Violentology Missing

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EXHUMATION OF A DISAPPEARED WOMAN, TIERRADENTRO, CÓRDOBA, MARCH 3, 2007 MISSING

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"Missing" is a downloadable chapter from the book Violentology: A Manual of the Colombian Conflict (Umbrage Editions, 2012), www.violentology.com/blog This photographic essay is based on the extraordinary investigation "Colombia busca 10.000 muertos" (Colombia Searches for 10,000 Dead), carried out by a team of reporters from El Tiempo newspaper, coordinated by Luz Maria Sierra and Marisol Gomez, published April 24, 2007. At that time, the official estimate of forcibly disappeared persons in Colombia was approximately 10,000. Due to ex-paramilitary confessions and investigations by Colombia's Attorney General's office, the official number has risen to 34,000 persons as of September, 2011. The copyrights to this document, and the photographs and texts within, belong to the author, Stephen Ferry. This document maybe freely used, reproduced and distributed as long as it remains intact.

Transcript of Violentology Missing

Page 1: Violentology Missing

eXHUMATion oF A DiSAPPeAReD WoMAn, TieRRADenTRo, CÓRDoBA, MARCH 3, 2007

MiSSinG

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eXhUMAtion oF A DiSAppeAreD WoMAn. tierrADentro, CÓrDoBA. MArCh 3, 2007.

fOrCed diSAPPeArAnCeJust as the FARC became notorious as experts in the cruel art

of kidnapping, the paramilitaries have their own signature crime.

the autodefensas frequently quarter their victims and then throw

them into rivers, burn their bodies in ovens, or bury them in clan-

destine graves. the point is to make the bodies disappear with-

out a trace. At least 34,000 Colombians have been forcibly dis-

appeared over the past three decades, according to Colombia’s

Attorney general’s office.1

the practice of forced disappearance is based on a macabre

logic. By hiding their victims’ bodies, paramilitaries seek to sabo-

tage any future investigation of their crimes. And given the effort

required to hide thousands of corpses, paramilitary troops would

dismember them so they could fit in shallow graves that are easier

to dig. in the mind of the general public, the chainsaw was seen

as the autodefensas’ weapon of choice, but in many cases they pre-

ferred the machete, as chainsaws tend to get inconveniently tan-

gled up in the victim’s clothing.2

TrAining CAMPthe AUC even held workshops on dismemberment, where they

used living people as instructional material. As quoted in El Tiem-

po, one former paramilitary described the training he received at

an AUC camp in the mid-1990s:

they were older persons that they brought in covered trucks, alive and tied up. they were taken to the place where the teach-er was waiting to start the class. the instructions were to cut off an arm, the head, dismember them alive. they would cry and begged not to do anything to them, that they had families.3

nighT And fOgthe autodefensas used forced disappearance also as a way to ter-

rify the civilian population into submission. the nazis pioneered

the technique with their 1941 night and Fog decree, which or-

dered secret detentions to eliminate resistance in occupied terri-

tories. the policy aimed to achieve “efficient and enduring intim-

idation” through “measures by which the relatives of the criminal

and the population do not know the fate of the [victim].”4

The SeArChAs the numbers of disappeared multiplied over the decade of the

1990s, relatives set out on personal searches, obsessively scouring

the country’s morgues, jails, and coroner’s offices for any trace of

their missing. like spirits with no rest, women would travel from

town to town, asking after their children. they found support in

victims’ organizations, as these groups pressured the government

to take up the search.

the Colombian state first began a sustained nationwide

search for the missing after 2006, in response to the Constitution-

al Court ruling that compelled demobilizing paramilitaries seek-

ing reduced sentences to confess their crimes and reveal the loca-

tion of their victims’ remains.

As of March 2011, Colombian forensic investigators had used

information gathered from these confessions to exhume 3,245

graves and to positively identify and return 1,401 bodies to family

members.5

NiGhT AND FOG

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eXhUMAtion oF A DiSAppeAreD WoMAn. tierrADentro, CÓrDoBA. MArCh 3, 2007.

This image—found in the cell phone of a paramilitary soldier—shows an instructor of the AUC paramilitary army demonstrating how to use a machete to dismember a man.

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WWW.FiSCAliA.Gov.Co

The website of Colombia’s Attorney General’s Office has an extensive photo gallery showing the clothes of exhumed persons. The site has helped families recover the remains of their missing relatives.i

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SAn onoFre CeMetery. SAn onoFre, SUCre. April 2, 2007.

Mrs. Teresita Meléndez (right) lost her husband and son to paramilitary violence. The last time she saw Marco Tulio Velásquez and Alfredo Manuel was twelve years ago as they left the house one morning to go to work as day laborers on a nearby farm.

Because she never saw their bodies, nor had the chance to properly bury her son and husband, Mrs. Meléndez could never fully accept the fact of their deaths nor grieve for them.

In the instant of this photograph, Mrs. Meléndez still had not recognized the piece of her husband’s clothing shown to her by a forensic investigator. A moment later, her daughter whispered to her, “But Mamá, you sewed up those underpants yourself.”

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SAn onoFre CeMetery. SAn onoFre, SUCre. April 2, 2007.

Mrs. Teresita Meléndez is grief-stricken as she recognizes the garment, proof of her husband’s death.

The investigation carried out by the Attorney General’s office reveals that paramilitary troops under the command of alias Cadena, commander of the Heroes of the Montes de María Block of the AUC, killed her husband and son along with four other laborers in a woodshed and later hid the bodies in the San Onofre, Sucre cemetery.

There is no evidence of connections between the murdered men and guerrilla groups, or of any other motive for the massacre.

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SAn onoFre CeMetery. SAn onoFre, SUCre. MArCh 3, 2007.

An investigator of the Attorney General’s office exhumes a person presumably disappeared by the Heroes of the Montes de María Block of the AUC under the command of alias Cadena. The AUC in this region hid victims by ordering cemetery workers to bury them underneath existing graves, thus complicating any potential exhumation of the bodies.

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viGil For the DiSAppeAreD. MeDellÍn, AntioQUiA. April 1, 2007.

Women seeking the return of their disappeared children founded the Mothers of Candelaria Association in 1999. Since then, the group has held weekly vigils in front of the Candelaria church in Medellín, demanding to see their loved ones “alive, free, and in peace.”

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VIOLENTOLOGYA MANUAL OF THE COLOMBIAN CONFLICT

violentology.com/blog

This booklet was made possible through the Tim Hetherington Grant, awarded by the World Press Foundation and Human Right Watch for long-term photographic documentation of human rights issues. The Violentology project has also been supported by an Audience Engagement Grant of the Open Society Institute, the Alicia Patterson Fellowship, and a grant from the Fund for Investigative Journalism.

This PDF based booklet may be downloaded and distributed free of charge, as long as it remains unaltered.