Lebanon urged to do more to trace thousands missing from civil war

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Portraits of some of the thousands who have gone missing in Lebanon
Portraits of some of the thousands who have gone missing in Lebanon

By Heba Kanso

BEIRUT, April 13  – The Lebanese government was urged on Thursday – the 42nd anniversary of the start of the nation’s civil war – to help families of the thousands of missing by approving a project to collect DNA samples to try to trace their whereabouts.

With families still struggling to cope with their loss, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and non-government organisation Act for the Disappeared staged a one-day exhibition in Beirut of chairs made by families of the missing.

“People who have lost a member of their family and don’t know what happened are living in this in between,” Fabrizio Carboni, head of the ICRC delegation in Lebanon, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“No grief possible and at the very same time hope is still present. So it is really torture for these families.”

More than two dozen families participated in “Empty Chairs, Waiting Families”, an exhibition of chairs painted with drawings and pasted with photos.

The ICRC called on Lebanese authorities to run a project to collect DNA samples and also to pass a law that will help families of the missing get clarity on what happened to them.

There is currently no public database or exact numbers for people who went missing during the civil war between 1975-1990 in which an estimated 150,000 people were killed.

Lebanon was shattered by its 15-year-long war. Villages and neighbourhoods in which Muslims and Christians had lived side by side for centuries were reshaped. Hundreds of thousands of people retreated into separate enclaves controlled by sectarian militias.

FATE UNKNOWN

The ICRC said thousands of people from all sides and backgrounds went missing during the civil war and their fate remains unknown.

“Under international humanitarian law, government authorities are required to clarify the fate of persons who go missing in conflict situations. However, Lebanon has yet to take the necessary steps,” the ICRC said in a statement.

The ICRC is asking the state to set up a mechanism to give families some answers – whether that is through preserving and opening mass graves, getting forensic information, or biological reference samples.

Missing since 1982 was Said whose 80-year-old brother Riad Sharif Harmouch used his chair to draw his brother in the car he used to transport people between the Christian East and Muslim West of Beirut returning them to families if they went missing.

“I am two years older than my brother. I was really affected. We were really close friends, more than just brothers. I lost a piece of me,” said Harmouch.

Fardous and her mother, Jamila Agha, drew her father Nazih’s fishing boat and motorcycle on a chair. He used to fish and sell what he caught while riding his motorcycle.

“We have hope that he will come back so we can get back what was taken away from us,” said Fardous, whose father went missing in 1982 when she was two-years-old.

Sayde Jhantous Tayyar, 53, whose brother Elias has been missing since 1984, replicated part of a drawing her brother did when he was younger on a chair and drew him holding a kite.

Jebran Harmouch, 71, whose brother Elias has been missing since 1976, included a photo of his brother and words that remind him of his brother.

“I remember his laugh, his jokes,” said Harmouch.

“What is harder than death is the fact that I don’t know whether he is alive or dead. This creates more sadness.”

Carboni referred to the chairs project as “heart therapy” with a purpose.

“It is an opportunity for families to manage their pain and this traumatic situation. And on the other hand it’s an opportunity to raise awareness in the public for the political authorities,” said Carboni.
Reuters

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One response to “Lebanon urged to do more to trace thousands missing from civil war”

  1. Danny Farah Avatar
    Danny Farah

    Yes thousands are missing and mostly in Syrian jails that Aoun failed to even bother look into. Second Hezbollah created a war in 2006 to free up Samir the Cunt-AR but they refused to even speak on behalf of the missings that includes even Shiites. These Lebanese Mr. Nassrallah fought hard for Lebanon as you fought Israel as well. But you S.O.B do not mind them rotting in Syria jails you and Berri and Aoun failed to help. Gaegea screams from behind and does nothing other than plain talk. What is the use talking about it they can’t even remove the trash from around them and within them. They close their nose when passing by trash as if it doesn’t belong to them. what a pity how long this nation has to suffer at mostly at its own citizen let alone what they have suffered at the hands of the Israelis and the assad regimes.

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