Showing posts with label ICMP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ICMP. Show all posts

Thursday, 18 December 2014

ICMP established as international organization in its own right


The Foreign Ministers of the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Sweden, Belgium, and Luxembourg today signed a Framework Agreement that grants a new legal status to the International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP).

“This Agreement reflects a new international consensus on the issue of missing persons,” ICMP Director General Kathryne Bomberger said immediately after the signing ceremony. “For decades the problem of missing persons has been treated as a humanitarian issue, or as a disaster-relief issue, or as a war-emergency issue – but it is now recognized as a systemic global challenge that demands a coherent and effective global response.”

Ms. Bomberger said the Agreement gives ICMP the tools it needs in order to remain at the forefront of this global response. “ICMP has been operating around the world for more than a decade: this Treaty means we can spearhead new initiatives in a way that is consistent with and supportive of the new international consensus on the issue of missing persons.”

ICMP was established in 1996 to ensure the cooperation of governments in the effort to account for the estimated 40,000 people who went missing during the conflicts in former Yugoslavia. In 2003, reflecting the organization’s extraordinary success in implementing its task in the Western Balkans and recognizing the global nature of the missing persons problem, supporting governments extended ICMP’s mandate and sphere of activity to address missing persons issues beyond former Yugoslavia, including cases arising from disasters.

ICMP Chairperson Thomas Miller said the Agreement dovetails with ICMP’s unique and evolving expertise. “This is a logical step for ICMP, which in the last decade has written the playbook for responding to instances of disappearances,” he said. “It gives the organization a firm legal and administrative footing so that it will be able to act quickly and effectively wherever it is needed.”

ICMP is now active in countries throughout the world, from Canada to the Philippines and from Iraq to Mexico. It works with governments, civil society organizations, justice institutions, international organizations and others to address the issue of people who have gone missing as a result of armed conflict, human rights abuses, disasters, organized crime and other causes. It is the only international organization that is exclusively dedicated to this issue.

Until now, ICMP’s international legal status has derived principally from the agreements it has reached with governments in the Western Balkans and international organizations such as INTERPOL and IOM. The Agreement, which was signed today by Bert Koenders, Philip Hammond, Margot Wallström, Didier Reynders and Jean Asselborn, of the Netherlands, the UK, Sweden, Belgium and Luxembourg respectively, constitutes ICMP as a treaty-based international organization with its own system of governance and international capacities. It provides for a new organizational structure, including a Board of Commissioners as its principal organ, a Conference of State Parties as its plenary organ, and an executive to be headed by a Director General.

The Framework Agreement stipulates that ICMP will establish its Headquarters in The Hague, where it will be close to other international organizations in the justice and rule of law field. This move, which is subject to further administrative and legal arrangements, is expected to take place during 2015.

The Framework Agreement will be open for signature by all states after 16 December 2014.

Thursday 18 December 2014

http://www.ic-mp.org/news/icmp-established-as-international-organization-in-its-own-right/

continue reading

Sunday, 23 February 2014

Ghosts of Srebrenica


The call had come from the International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP). We have found and identified Ekrem, one of your brothers, the caller told the Bosnian Muslim woman, before delicately explaining that unfortunately they had not been able to find the dead man's head among his remains.

Eight years earlier during the Bosnian War, Ekrem, along with another brother Mustafa, Kada's husband Sejad and her son Samir were among the 8000 men and boys rounded up and killed at Srebrenica, the worst atrocity on European soil since the Second World War.

It was in July 1995 that Serbian forces commanded by General Ratko Mladic and his paramilitary units systematically massacred the menfolk of Srebrenica. Most were killed with bullets or grenades in fields, warehouses, and football pitches. Their bodies, many dismembered and mutilated, were piled into mass graves and almost 20 years later are still being uncovered.

Last week, at the Potocari Memorial Centre that houses the huge cemetery for the victims of Srebrenica, I listened as Kada recounted horrific memories of those dark days in July 1995.

"I know that Samir, along with other boys, was tied and probably kept waiting a long time to be killed," said Kada. "It was a very hot day - so hot that some of the Serb soldiers couldn't keep up with the pace of the shooting," Kada continued, standing among the rows of white headstones four of which belong to the men of her family.

"As the boys waited to be shot one Serb woman seeing they were so thirsty stepped forward to offer them some yoghurt, but was prevented by a Serb soldier who then also pushed her into the line to be killed simply for offering a drink." Looking out over the rows of headstones, the scale of the Srebrenica massacre moves from being a cold statistic to reveal its human proportions.

As a journalist who covered the war in the former Yugoslavia, I am returning now as part of a Scottish delegation representing the UK charity initiative, Remembering Srebrenica, whose aim is to raise awareness of the massacre and learn from the genocide to help work towards a rejection of the racism, hatred and extremism that underpinned it.

Headed by Angus Robertson, the leader of the SNP's Westminster group, other delegates include the Reverend Lorna Hood, Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland and its head of communications, Seonag MacKinnon, Ann McKechin, MP for Glasgow North, and Sergeant David Hamilton, who, prior to his time as chairman of the Scottish Police Federation (North Area), helped drive truckloads of humanitarian supplies during the Bosnian War for the charity Edinburgh Direct Aid.

During our time in Bosnia, we were to hear from fellow Scots who have played a significant role in solving what has been described as the "world's greatest forensic puzzle" - the exhumation and identification of the remains of the tens of thousands who were victims of ethnic cleansing and genocide in the former Yugoslavia.

Like countless more relatives of the victims of Srebrenica, Kada Hotic owes an immense debt of gratitude to the International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP). Along with other members of the Mothers of Srebrenica who we were to meet at Potocari Memorial Centre, Kada Hotic even went as far as to say that ICMP director general Kathryne Bomberger was worthy of nomination for a Nobel Peace Prize.

Bomberger's husband, Adam Boys, a Scot, originally from Glasgow and now director of international programmes at ICMP, has lived in Bosnia for going on 20 years, during which time he has seen the organisation rise to become a global leader in dealing with missing persons.

"We currently operate the world's largest DNA human identification facility," says Boys, who went on to explain how ICMP employs archaeology, anthropology and pathology to identify human remains in places like Srebrenica.

Since it was established in 1996 ICMP has taken 71,195 blood samples from the families of the missing. Matching blood and bone samples has become the only accurate way to identify the thousands of Bosnian bodies recovered from mass graves. This is no easy task when one considers that at the end of the Balkan wars as many as 40,000 people were estimated to have disappeared. At Srebrenica alone 91 mass grave-sites have been uncovered while the remains of many victims are also found in "surface sites" and in caves and rivers.

Making the job of the ICMP teams even more difficult is the incredible extent to which the perpetrators of the atrocities have tried to hide the evidence of their crimes. "We uncovered the remains of one man in four different grave sites, 50 kilometres apart, and had to carry out 13 separate DNA test to identify him," recalls Boys.

Given that many of the findings by ICMP are presented as evidence in war crimes cases and trials, great emphasis by the organisation is put on how such a complex scientific process has to work alongside a rule-of-law approach.

"The families are also the victims of the crime," insists Boys. "They have to be sure that their genetic data will be protected, that it will only be used for the purpose of identification, and that it will not be shared unless they give their permission."

Dr John Clark, a forensic pathologist for 30 years formerly based at the University of Glasgow, is also one of the ICMP team and has been the chief pathologist for the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) on numerous occasion during its operations in Bosnia.

At the ICMP Podrinje Identification Centre in the town of Tuzla, Dr Clark lifts a few human bones from one of the tables and explains in this instance what he believes happened to the victim.

"This is a bullet hole here in the pelvis which then probably moved around, causing wider damage", he says, fitting the bones together like a macabre jigsaw puzzle.

Currently, Clark is working in the Prijedor area of Bosnia where yet more mass grave-sites have been discovered. On eight occasions he has testified at the ICTY in various war crimes trials and twice in the Bosnian State Court.

Standing alongside Clark as he spoke was ICMP's Senior Forensic Pathologist at the Podrinje Identification Centre, Dragana Vucetic. A Serb from Belgrade, she is now 34 years old and says she was too young back during the war years to remember much about it.

I ask whether being a Serb has posed any problems for her, given that Serb soldiers and paramilitaries were responsible for most of the victims whose remains she deals with. "I came here as an anthropologist, not as a Serb," she replies, adding that she was at first greatly affected by what she had to deal with, having come straight out of university.

Fascinating and remarkable as the forensic science behind ICMP's work is, its specialists never forget that, ultimately, the stories they are uncovering are about lives lost and its emotional impact on those left with the legacy of war-time atrocities. Adam Boys is the first to admit admiration for the way the Mothers of Srebrenica like Kada Hotic have stayed committed to highlighting the horrors of what went on, something that becomes apparent as I talk with Kada among the grave-stones of her male relatives at the Potocari Memorial Centre.

"When I gave birth to my son, I was the happiest woman alive and now I think of him thirsty and afraid having to wait in line that day to be killed," Kada reflects, before telling me of another atrocity she herself witnessed at Srebrenica after the women were separated from their menfolk.

"As we waited for the buses that would take us away from the men, one woman gave birth on the ground right before my eyes," she begins her story.

"The baby just born not even a name and a Serb soldier came over and crushed it under his boot ... What can I say - genocide." Having witnessed such things and herself having suffered so much loss, grief, and pain I wondered if she could ever forgive those who had done such barbaric things. "To begin with, the perpetrators have not accepted or recognised their crime," she tells me with a shrug of her shoulders.

She adds: "I am not the owner of the lives of my husband, son and brothers, I have no right to forgive for their suffering. In many ways I feel sorry for those who did this and that they became like animals."

Today, Kada, at 69, suffers from rheumatoid arthritis but this has not prevented her and the other Mothers of Srebrenica from being as determined as ever to ensure justice is done and that the world should never forget the torture, brutality and killing during those days of the massacre.

Today, Kada and the others continue to battle with the Serb authorities in their efforts to have the old battery factory and other buildings adjacent to the cemetery made into a museum to commemorate the victims and highlight the issue of genocide. It was in these buildings that Dutch UN peacekeepers tasked with safekeeping the Muslim enclave of Srebrenica were stationed. To this day many here in Bosnia and around the world still hold the Dutch troops responsible for failing to intervene and protect the innocent civilians of Srebrenica. "If our loved ones could not live here alive, they can live here dead," insists Kada.

Having rebuilt her family home in Srebrenica, Kada says she continues to live in the area because of her "bloodymindedness" and determination to keep telling the world and those that visit about the uncomfortable reality of what Srebrenica represents.

As I accompany her from the grassy area of the cemetery that day, she asks me to ensure that I walk only along the base of the graves and not across the head as this would be disrespectful.

Passing each gravestone, she gently caresses the marble tops, stopping once to hug the stone above the grave of her son, Samir, as if it were the boy himself still here and alive.

It is a touching and poignant moment that I will always remember, just as all of us in the same way should never forget the evil that gripped Srebrencia those few short years ago.

Sunday 23 February 2014

http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/home-news/ghosts-of-srebrenica.23509441

continue reading

Friday, 1 November 2013

Experts: More must be done to trace missing people


Experts say the ranks of missing people are swelling around the world, including Muslim men murdered and dumped into mass graves in Bosnia, victims of Asia's 2004 tsunami, people killed in Mexico's drug wars, and asylum seekers who drown as they flee conflicts in rickety boats.

Academics and others meeting in The Hague to discuss the plight of missing people called on Friday for more to be done to tackle the problem, saying that would contribute to more stable societies around the world.

Professor Jeremy Sarkin, a member of the U.N. Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances, told a three-day conference that peace will be threatened in nations emerging from armed conflict "if issues relating to the missing continue to exist."

The conference was organized by the Sarajevo-based International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP), which was formed in 1996 to help trace and identify thousands of people who went missing during the Balkan wars of the 1990s. It has grown into a repository for expertise on using DNA to identify missing people.

The organization is currently working in the Balkans, Iraq, Libya, Cyprus, Chile and El Salvador as well as helping Interpol identify victims of the recent Westgate Mall terror attack in Kenya.

In the former Yugoslavia, it has built up a database of blood samples from more than 90,000 relatives of 29,500 missing people and 54,000 bone samples exhumed from mass graves. Using DNA analysis, the group has identified some 17,000 people killed in the wars, bringing a measure of closure to their relatives.

ICMP Chairman Thomas Miller said exact numbers of the missing worldwide are almost impossible to gauge, but he said thousands of people disappear each year.

"The world needs a global mechanism that has the strength and backing of the international community to successfully address this painful issue," he said.

Dutch Foreign Minister Frans Timmermans appealed for the ICMP to be given a formal status under international law.

"I call upon national governments to support our efforts to make it easier for this organization to operate around the world," he told delegates.

People disappear daily around the world for a variety of reasons, experts say.

In Mexico, the government's war on drugs has triggered a surge in disappearances, said Consuelo Morales, one of the founders of Citizens for Human Rights Support.

She recalled the case of a 3-year-old boy left screaming in a street after his father was abducted by a street gang because he had witnessed a robbery.

"This child lost his father, security," Morales said. "In 15 years, can you imagine what will be in the heart and mind of this child?"

Efforts to track down and identify such victims will help heal the family's wounds, she said. "Without truth, without justice, there can be no peace," Morales told The Associated Press.

In Syria, thousands of people have disappeared in the country's civil war and opposition groups already are planning how best to identify remains after the conflict.

Radwan Ziadeh, executive director of the Syrian Center for Political and Strategic Studies and a prominent opposition figure, said his group wants to enlist the help of the ICMP in visiting refugee camps in Turkey and Jordan to collect samples from relatives of people who have disappeared during the civil war so their DNA can be used later for identification tests.

"The ICMP has done great work on building a central database, we want to take lessons from them," he said.

Friday 01 November 2013

http://www.ironmountaindailynews.com/page/content.detail/id/401125/Experts--More-must-be-done-to-trace-missing-people.html?isap=1&nav=5024

continue reading

Thursday, 31 October 2013

Finding the millions of missing people across the world


The International Commission on Missing Persons is hosting a three day conference called “The Missing – an Agenda for the Future” at the Hague.

The core strategy of the conference is to set out a road map for how the issue of missing people will be addressed in the future. It will look at global initiatives to find missing people and how better to understand the magnitude of the problem.

The Commission was established at the G7 Summit in Lyon, France in 1996 at the request of President Bill Clinton in the aftermath of the war in the Balkans. Its primary role is to ensure the cooperation of governments in locating or identifying those who have disappeared.

The ICMP provides logistical support to the government in the exhumation of mass graves and the identification of bodies using state of the art DNA techniques in the countries of former Yugoslavia.

It has also provided evidence to the domestic and international courts that heard war crimes cases.

In the aftermath of the Bosnian war, around 40,000 people were missing. Because of the work of the Commission which is based in Sarajevo 70 percent were identified. There can be no precise figures for missing persons across the world.

According to estimates anything between 250,000 and one million are missing in Iraq, 50,000 in Syria and at least 26,000 in the Mexico drug wars.

Statistics show how modern conflicts affect civilians. Before the First World War the ratio of casualties – including those who go missing – was seven combatants to one civilian. Now the balance has shifted dramatically. The ratio is one combatant to nine civilians.

The most glaring example of that is the war in Iraq where it is the civilians who are paying the heaviest price. The invasion of Iraq which was ten years ago caused one of the most serious humanitarian crises in the world. The work to locate the missing in Iraq remains daunting.

Natural disasters like the tsunami in Japan are also in the focus of the work of the ICMP. The organisation hopes ways will be found to ensure an international mechanism is available that can provide a structured and sustainable response to all missing persons cases in rich and poor countries alike.

Euronews interviewed Queen Noor of Jordan, who is a commissioner with the International Commission on Missing Persons.

Paul McDowell, euronews: “The title of the conference is ‘The Missing – an Agenda for the Future’. Tell me how difficult is it to look to the future because the causes that have created these problems are so many – whether it is armed conflict, violation of human rights or natural disasters.”

Queen Noor of Jordan: “We are the only organisation in the world that is dealing with missing persons cases in all their dimensions, no matter what the circumstances. And this conference in The Hague is one that we’ve brought together for the first time ever – experts and policy makers – concerning the issue of missing persons and all of the different dimensions of this problem, again regardless of circumstances.”

euronews: “I get the sense that the real difficulty is to prioritise – where and who are in most urgent need of assistance. How will you approach that?”

Queen Noor of Jordan: “ICMP has developed the largest, most efficient and cost effective human identification laboratory system in the world that we have used in the Balkans, and that we have been able to demonstrate that it is possible to account for the missing from those kinds of extraordinarily complex and vicious genocides and abuses of human rights. Our experience there is informing our approach to countries like Libya and Iraq, which we’re working in today. Syria, where we’ve been approached by transitional justice groups, to try to help them begin to plan for post-conflict, and how they might address what are estimated to be about 50,000 people…. 17,000 from the previous regimes, and about 30,000 who have gone missing in this current conflict. One of the ways that we’re talking with them about what we might be able to do in this period now, is perhaps try to collect data – genetic data as well possibly – from those who have been displaced outside the country in camps in Turkey and Jordan and Lebanon, in Iraq and Egypt and elsewhere… try to pull together as much data as possible, which helps us prepare to be able to set into motion the kind of operation that we have been able to achieve such great, unprecedented results with in the western Balkans, in a country like Syria.”

euronews: “Finally, it is difficult to get a concept of those huge figures, but perhaps a couple of high-profile cases recently have really hit home – and that is the cases of missing children that have been in the news. How much of your work in the future will focus on missing children?”

Queen Noor of Jordan: “Women and children form a majority – if you will – of the cases we’ve had to address of missing persons in various parts of the world. In terms of the kinds of cases that you’re discussing, we haven’t yet developed a framework for handling individual cases in specific countries. We’ve been working on a much larger scale. But we do believe that our DNA identification system, that our work with different governments and international organisations – to develop legal frameworks and institutional and even community frameworks for looking at these problems, and trying to draw in as many people as possible to solve a problem – will apply to individual missing children cases as well as to larger scale problems.”

Thursday 31 October 2013

http://www.euronews.com/2013/10/30/finding-the-millions-of-missing-people-across-the-world/

continue reading

Thursday, 14 March 2013

First DNA matches from Libyan mass graves


The Libyan government has received the first of a number of DNA matches from bodies that were found in a mass grave, one of which could be that of photographer Anton Hammerl.

The seven samples, according to Libyan government officials, arrived in Libya on Thursday from the International Commission for Missing Persons, (ICMP) in Bosnia. But none of the samples are linked to the missing photographer, who was killed on April 5, 2011.

These are the first of a 100 samples that are been analysed by the ICMP. It is expected that all the samples will arrive back in Libya in the next 10 days.

Hammerl, who previously worked for the Saturday Star, died while covering the Libyan civil war.

His body was believed to be among 169 other bodies exhumed from a mass grave near the town of Bin Jawwad.

Hospital records showed the body was that of a white male of Hammerl’s height, with black hair, and that he had died around the same date. A lens was also recovered nearby.

However, those who have seen the lens believe it did not come from a camera, but might be from a pair of binoculars.

“We will be receiving results as they go along,” said Mervat Mhani of the Libyan Ministry of Martyrs and Missing People. These individuals were identified from DNA extracted after a mass exhumation. The DNA was then compared to that of relatives.

She added that once the government received the samples, the remains of the person would be exhumed and subjected to a physical examination.

“Only then would the family be informed, and they would then decide if they wanted to move the remains,” Mhani added.

The mass grave in Bin Jawwad was exhumed early last year by relatives of the dead. The exhumation was supervised by the ministry.

There was a delay in sending the samples to the ICMP, as a decision had to be made if they would be analysed in Libya.

Thursday 14 March 2013

http://www.iol.co.za/news/africa/could-dna-be-anton-hammerl-s-1.1484901#.UUIHyYfVWCA

continue reading

Friday, 9 November 2012

The International Commission on Missing Persons

Last December, the Libyan National Transitional Council decided it was about time to tackle the thorny problem of dealing with the thousands of persons who had gone missing in the country over the previous 35 years. The Council authorised the country’s new Ministry of Martyrs and Missing Persons, itself then merely a month old, to handle this issue. Their minister, Mr. Naser Djibril Hamed, then promptly approached for assistance the Sarajevo-based International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP).

The ICMP will now help Mr Djibril Hamed and his ministry, which he says is committed to searching for persons in a non-discriminatory fashion, regardless of whether the person missing is a “loyalist, rebel, or from another group.” He says there could be up to 10,000 people missing in Libya, both from the recent conflict, as well as those missing from the 1977 war with Egypt, the 1978 war with Uganda, the 1980-1987 wars with Chad and the 1996 Abu Salim Prison massacre in Tripoli. The bodies of missing people are scattered in mass graves across the country.

Founded at the behest of Bill Clinton at the G-7 summit in 1996 to deal with the problem of the thousands of people missing from the Balkans conflicts, the ICMP set out to identify, using DNA technology, the mangled human remains of the estimated 8,100 Bosnian Muslim victims of the 1995 massacre at Srebrenica scattered in mass graves around Bosnia (pictured above). Seventeen years on ICMP has identified over 85% of these, returning the bodies to grieving relatives for proper burial. By matching blood-samples taken from living relatives with DNA extracted from bone samples taken from exhumed human remains as well as using traditional means, some 70% of the estimated 40,000 persons missing from the 1990s Balkans wars have been identified.

The organisation’s director-general, a tenacious American called Kathryne Bomberger, says that ICMP, through its efforts in the western Balkans, Southeast Asia and elsewhere, has demonstrated that the missing can be found, whether they are missing as a consequence of wars and atrocities, disasters, or other causes. The ICMP, she says, “has modernised and transformed the international community response to the issue.” On a recent visit to Sarajevo, William Hague, the British foreign secretary, said that by supporting the ICMP, the international community has shown that missing persons can be found.

Governments worldwide trying to cope with missing persons, from Iraq to Colombia, and from South Africa to Norway, now come to ask for the ICMP’s assistance. The organisation has identified in its Sarajevo laboratory Chilean victims of General Pinochet killed in the 1970s. The ICMP assisted in the wake of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans and after the Asian tsunami. INTERPOL has ICMP on-call for help with the grisly task of DVI, or Disaster Victim Identification.

The organisation will assist the Libyans by deploying the same operationally-trifurcated approach that reaped success in the Balkans. This involves the establishment of forensic scientific expertise, a human rights-based approach to helping victims’ living relatives, and the creation of legislation that will help the fledgling Libyan authorities deal with missing persons. In time, Libyans will aim towards the establishment of the Libya Identification Centre, handling the locating, recovery and identification of the missing. Two NGOs, the Libyan Society for Missing Persons and The Free Generation Movement, working on the ‘Mafqood’, or ‘Missing’ project, have been recording information on mass graves.

The American government are providing 65% of the initial $1m costs of the preliminary Libya project. Denmark is providing the remainder. America has given some $45m to the ICMP since 1996, making it the largest of the 22 governmental donors that fund it along with the EU, UN and Interpol.

Nearly 85% of the organisation’s staff are Bosnian, says Adam Boys, a Scot who is the ICMP’s Chief Operating Officer, and who has worked in the country since the days of the war in 1993. ICMP is one of the few Bosnian exports that are in demand. “The ICMP’s success could be said to be one of the most successful international interventions in post-conflict former Yugoslavia.”

Friday 9 november 2012

http://www.economist.com/blogs/easternapproaches/2012/11/bosnia

continue reading