story makes me explode, wtf? 1990————————2012 and now you begin to notice how important this issue .

    i feel sorry for mothers on all sides going to their grave without any hope of closure. i say next time a government totaly made up of mothers and i bet you would see less wars and pissing contests. 

    1. Prophettttt Avatar
      Prophettttt

      You said it best,geo. I can tell you about two people related to me, who went missing. One on black Saturday in 75. He was 25 years old,and the other ,a father of 5, a 40  year old, disappeared at the hands of Saad Hadad in 79. I watched the parents of both of these people spend the rest of their lives in agony and sadness until sadness and depression killed all of them. 
      I don’t know why these people  want to open all these old wounds.

      1. 5thDrawer Avatar
        5thDrawer

        Those old wounds have never been closed, Prophet. Knowing the truth of the finality could have helped those friends of yours. It may help others. At the very least, it writes the history correctly.

      2. Hannibal Avatar
        Hannibal

        There are more people in Syrian jails… However, seeing what happens to the Syrians in the jails of the Assads I am not hopeful any of our kids are still alive. We should soon find out when his time comes.

        1. hannibal, it amazes me that all the trips made to syria by lebanese leaders  including aoun,suleiman, nasrallah, and many others not one of them went on a mission of not returning without lebanese prisoners or body bags or statments of their demise,,,, no balls no guts no care, allways a visit on a mission to kiss bashars butt and get his blessings to gain for their own intrest and never to put the issue of lebanese prisoners on the table.

           lets be honest about it we all know who is buddy buddy with syria and if they have not grabbed the bull by the horn  about the issue of lebanese held in syrian prisons they are totaly useless…again i  direct my comment and put the responsibility  at those allied with syria,,,,libnan1 with all due respect get the word out to the great one and see if you can get an answer on what effort he made to bring them home. 

        2. Prophettttt Avatar
          Prophettttt

          I don’t believe that there are any Lebanese prisoners  in Syrian jails, Not alive at least.They usually don’t survive the torture. 
          Unless we’re talking about average criminal who was convicted of theft or something,and That is what we’re talking about.

      3. prophet killing is far too comfortable and easily justified or sanitized and sadly many  today eat up all the excuses and justifications of the casualties. what happened in lebanon is no different what is taken place in syria. taking a life is a very serious matter in the eyes of god !

        consider the imbassils that inadvertinly  burned the quoran  are the same imbassils that dumped remains of us servicemen in garbage dumps, none are harmed or even repremanded yet 

           how many people died in afganistan over the burning of the quoran that had nothing to do with burning it? was it the only copy?  is it all better now?  the killers will go without punishment for murder feeling emboldened  and  noble. make no mistake about it the familly members you lost and every single other life taken in lebanons civil war will not be overlooked  those wo killed will not escape judgment.

         

        1. Prophettttt Avatar
          Prophettttt

          I can’t agree more, geo. 
          Killers never consider  God laws or laws that are man made.
          Worse, is why do people kill  people who are killers in order to show that killing is wrong? Can you see the contradiction in our human thinking?
          Revenge can never be the answer.It is easy for humans to react and seek  revenge, but unfortunately, it is hard not too.
          Your example about the Quran burning,and the  cost of reaction to it in Afghanistan is a good one.What did it serve? did it restore the “integrity” of  the Quran or Muslims? defiantly not. 
          I have drawn a parallel in few of my comments between what Lebanon went through,and what some are advocating in syria , in order to make the point that the human cost of an extended military conflict or a civil war in Syria should be avoided at any cost. Knowing how vicious the syrian regime is, militarizing this revolution has played right into the hands of the regime,and it has extended the life of regime and its leaders.
          I came to term  with my loses( by Syrians, Israelis, and Lebanese),and now, believe that most people who died in Lebanon , have lost their lives for no reason.I sympathize with all people, regardless of how or by whom, who lost  loved ones, and I can relate to everyone of them, and know that deep inside, non of those people think that the lose of their loved ones was worth anything they believed in.

  2. now most of you know that geo is a lover not the fighter type i try to stay on the light side of subjects but this story makes me explode, wtf? 1990————————2012 and now you begin to notice how important this issue .

    i feel sorry for mothers on all sides going to their grave without any hope of closure. i say next time a government totaly made up of mothers and i bet you would see less wars and pissing contests. 

  3. now most of you know that geo is a lover not the fighter type i try to stay on the light side of subjects but this story makes me explode, wtf? 1990————————2012 and now you begin to notice how important this issue .

    i feel sorry for mothers on all sides going to their grave without any hope of closure. i say next time a government totaly made up of mothers and i bet you would see less wars and pissing contests. 

    1. Prophettttt Avatar
      Prophettttt

      You said it best,geo. I can tell you about two people related to me, who went missing. One on black Saturday in 75. He was 25 years old,and the other ,a father of 5, a 40  year old, disappeared at the hands of Saad Hadad in 79. I watched the parents of both of these people spend the rest of their lives in agony and sadness until sadness and depression killed all of them. 
      I don’t know why these people  want to open all these old wounds.

      1. 5thDrawer Avatar
        5thDrawer

        Those old wounds have never been closed, Prophet. Knowing the truth of the finality could have helped those friends of yours. It may help others. At the very least, it writes the history correctly.

      2. There are more people in Syrian jails… However, seeing what happens to the Syrians in the jails of the Assads I am not hopeful any of our kids are still alive. We should soon find out when his time comes.

        1. hannibal, it amazes me that all the trips made to syria by lebanese leaders  including aoun,suleiman, nasrallah, and many others not one of them went on a mission of not returning without lebanese prisoners or body bags or statments of their demise,,,, no balls no guts no care, allways a visit on a mission to kiss bashars butt and get his blessings to gain for their own intrest and never to put the issue of lebanese prisoners on the table.

           lets be honest about it we all know who is buddy buddy with syria and if they have not grabbed the bull by the horn  about the issue of lebanese held in syrian prisons they are totaly useless…again i  direct my comment and put the responsibility  at those allied with syria,,,,libnan1 with all due respect get the word out to the great one and see if you can get an answer on what effort he made to bring them home. 

        2. Prophettttt Avatar
          Prophettttt

          I don’t believe that there are any Lebanese prisoners  in Syrian jails, Not alive at least.They usually don’t survive the torture. 
          Unless we’re talking about average criminal who was convicted of theft or something,and That is what we’re talking about.

      3. prophet killing is far too comfortable and easily justified or sanitized and sadly many  today eat up all the excuses and justifications of the casualties. what happened in lebanon is no different what is taken place in syria. taking a life is a very serious matter in the eyes of god !

        consider the imbassils that inadvertinly  burned the quoran  are the same imbassils that dumped remains of us servicemen in garbage dumps, none are harmed or even repremanded yet 

           how many people died in afganistan over the burning of the quoran that had nothing to do with burning it? was it the only copy?  is it all better now?  the killers will go without punishment for murder feeling emboldened  and  noble. make no mistake about it the familly members you lost and every single other life taken in lebanons civil war will not be overlooked  those wo killed will not escape judgment.

         

        1. Prophettttt Avatar
          Prophettttt

          I can’t agree more, geo. 
          Killers never consider  God laws or laws that are man made.
          Worse, is why do people kill  people who are killers in order to show that killing is wrong? Can you see the contradiction in our human thinking?
          Revenge can never be the answer.It is easy for humans to react and seek  revenge, but unfortunately, it is hard not too.
          Your example about the Quran burning,and the  cost of reaction to it in Afghanistan is a good one.What did it serve? did it restore the “integrity” of  the Quran or Muslims? defiantly not. 
          I have drawn a parallel in few of my comments between what Lebanon went through,and what some are advocating in syria , in order to make the point that the human cost of an extended military conflict or a civil war in Syria should be avoided at any cost. Knowing how vicious the syrian regime is, militarizing this revolution has played right into the hands of the regime,and it has extended the life of regime and its leaders.
          I came to term  with my loses( by Syrians, Israelis, and Lebanese),and now, believe that most people who died in Lebanon , have lost their lives for no reason.I sympathize with all people, regardless of how or by whom, who lost  loved ones, and I can relate to everyone of them, and know that deep inside, non of those people think that the lose of their loved ones was worth anything they believed in.

  4. MekensehParty Avatar
    MekensehParty

    no comment

  5. MekensehParty Avatar
    MekensehParty

    knowing how much lebanese love titles, I won’t be surprised that all 17,000 are running for “World Champion of Ghammida”. Nkeye fik moussa el sader!

  6. its very easy. Most of those that did the killing are parliament or the cabinet today just ask them…..

  7. its very easy. Most of those that did the killing are parliament or the cabinet today just ask them…..

  8. LEBANON101 Avatar
    LEBANON101

    mass graves found in bekka valley near syrian intelligence and no one cared thats how sick syrian regime supporters really are. tfuuuuuuuuuu 3alaykon

  9. LEBANON101 Avatar
    LEBANON101

    mass graves found in bekka valley near syrian intelligence and no one cared thats how sick syrian regime supporters really are. tfuuuuuuuuuu 3alaykon

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