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ICRC: 13,595 families searching for 23,659 missing persons in Nigeria

ICRC Missing persons Nigeria
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)

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‎”Behind each missing person is a family living in anguish and uncertainty, struggling with the pain of not knowing what has happened to their loved one. ‎

‎By Franca Ofili

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has estimated that 13,595 families continue to search for 23,659 missing persons in Nigeria with 67 per cent of the cases in Borno State.

ICRC said this in a statement issued in commemoration of the International Day of the Disappeared celebrated every Aug. 30,

According to the statement, 59 per cent of missing persons in Nigeria were minors at the time of disappearance.

ICRC also noted that there are approximately 284,400 registered missing people worldwide.

It also said that no fewer than 94,000 people were registered as missing in 2024 alone, but noted that the figure is likely only “a fraction of the true number”.

‎‎”In 2024, more than 94,000 people were registered as missing by their families with the Family Links Network, bringing the current number of registered missing people to approximately 284,400.

“From our experience this is only a fraction of the true number of missing people out there,” it said.

The Family Links Network, a programme of the ICRC, is composed of 192 National Societies, ICRC delegations and the IFRC.

‎The statement urged stakeholders to promote empathy by highlighting the impact that people going missing had on families and community.

‎According to it, the issue of missing people, including victims of enforced disappearance, is one of most devastating and long lasting consequences of armed conflict and other violence, disasters and migration.

‎”Behind each missing person is a family living in anguish and uncertainty, struggling with the pain of not knowing what has happened to their loved one.

‎”This suffering is compounded by economic, legal, administrative, psychological and psychosocial challenges as well as the need for their suffering to be officially acknowledged and for someone to be held accountable,” it said.

‎‎According to it, ICRC is a humanitarian organisation dedicated to protecting the lives and dignity of victims of armed conflict and other situation of violence.
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‎The statement advocated for families of missing persons not to be stigmatised, accused or excluded for their attempts to clarify the fate and whereabout of their missing persons.

‎”Solidarity and support initiatives created by families of missing persons should be supported.

‎”They constantly demonstrate great resilience to overcome the challenges caused by the disappearance”.

The statement said that International Day of the Disappeared was a day to be in solidarity with those seeking to establish the fate and whereabout of their beloved ones.

‎”As we commemorate this day, we renew our commitment to advocate for the rights of the disappeared, call for increased and continuous efforts to search for missing persons and to provide answers to their families.

‎”Let us stand together, amplifying the voices of the families of the disappeared and work towards a world where no one must endure the pain of uncertainty.

‎”Continuous efforts are needed to search for those who are missing and provide information on their fate and whereabout to their families.

‎”Time does not heal, acknowledgement, answer and respect do,” it said.(NAN)(www.nannews.ng)
‎FNO/VIV

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