- The Hague-based organization opened an office in Kyiv in July to help Ukraine to document and track down missing people.
- The process of investigating the missing in Ukraine will last years even after fighting stops, Holliday told Reuters in an interview.
- In Kyiv, the ICMP has started to collect DNA samples and is ramping up capacity for a multi-year process that will also help prosecutors build war crimes cases.
More than 15,000 people have gone missing during the war in Ukraine, an official at the International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP) said on Thursday.
Missing people
The Hague-based organization, created in the wake of the Balkan wars of the 1990s, opened an office in Kyiv in July to help Ukraine to document and track down missing people.
The ICMP’s programme director for Europe, Matthew Holliday, said it was unclear how many people had been forcibly transferred.
Or were being held in detention in Russia, were alive and separated from their family members, or had died and had been buried in makeshift graves.
Investigation process
The process of investigating the missing in Ukraine will last years even after fighting stops, Holliday told Reuters in an interview.
The 15,000 figure is conservative when considering that in the port city of Mariupol alone authorities estimate as many as 25,000 people are either dead or missing.
“The numbers are huge and the challenges that Ukraine faces are vast. Besides which they’re fighting an ongoing war as well against the Russian Federation,” Holliday said.
He was speaking after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy demanded that the United Nations punish Russia for air strikes on civilian infrastructure, after a missile barrage plunged Ukraine’s cities into freezing darkness.
DNA samples
By storing DNA samples on a database and seeking matches with relatives, the ICMP accounted for more than 27,000 out of 40,000 persons reported missing during the conflicts in the former Yugoslavia.
In Kyiv, the ICMP has started to collect DNA samples and is ramping up capacity for a multi-year process that will also help prosecutors build war crimes cases.
“What is key now is setting in place all the correct measures to ensure that as many persons can be identified,” Holliday said.
“The vast majority of missing persons, those deceased, are victims of war crimes, and the perpetrators need to be held responsible.”
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Source: Reuters