Aadel Collection

Report of the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances

          
          UNITED
          NATIONS
          Economic and Soc
          ial Distr.
          Council
          GENERAL
          EICN.4 12000/64
          21 December 1999
          Original: ENGLISH
          COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS
          Fifty-sixth session
          Item 11(b) of the provisional agenda
          CIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTS, INCLUDING QUESTIONS OF
          DISAPPEARANCES AND SUMMARY EXECUTIONS
          Report of the Working Group on Enforced
          or Involuntary Disappearances
          E
          GE.99-I6472 (E)
        
          
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          CONTENTS
          Paragraphs Page
          Executive summary 5
          Introduction 1 - 8 7
          ACTIVITIES OF THE WORKING GROUP IN 1999 9-23 8
          A. Meetings and missions 9 - 13 8
          B. Communications 14 - 18 8
          C. Methods of work 19 - 23 9
          II. COUNTRIES IN WHICH THERE WERE NEW CASES OF
          DISAPPEARANCES OR CLARIFICATIONS 24-95 10
          Algeria 24-26 10
          Belarus 27 10
          Brazil 28 11
          Cambodia 29 11
          China 30-31 11
          Colombia 32-39 11
          Democratic Republic of the Congo 40 - 41 13
          Ethiopia 42 13
          Guatemala 43 - 49 13
          Honduras 50 14
          India 51 -56 15
          Indonesia 57 16
          Iran (Islamic Republic of) 58 - 59 16
          Iraq 60 16
        
          
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          CONTENTS ( continued)
          Paragraphs Page
          Jordan 61 17
          Libyan Arab Jamahiriya 62 17
          Mexico 63 - 71 17
          Morocco 72 - 74 18
          Nepal 75-78 19
          Pakistan 79-81 19
          Philippines 82 - 83 20
          Sri Lanka 84 - 86 20
          Sudan 87 - 88 20
          Tunisia 89 21
          Turkey 90-92 21
          Uzbekistan 93 - 95 21
          III. COUNTRIES FROM WHICH THE WORKING GROUP
          RECEIVED COMMENTS FROM GOVERNMENTS OR
          NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS 96-130 22
          Angola 96 22
          Argentina 97 - 105 22
          Burundi 106 24
          Cameroon 107 24
          Egypt 108-109 24
          El Salvador 110-111 24
        
          
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          CONTENTS ( continued)
          Paragraphs Page
          Eritrea 112 25
          Kuwait 113 - 114 25
          Malaysia 115-116 25
          Peru 117-124 26
          Uruguay 125 - 130 27
          IV. COUNTRIES FROM WHICH THE WORKING GROUP
          RECEIVED NO iNFORMATION OR COMMENTS 131-132 28
          V. COUNTRIES IN WHICH ALL REPORTED CASES OF
          DISAPPEARANCE HAVE BEEN CLARIFIED 133 29
          VI. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 134- 143 29
          VII. ADOPTION OF THE REPORT AND SEPARATE OPINION
          OF TWO MEMBERS OF THE WORKTh1G GROUP 144- 145 31
          Annex : Decisions on individual cases taken by the Working Group
          during 1999
          33
        
          
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          Executive summary
          The report submitted by the Working Group corresponding to 1999 again indicates
          further developments of two basic features of the situation of enforced or involuntary
          disappearances in the world.'
          First was the continuation of the practice of disappearances in a number of countries.
          During last year, the Working Group received information on 300 new cases of disappearances
          which occurred in 23 countries; 115 of these cases occurred in 1999. At the moment, the
          Working Group has 46,054 outstanding cases on its registers. During 1999, 125 cases were
          transmitted by the Working Group to the Governments of 19 countries by way of its urgent
          action procedure. (The highest number of cases of enforced or involuntary disappearances in
          1999 occurred in Indonesia (50) and Colombia (27); the Working Group transmitted to the
          Government of Algeria 146 cases of disappearance, one of which occurred in 1999).
          Second, the process of clarification of cases, especially cases which were transmitted
          more than 10 years ago, is becoming slower. In spite of satisfactory cooperation with the
          Working Group from a great number of countries, the fact remains that the attitude of most
          Governments towards investigating and to clarifying the outstanding cases has not improved. In
          the period under review (1999), out of 69 countries with unclarified cases, the Governments of
          34 countries have not communicated at all with the Working Group.
          In its report, the Working Group has recommended to the Commission on Human Rights
          that it should call upon all the States with outstanding cases to adopt proper measures to improve
          the process of clarification of cases.
          The report also points out that impunity continues to be one of the main causes of
          disappearances and also the major obstacle in the process of clarification. The Working Group
          reiterates that the Declaration on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance
          obliges all States to declare all acts of enforced disappearance offences in their domestic criminal
          law, to promptly and thoroughly investigate all allegations of enforced disappearance and to
          bring the perpetrators to justice.
          1 Since its creation in 1980, the Working Group has submitted a report annually to the
          Commission on Human Rights, starting at the Commission's thirty-seventh session. The
          document symbols of the previous 17 reports are as follows: E/CN.4/1435 and Add.1;
          E/CN.4/1492 and Add.1; E/CN.4/1983/14; E/CN.4/1984/21 and Add.1 and 2; E/CN.4/1985/15
          and Add.1; E/CN.4/1986/18 and Add.1; E/CN.4/1987/15 and Corr.1 and Add.1; E/CN.4/1988/19
          and Add.1; E/CN.4/1989/18 and Add.1; E/CN.4/1990/13; E/CN.4/1991/20 and Add.1;
          E/CN.4/1992/18 and Add.1; E/CN.4/1993/25 and Add.1; E/CN.4/1994/26 and Corr.1 and 2 and
          Add. 1; E/CN.4/1995/36; E/CN.4/1996/38; E/CN.4/1997/34; E/CN.4/1998/43; and
          E/CN.4/1999/62 and Add.1 and Add.2. The relevant resolutions of the Commission adopted at
          its last session are resolutions 1999/16, 1999/27, 1999/33, 1999/34 and 1999/41.
        
          
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          As a result of the current limitations in its resources and staff, together with the need to
          reduce the length of its report, the Working Group has not included some important sections
          contained in its previous reports, such as those referring to the implementation of the
          Declaration, as well as general comments on its articles and observations on the draft
          international convention on the prevention and punishment of enforced disappearances. Also, it
          has not been possible to include concluding observations in the country chapters.
          In its report, the Working Group expresses again its serious concern about its ability in
          the future, with the present limited financial resources and seriously limited staff, to carry out the
          various mandates assigned to it by the Commission.
          The report includes the separate opinion of two members of the Working Group,
          Mr. Diego GarcIa-Sayán and Mr. Manfred Nowak, who strongly objected to the fact that the
          report had been limited to 32 pages as requested by the General Assembly.
        
          
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          Introduction
          1. The present report of the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances is
          submitted pursuant to Commission on Human Rights resolution 1999/3 8, entitled “Question of
          enforced disappearances”.
          2. In addition to its original mandate, which is to act as a channel of communication
          between the families of disappeared persons and the Governments concerned, with a view to
          ensuring that sufficiently documented and clearly identified individual cases are investigated and
          the whereabouts of the disappeared persons clarified, the Working Group has been entrusted by
          the Commission with various other tasks. In particular, the Working Group is to monitor States'
          compliance with their obligations deriving from the Declaration on the Protection of All Persons
          from Enforced Disappearance (hereafter referred to as the Declaration).
          3. The number of countries with outstanding cases of alleged disappearance was 69 in 1999.
          During the period under review, the Working Group received 300 new cases of disappearance
          in 23 countries, 115 of which allegedly occurred in 1999. The total number of cases transmitted
          by the Working Group to Governments since the Group's inception stands at 49,070. The total
          number of cases being kept under active consideration, as they have not yet been clarified, now
          stands at 46,054.
          4. As in previous years, the Working Group has continued to apply the urgent action
          procedure in cases that allegedly occurred within the three months preceding the receipt of a
          complaint. This year the Working Group sent urgent action appeals in respect of 125 cases to
          the Governments of 19 countries (see para. 14).
          5. The Working Group regrets that out of the 69 countries with unclarified cases, the
          Governments of 34 countries have not communicated at all with the Group during the period
          under review.
          6. As in the past, the present report reflects only communications or cases examined before
          the last day of the third annual session of the Working Group, which was 3 December 1999.
          Urgent action cases which may have to be dealt with between that date and the end of the year,
          as well as communications received from Governments and processed after 3 December 1999,
          will be reflected in the Working Group's next report.
          7. Owing to serious limitations in its resources and inadequate staff, together with the
          requested reduction of pages of this report, the Working Group has not been able to include in
          the present report some very important sections, such as the implementation of the Declaration
          on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, including general comments on
          its provisions, as well as observations on the draft international convention on the prevention and
          punishment of enforced disappearances. Also, it has not been possible to include observations in
          the country chapters.
          8. The Working Group has faced very serious shortages in the staff servicing its mandates,
          rendering it almost impossible for the Group to complete all aspects of its mandates in an
          adequate manner. Therefore, the Working Group expresses serious concern about its ability in
        
          
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          the future, with the present limited financial and human resources, to carry out the various
          mandates assigned to it by the Commission on Human Rights. Here, the Working Group
          expresses its deep appreciation of the work of the staff which was carried out in spite of the
          difficulties referred to above.
          I. ACTIVITIES OF THE WORKING GROUP IN 1999
          A. Meetings and missions
          9. The Working Group held three sessions in 1999. The fifty-seventh session was held in
          New York from 10 to 14 May, and the fifty-eighth and fifty-ninth sessions were held in Geneva
          from 30 August to 3 September and from 24 November to 3 December, respectively. During
          these sessions, the Working Group met with official representatives of the Governments of
          Angola, Argentina, Guatemala, Kuwait, Mexico and Nepal.
          10. In addition, the Working Group met with representatives of human rights organizations,
          associations of relatives of missing persons and families or witnesses directly concerned with
          reports of enforced disappearances.
          11. By letter dated 19 November 1997, the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran
          invited the Working Group to visit that country. The Working Group accepted the invitation and
          a mutually convenient date is being sought.
          12. As reported last year, to date the Working Group has received no reply from the
          Government of Iraq to its letter dated 21 July 1995 requesting a visit.
          13. The Working Group represented by one of its members, Mr. Manfred Nowak, undertook
          a mission to Sri Lanka from 25 to 29 October 1999. His report, as adopted by the Working
          Group, is contained in addendum 1 to the present report.
          B. Communications
          14. During the period under review, the Working Group transmitted 300 new cases of
          enforced or involuntary disappearance to the Governments of Algeria (146), Belarus, Brazil,
          China, Colombia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Honduras, India, Indonesia,
          Iran (Islamic Republic of), Jordan, the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, Mexico, Morocco, Nepal,
          Pakistan, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, the Sudan, Tunisia, Turkey and Uzbekistan. Of these, 125
          were sent under the urgent action procedure.
          15. Of the newly reported cases, 115 allegedly occurred in 1999 and relate to Algeria,
          Belarus, Brazil, China, Colombia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Honduras,
          Indonesia (50), Iran (Islamic Republic of), Jordan, Mexico, Nepal, the Philippines, Sri Lanka,
          the Sudan, Turkey and Uzbekistan.
          16. During the same period, the Working Group clarified 70 cases concerning Brazil, China,
          Colombia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Guatemala, Honduras, India, Indonesia,
          Lebanon, Mexico, Nepal, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, South Africa, Tunisia and Turkey.
        
          
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          17. As in previous years, the Working Group received reports and expressions of concern
          from non-governmental organizations, associations of relatives of disappeared persons, and from
          individuals about the safety of persons actively engaged in the search for missing persons, in
          reporting cases of disappearance or in the investigation of cases. In some countries, the mere
          fact of reporting a disappearance entailed a serious risk to the life or security of the person
          making the report or to his or her family members. In addition, individuals, relatives of missing
          persons and members of human rights organizations were frequently harassed and threatened
          with death for reporting cases of human rights violations or investigating such cases.
          18. Taking into account the ever-increasing number of United Nations field operations with
          human rights components and field offices of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, the
          Working Group has continued this year to address itself to these offices in an effort to take
          advantage of their unique position on the ground in order to improve its information flow with
          regard to disappearances.
          C. Methods of work
          19. During its fifty-eighth session, at the request of several non-governmental organizations,
          the Working Group met with their representatives to discuss and possibly review its methods of
          work. A number of representatives underlined the importance of the work carried out by the
          Working Group in seeking the whereabouts of disappeared persons and, in particular, the
          effectiveness of its urgent action procedure. However, they expressed concern about the
          decision taken by the Working Group in 1997 to discontinue consideration of cases where it
          considers that it can no longer play any useful role in trying to elucidate them, in particular if the
          source is no longer in existence, or in cases in which the families no longer have an interest in
          pursuing the matter. In this connection, a number of representatives pointed out that in many
          cases, the reasons why a source or family members might not respond to a query from the
          Working Group, or might not wish to pursue an investigation, might not be voluntary and that
          threats and intimidation might be involved. In such cases, they were of the view that the
          Working Group, before considering a case clarified, should make every effort to investigate the
          reasons behind the action or non-action of the source or the family concerned.
          20. With regard to compensation in cases where a person reported to have disappeared is
          found to have been killed, many representatives were of the view that it was part of the
          humanitarian mandate of the Working Group not only to ensure that the family was informed
          and compensated, but also to reveal the place of burial to the family.
          21. Many representatives of non-governmental organizations, including the Asian Federation
          against Involuntary Disappearances, Amnesty International, the Latin American Federation of
          Associations of Relatives of Disappeared Detainees, and the International. Federation of Human
          Rights Leagues, asked for better communication between the source and the Working Group on
          action taken by the Group in individual cases, especially under the urgent action procedure.
          22. At its fifty-ninth session, the Working Group decided to review its methods of work at its
          sixtieth session to be held in April 2000, taking into account the concerns expressed by the
          non-governmental organizations.
        
          
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          23. In accordance with the directive received by the Working Group to reduce the length of
          the annual report, the following new format has been adopted for the present report:
          Category A : countries in which there were new cases of disappearance or clarifications.
          Category B : countries on which the Working Group received comments from
          Governments and non-governmental organizations.
          Category C : countries from which the Working Group received no information or
          comments.
          II. COUNTRIES Th1 WHICH THERE WERE NEW CASES OF
          DISAPPEARANCES OR CLARIFICATIONS
          Algeria
          24. The Working Group transmitted 146 newly reported cases, one of which occurred
          in 1999. During the same period, the Working Group did not clarify any case.
          25. The Working Group received information from non-governmental organizations
          concerning non-compliance by the Government of Algeria with provisions of the Declaration on
          the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance.
          26. The Government of Algeria also provided information on 214 cases. There were two
          kinds of response: the missing persons had been neither questioned nor arrested; investigations
          to locate the missing persons were continuing. The Government reiterated its willingness to
          cooperate with the Working Group and the other extra-conventional mechanisms of the
          Commission on Human Rights. The Government advised the Working Group that offices had
          been established throughout the country since August 1998 to receive complaints from families,
          gather information on cases of enforced disappearances and respond when the investigations
          were completed. The National Human Rights Monitoring Unit and the Ombudsman could be
          approached directly by the families. They could also contact the judicial authorities.
          Belarus
          27. One case was transmitted to the Government under the urgent action procedure. It
          concerns a former Minister for Internal Affairs who was very active in the presidential campaign
          of an opposition leader. No information was received from the Government concerning this
          case.
        
          
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          Brazil
          28. Four new cases were transmitted to the Government. Three of them concerned three
          persons who were reportedly arrested when they were leaving a carnival party. The cases were
          subsequently clarified on the basis of information provided by the source and transmitted to the
          Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions. According to the
          information received, these persons were shot in the head at point-blank range with a
          high-calibre pistol similar to those used by the military police.
          Cambodia
          29. During the period under review, information was received from non-governmental
          organizations concerning non-compliance by the Government of Cambodia with provisions of
          the Declaration. Scores of people, possibly as many as 200, were arrested in this context. It was
          said that the authorities acknowledged only 22 arrests and claimed that 19 of those persons had
          been released. It was said that at least 20 people, and possibly more, were killed in the
          two weeks following the crackdown on opposition protests. It was feared that the
          unacknowledged prisoners may be among the dead. Cambodian authorities have reportedly
          denied that any of those killed were peaceful demonstrators.
          China
          30. Seven new cases were transmitted by the Working Group to the Government. One was
          sent under the urgent action procedure. Four cases concerned persons who were detained
          on 2 November 1998 in Huangzhou, Zhejian Province, by the security forces. They were
          reportedly detained because of their apparent involvement with Mr. Wang Youcal, a political
          dissident. The whereabouts of two other persons are unknown since 4 May 1998, when prison
          and police officers opened fire on prisoners staging a demonstration in Drapchi Prison.
          31. The Government submitted information on 15 outstanding cases. The Working Group
          clarified nine cases on the basis of information previously received from the Government to
          which no objection was received from the source. The missing persons were found in prisons or
          in a re-education camp. In one case, the missing person had plotted to create an illegal
          organization, mounting illegal activities in Beijing, Shanghai and elsewhere and was assigned to
          three years' re-education.
          Colombia
          32. The Working Group transmitted 27 newly reported cases to the Government. During the
          same period, the Group clarified nine cases, five of them on the basis of information provided by
          the Government on which the sources did not make any observations during the six-month
          period. In one case, the missing person was found living at liberty. In two other cases, the
          corpses of these persons were found. Two other persons were handed over to a commission of
          the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Doradal, Department of Antioquia.
          Four other cases were clarified on the basis of the information provided by the source in the
          sense that these persons, members of a human rights organization, were released by their captors.
        
          
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          33. The newly reported cases transmitted in 1999 occurred mainly in the communities of
          El Arenal, Villa Hermosa and Caño Seco, Department of Choco, Urabá region; on the river Sinu,
          Department of Córdoba, and in Barrancabermeja, Department of Santander. Most of the
          abductions and detentions leading to disappearances were carried out by members of
          paramilitary groups whose actions were believed to have been undertaken in complicity with, or
          to be supervised by members of the security forces, very often in areas of heavy military
          presence. In one case, the police was allegedly responsible for the disappearance.
          34. During the period under review, the Government made reference to 72 outstanding cases.
          Most of the communications contained details of legal proceedings carried out by various
          authorities dealing with the cases or requests for additional information. The Government of
          Colombia also reported that it had submitted to Congress a bill which defined the crime of
          enforced disappearance and established severe penalties.
          35. The Working Group was informed that enforced or involuntary disappearances continued
          to occur and were the work mainly of paramilitary groups apparently operating in various parts
          of the country with the acquiescence of the security forces. It is alleged that the situation obtains
          in spite of the fact that in 1989 the Government of Colombia suspended the legal basis for the
          establishment of those groups and issued specific instructions to the armed forces to break them
          up. The Working Group was informed that in February 1999, the Public Prosecutor's Office
          complained that the security forces had served only 200 detention orders on members of
          paramilitary organizations. Special mention was made of the disappearance of eight people in
          May 1998 during the attack on Puerto Alvira, Marpiripán municipality, Department of Meta, by
          the paramilitary organization United Self-Defence Group of Colombia. It was reported that
          although the authorities had received several warnings that an attack on Puerto Alvira was
          imminent, they took no action to prevent it or to protect the inhabitants of the port.
          36. The Working Group has received reports of other cases in which the security forces did
          not protect the civilian population or repel attacks against it by paramilitary groups. One such
          case involved internally displaced persons (from the southern department of BolIvar, in the
          Magdalena Medio region), who decided to return home after receiving government guarantees
          that they would be protected in the event of an attack by paramilitary groups. However, they
          were apparently again attacked in October 1998 and the special armed forces unit deployed to
          guarantee their security did not provide them with effective protection.
          37. It was also reported that the cases of 25 people who had disappeared in Barrancabermeja
          in May 1998 after an attack by a paramilitary group remained unsolved. Apparently, evidence of
          complicity in the attack by members of the security forces is beginning to emerge.
          38. The Working Group learned that in October 1998, Congress gave preliminary approval to
          a bill that would incorporate the crimes of enforced disappearance, massacre and genocide in the
          Penal Code. In June 1999, the Working Group received information that the bill incorporating
          the crime of enforced disappearance in Colombian domestic legislation would be the subject of a
          third debate.
          39. Lastly, reference was also made to acts of intimidation, harassment and reprisal against
          members of non-governmental human rights organizations. The Working Group was informed
        
          
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          of the murders of Eduardo Umaña Mendoza and Jaime Garzón and of the death threats made by
          paramilitary groups against members of the Trujillo Association of Relatives of Victims and the
          Intercongregational Commission for Justice and Peace, which were obliged to shut down their
          offices in Trujillo on 19 February 1999. It was alleged that the Government provided no
          guarantees of protection to those non-governmental organizations and took no special measures
          to protect the lives of their members.
          Democratic Republic of the Congo
          40. Five new cases of disappearance were transmitted by the Working Group to the
          Government. All occurred in 1999 and were sent under the urgent action procedure. Two cases
          were subsequently clarified given that the source advised the Working Group that these persons,
          members of a human rights non-governmental organization, had been released.
          41. The Working Group received allegations about the arrest and abduction of citizens for
          varying periods of time without charge or notification to their families. It was said that some
          persons had disappeared after being arrested by the Forces armées congolaises on suspicion of
          links with the Rassemblement congolais pour la démocratie. Many victims were said to be from
          the Gombe, Binza, Ma Compagne, Ozone and Pigeon districts of Kinshasa. The governmental
          forces were also accused of being responsible for a series of abductions in the eastern region of
          the country, many of the victims said to be Hutu civilians.
          Ethiopia
          42. The Working Group transmitted a newly reported case of disappearance to the
          Government, which allegedly occurred in 1999 and was sent under the urgent action procedure.
          The case concerns an Eritrean citizen who was detained in the context of a denounced policy of
          forced repatriation to Eritrea.
          Guatemala
          43. The Government provided information on 16 individual cases. Eight cases were
          subsequently clarified by the Working Group. In six cases the missing persons were found
          living at liberty and held interviews with government officers. The deaths of the two other
          missing persons were verified through the corresponding death certificates and the Citizen's
          Registry in the Supreme Electoral Court.
          44. The Working Group received allegations that the phenomenon of impunity continued to
          be considered the biggest obstacle to the enjoyment of human rights in Guatemala. It was
          indicated that little progress had been made in bringing to trial those responsible for enforced or
          involuntary disappearances committed in the past. Most cases had not been solved. Reference
          was made to the inefficiency of the investigations carried out by the Public Prosecutor's Office
          and to the defective functioning of the judicial system and the security forces.
          45. With regard to article 19 of the Declaration, the Working Group was informed that no
          measures had been adopted providing redress or compensation for the families of the victims of
          enforced or involuntary disappearances.
        
          
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          46. Special concern was expressed about the fact that the causes and the circumstances of
          and responsibility for the murder in April 1998 of Monseñor Juan José Gerardi, the Coordinator
          of the Guatemalan Archdiocesan Human Rights Office, had not been established. It was
          indicated that Monseñor Gerardi had been beaten to death two days after presiding over the
          public presentation of the report entitled “Recovery of Historical Memory”. The report collates
          and summarizes testimony collected throughout the country over a three-year period on cases of
          enforced or involuntary disappearance and of extrajudicial execution. The Working Group was
          also informed of the murder in May 1998 of Public Prosecutor Silvia Jeréz Romero de Herrera,
          who was investigating the disappearance of guerrilla leader EfraIn Bámaca. It was mentioned
          that members of the security forces, or persons acting with their consent or acquiescence, might
          have been responsible.
          47. The Working Group continued to receive reports of acts of harassment and intimidation
          and threats against members of non-governmental human rights organizations working to
          ascertain the fate or whereabouts of the thousands of victims of enforced disappearances. It
          learned that members of the Association of Relatives of Detained/Disappeared Persons in
          Guatemala (FAMDEGUA) had received death threats in July 1999 and been subjected to
          surveillance and various acts of hostility. It was also informed that on 14 February 1999
          members of the Guatemalan Team of Forensic Anthropology were attacked and threatened by
          army soldiers while excavating unmarked graves in Huehuetenango. The team's work was part
          of the process of exhumation of the bodies of victims of enforced disappearance carried out by
          FAMIDEGUA and other Guatemalan human rights organizations with a view to handing the
          mortal remains discovered over to the families for proper burial. There are said to be about 500
          unmarked burial grounds in Guatemala.
          48. It was alleged that there had been no follow-up to the work of the Commission for
          Historical Clarification in Guatemala and that the Commission's recommendations had not been
          implemented. It was said that the work had cost Guatemala and the international community
          effort, money and time and that there was no point in the recommendations being simply
          shelved. It was said that there had been no official reaction to some of the Commission's main
          recommendations, among them the establishment of a special body to trace disappeared persons
          and to ascertain the fate of all the victims of enforced disappearance during the armed conflict,
          many of them children.
          49. It was also alleged that the Peace Agreement's provisions on measures to preserve the
          memory of the victims, on full redress and on compensatory measures had not been met.
          Honduras
          50. The Working Group transmitted a newly reported case of disappearance to the
          Government. It was subsequently clarified on the basis of the information provided by the
          source that the missing person had been found alive. The Working Group transmitted also a
          prompt intervention cable in favour of members of the Committee of Relatives of Detainees and
          Disappeared Persons who had reportedly been subjected to acts of harassment and intimidation.
        
          
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          India
          51. The Working Group transmitted six newly reported cases to the Government, four of
          which occurred in 1998, one in 1996 and one in 1997. Four persons allegedly disappeared after
          having been arrested in Srinagar and one in Kashmir. During the same period, the Working
          Group clarified five cases on the basis of information previously received from the Government,
          on which no objection was received from the source. In three cases, the persons concerned were
          found living at liberty.
          52. During the period under review, information concerning developments in India having an
          influence on the phenomenon of disappearance and the implementation of the Declaration on the
          Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance was received from non-governmental
          organizations. Allegations were also received of reports that police throughout the country do
          not often file required arrest reports. It was said that when family members seek information on
          detained relatives, all knowledge of the missing person is denied, in breach of article 10 of the
          Declaration relating to the provision of accurate information to the family members of a person
          deprived of liberty.
          53. Particular concern was expressed with regard to the Terrorist and Disruptive Activities
          Act (TADA) which continues to be applied despite the announcement by the Government in
          May 1995 that its validity would not be extended. Impunity is said to prevail in Manipur. The
          Assam and Manipur Special Powers Act of 1958 reportedly confers on the armed forces broadly
          defined virtual immunity from prosecution.
          54. It was said that the Protection of Human Rights Act of 1993 prevents the Indian National
          Human Rights Commission (NHRC) from inquiring into incidents older than one year. It has no
          power to investigate directly violations of human rights, no jurisdiction over violations
          committed by the armed and the security forces, no power to prosecute violators and no power to
          compensate victims. Allegations were also received according to which more than 2,000 persons
          are being held in long-term unacknowledged detention in interrogation centres and transit camps
          in the north-east of the country and in Jammu and Kashmir.
          55. The Government of India pointed out that the allegations referred to above do not reflect
          the actual situation prevailing in India and contain sweeping generalizations which have no
          foundation in fact. As a democracy, India has an extensive range of institutions which ensure the
          protection of human rights. TADA had been allowed to lapse as a conscious decision on the part
          of the Government after significant public debate in the country. Since then, to the
          Government's knowledge, no one has been charged with offences under this Act. Only 1,022
          persons continue to be detained under the Act at present. NHRC has powers under article 12 of
          the Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993 to inquire suo moto as well as on the basis of petitions
          submitted by victims. It can also utilize the services of any officer of the Central or state
          Governments as required for investigations. While it is true that article 19 of the Act provides
          for a separate procedure with regard to complaints of violation by members of the armed forces,
          this is merely an alternative procedure and does not provide any immunity. It is also incorrect to
          allege that laws such as the Armed Forces Special Powers Act provide security forces with
          immunity from prosecution. No law passed by the legislature can violate human rights
          guaranteed by the Constitution of India.
        
          
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          56. Regarding the situation in the State of Manipur, since the late 1970s, the Government
          reports that there has been cross-border terrorism carried out by militant elements and insurgents.
          These militants have been responsible for random killings, extortion, looting, abductions, etc.
          The Government has an obligation to uphold democracy, the rule of law and the human rights of
          its citizens and it is convinced that measures to combat terrorism must be carried out but only in
          accordance with human rights and national law standards. Violators of human rights at all levels
          are identified and punished in India.
          Indonesia
          57. The Working Group transmitted 50 newly reported cases of disappearance, all of which
          occurred in 1999 and mostly in East Timor and in Aceh. The cases were sent under the urgent
          action procedure. During the same period, the Working Group clarified a case on the basis of
          information previously received from the Government on which no objection was received from
          the source. The response pointed out that this person had been found imprisoned at the Bacau
          police station awaiting trial on charges of rebellion. Another case was clarified on the basis of
          the information provided by the source according to which the missing person had been released
          after being held in incommunicado military detention. The Government of Indonesia also
          submitted information on 27 other cases.
          Iran (Islamic Republic of )
          58. The Working Group transmitted four newly reported cases to the Government. Three
          cases were transmitted under the urgent action procedure.
          59. The Working Group received allegations that relatives are not informed of the detention
          of their family members, in breach of article 10 of the Declaration. That was reportedly the case
          of several students detained during the demonstrations that took place in Tehran on 8 July 1999.
          It was alleged that in the following days, students, journalists and academics were taken from
          their homes without any arrest warrant and without any explanation or notice to their relatives. It
          was said that these actions placed the detainees outside the protection of the law. It was also
          reported that other detentions without a legal warrant took place in Mashhad and Rasht. Some of
          the detained persons were reportedly linked to the People's Moj ahedin Organization of Iran.
          Ir q
          60. The Working Group transmitted to the Government of Iraq one new case. It was
          transmitted by the urgent action procedure. It concerns an Iraqi national who was allegedly
          abducted in Amman by the Iraqi Intelligence Services. He had reportedly travelled to Jordan to
          escape persecution in Iraq. In conformity with its methods of work, the case was also
          transmitted by the Working Group to the Government of Jordan. No response has been received
          so far from the Government of Iraq concerning this case.
        
          
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          Jordan
          61. The Working Group transmitted to the Government the same case transmitted to the
          Government of Iraq (see para. 60 above). No response had been received so far from the
          Government of Jordan.
          Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
          62. One new case of disappearance was transmitted by the Working Group to the
          Government. It concerns a Lebanese citizen who was abducted in Tripoli on 31 August 1978
          while he was accompanying a famous Shiite Muslim scholar visiting Libya.
          Mexico
          63. The Working Group transmitted six newly reported cases of disappearance to the
          Government, one of which occurred in 1999. All the cases were sent under the urgent action
          procedure. During the same period, the Working Group clarified 16 cases on the basis of
          information previously provided by the Government on which the sources had not made
          observations within the six-month period. The Working Group also decided to discontinue
          consideration of one case, since the brother of the missing person reiterated, on behalf of his
          relatives, his desire not to pursue the issue any further.
          64. The newly reported cases occurred in Mexico, Federal District; in Villahermosa, State of
          Tabasco; in El Calvario community, Sabanilla municipality, State of Chiapas; and in the
          communities of Coyuca de BenItez and El Achotal, municipality of Atoyac de Alvarez, State of
          Guerrero. Members of the security forces were mentioned as responsible in one case; soldiers of
          the Mexican Army in three cases, and members of paramilitary groups, acting with the
          acquiescence of members of the security forces, in two cases. Specifically mentioned were the
          60th Battalion of the army and the paramilitary group Paz y Justicia (Peace and Justice). Victims
          were peasants, the president of a coalition of municipal councils; a member of the Partido de la
          Revolución Democrática (Democratic Revolution Party) and two members of the Peasant
          Organization of the Sierra del Sur (OCSS).
          65. Representatives of the Mexican National Commission on Human Rights met with the
          Working Group at its fifty-seventh and fifty-eighth sessions and reiterated their desire to
          continue cooperating with the Group. They reported that between April and July 1999, a total of
          46 working missions had been carried out by the National Commission to 20 states of the
          Federation. Two investigators had taken part in each visit, which generally lasted for a period of
          approximately five days.
          66. The Working Group clarified 16 cases on which the sources had not made observations
          within the six-month period. In four cases, it was reported that the persons concerned had been
          found living at liberty; in one case, the person concerned had been found in detention at the
          Social Readaptation Centre of Chilpancingo; in four cases, the mortal remains of the missing
          persons had been found.
        
          
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          67. Concern was expressed by several non-governmental organizations that the draft
          legislation on enforced disappearances drawn up by the Mexican National Human Rights
          Commission in May 1998 had still not been discussed by the Congress.
          68. Special reference was made to the fact that the efforts of the National Human Rights
          Commission to ascertain the fate and whereabouts of hundreds of people who had disappeared
          during the 1970s and early 1980s had been fruitless in most cases. It was further pointed out that
          a fresh wave of disappearances had occurred between 1994 and 1997.
          69. The Working Group was informed that a number of people who had temporarily
          disappeared in previous years and subsequently been located said that they had been subjected to
          torture and ill-treatment for long periods by their captors, who wanted them to confess or provide
          information. It was pointed out that the recent cases of enforced or involuntary disappearance
          had occurred in the context of government-run law and order, counter-insurgency or anti-drug
          trafficking operations.
          70. Other allegations received refer to the existence in Mexico of a widespread culture of
          impunity, exacerbated by recourse to the system of military justice to investigate and prosecute
          members of the armed forces involved in human rights violations, by the alleged lack of
          independence of and the corruption in the ordinary judicial system and by acts of hostility,
          intimidation and reprisal committed by state and federal authorities against members of
          non-governmental organizations and opposition political parties.
          71. It was also stated that the families of victims of enforced disappearances cannot obtain
          amparo from the judiciary, the judges allegedly not only refusing to investigate charges or
          prosecute those supposedly responsible, but refusing even to start the corresponding judicial
          investigations.
          Morocco
          72. The Working Group transmitted two cases to the Government, one of which reportedly
          occurred in 1997.
          73. The Government of Morocco provided the Working Group with information on four
          cases, stating that the persons concerned had died. The Moroccan Conseil consultatif des droits
          de l'homme had clarified those cases. The Government promised to send the Working Group
          the corresponding death certificates.
          74. The Working Group received allegations that the Government had taken no further steps
          to investigate the disappearances of more than 200 Moroccans and Saharawis who disappeared
          between 1984 and 1991, in breach of article 9 of the Declaration. It was said that the relatives of
          those disappeared had not received any kind of compensation, in violation of article 19 of the
          Declaration. It was further reported that a royal amnesty continued to protect those responsible
          for enforced or involuntary disappearances from legal prosecution. The failure on the part of the
          authorities to carry out serious investigations and to institute legal proceedings was also
          denounced.
        
          
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          Nepal
          75. The Working Group transmitted six newly reported cases, five of which occurred
          in 1999, to the Government. All the cases were sent under the urgent action procedure. The
          victims were the Chairman of the Gorkha District Bar Association, a member of the Forum for
          the Protection of Human Rights, a member of the Nepal Bar Association, and three persons who
          were reportedly re-arrested on the premises of the Parsa District Court immediately after the
          Court ordered their release. In all the cases the police was mentioned as the responsible force.
          The Working Group clarified two cases on the basis of the information provided by the
          Government referring that these two persons had been released on bail on 15 February 1999.
          76. Non-governmental organizations informed the Working Group that police operations
          initiated on 26 May 1998 had led to an alarming deterioration in the country's human rights
          situation and to cases of enforced or involuntary disappearances. The operations were allegedly
          against members of the so-called Maoist Communist Party of Nepal, which had reportedly
          declared a “people's war” in February 1996.
          77. A representative of the Government of Nepal met with the Working Group at its
          fifty-ninth session. He stated that strict instructions had been issued to police personnel not to
          take any action with a bias against anybody in the course of controlling terrorist activities.
          Police personnel had not resorted to acts of enforced disappearance or torture. None of the
          disappeared persons considered by the Working Group seems to have been arrested by the
          police. He added that people involved in terrorist activities have opted to go underground
          fearing the initiation of legal actions against them. The legal struggle against terrorism cannot
          create situations wherein citizens could be deprived of the enjoyment of their constitutional
          rights.
          78. The Government of Nepal provided information on five outstanding cases announcing
          that the authorities are making every possible effort in the search of the disappeared persons.
          Pakistan*
          79. The Working Group transmitted to the Government three newly reported cases of
          disappearance, which occurred in December 1998 and were sent under the urgent action
          procedure. They concern three members of the Muhajir Quami Movement in Karachi who were
          arrested by law enforcement officers and taken to unknown destination.
          80. With regard to these cases, the Government informed the Working Group that the
          authorities are investigating the facts of the matter and that if the allegations prove to be well
          founded, those responsible will be brought to justice.
          * Mr. Agha Hilaly did not participate in the decisions relating to this subsection of the report.
        
          
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          81. The Working Group received allegations that, in breach of article 10 of the Declaration,
          disappeared persons continued to be unaccounted for because of the lack of investigation into
          the cases by the authorities. It was also alleged that authorities are usually unable to bring
          perpetrators of enforced disappearances to justice, as provided for in article 14 of the
          Declaration.
          Philippines
          82. The Working Group transmitted three newly reported cases; one occurred in 1999.
          During the same period, the Working Group clarified two cases on the basis of information
          provided by the source and one on the basis of information provided by the Government on
          which no observations were received from the source within a period of six months.
          83. The three newly reported cases transmitted in 1999 concern two persons who were
          detained by army officers in Nasugbu, Batangas, on suspicion of being members of the so-called
          Communist New Peoples Army. They were interrogated and reportedly handed over to the
          Mobile Force Company of the Philippine National Police (PNP) base in Palico. However, the
          PNP denied any knowledge of the arrest. The other victim is a trade union organizer for the
          Citizen's Campaign against Criminalization of Political Detainees who was reportedly detained
          by members of the army in Bagong barrio, Caloocan City, Metro Manila.
          Sri Lanka
          84. The Working Group transmitted seven newly reported cases, two of which occurred
          in 1999. All the cases were sent under the urgent action procedure. During the same period, the
          Working Group clarified the two cases that reportedly occurred in 1999 on the basis of
          information submitted by the source according to which the persons concerned were released
          after 39 days of unacknowledged detention in the People's Liberation Organization of
          Tamil Eelam (PLOTE) camp at Kovilkulam Junction.
          85. Five of the newly reported cases concerned displaced persons residing at the
          Veppankulam camp in Vavuniya district who were abducted by members of an armed Tamil
          group opposed to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, allegedly acting with the acquiescence
          of the security forces. Local investigations have so far given no indication as to their
          whereabouts.
          86. At the invitation of the Government of Sri Lanka, a member of the Working Group,
          Mr. Manfred Nowak, and the Working Group's Acting Secretary visited Sri Lanka from 25
          to 29 October 1999. The report on the visit is contained in addendum ito the present report.
          Sudan
          87. The Working Group transmitted three newly reported cases. The cases occurred in 1999
          and were sent under the urgent action procedure.
          88. The Government provided information on two cases, stating that one of the persons
          concerned was currently leading a normal life as a bishop and that the other missing person had
        
          
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          been released from prison in April 1997. The Working Group was unable to clarify the first of
          the cases in view of the discrepancy in the occupation of the person referred to by the source and
          the Government and to the fact that the Government had provided three different dates of his
          release. With regard to the second case, no information was provided on the current
          whereabouts of the missing person.
          Tunisia
          89. The Working Group transmitted one new case under the urgent action procedure. It
          concerns a woman who allegedly disappeared in December 1998 following her release from her
          place of detention in Mannouba prison in Tunis. The case was subsequently clarified on the
          basis of the information provided by the Government that this person was still serving her
          sentence in the same prison. The source did not reply to the Government's information within
          the six-months period.
          Turkey
          90. The Working Group transmitted eight newly reported cases, which reportedly occurred
          in 1997, 1998 and 1999. Two cases which occurred in 1999 were sent under the urgent action
          procedure. Two cases concern persons who were detained at Habur while intending to cross the
          border to Iraq. Another case concerns a person who allegedly disappeared after having been
          arrested because of irregularities in his passport at Ipsala Border Control Post. Three cases
          occurred in the city of Diyarbakir, one in GUngoren district in Istanbul and one in Izmit. One
          case concerns a prisoner who, according to the prison guards, ran away when he was taken to the
          hospital for a medical operation.
          91. The Government submitted information on 10 outstanding cases. One case was
          subsequently clarified by the Working Group on the basis of that information, given that the
          source made no observations within the six-month period. According to the information
          provided by the Government, the missing person was kept at Amasya prison. Another four cases
          were clarified given that the sources did not formulate observations to the responses from the
          Government during the six-month period.
          92. With regard to three other cases, the Government reported that the investigations
          carried out by the Office of the Chief Prosecutor of Izmir had determined that there was no
          evidence that these persons had been detained by the police. With reference to another case,
          the missing person had asylum status in Greece since 1984 and probably had illegally
          entered and left Turkish territory on false travel documents. With regard to another case the
          missing person is on the wanted list of the police for several offences and has been a fugitive
          since 28 February 1994.
          Uzbeki stan
          93. The Working Group transmitted seven new cases, one of them under the urgent action
          procedure. The cases occurred in February and March of 1999 following a series of bombing in
          Tashkent. According to information received these persons were arrested at night by masked
          members of the security forces because of their ties to the banned political opposition parties
        
          
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          Birlik (Unity) and Erk. The missing persons are an acclaimed novelist; the brother of a leader of
          Erk; the editor of the Erk party newspaper; the deputy chair of the party; a private trader and a
          former mathematics professor. Another case occurred in July 1999 in Tashkent and concerns a
          member of the unregistered Independent Human Rights Organization of Uzbekistan (NOPCHU)
          and the Birlik opposition movement.
          94. The Working Group was informed that relatives of people arrested are more reluctant
          than in the past to speak with human rights activists for fear of further repression.
          95. The Government of Uzbekistan provided information on nine cases. The information
          was not considered sufficient for the Working Group to clarify them. It also stated that since
          independence, Uzbekistan had achieved impressive results in the field of human rights. The
          Institute of the Ombudsman in the Parliament of Uzbekistan, the National Centre for Human
          Rights and other human rights institutions were established during this time.
          III. COUNTRIES FROM WHICH THE WORKING GROUP
          RECEIVED COMMENTS FROM GOVERNMENTS OR
          NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
          Angola
          96. Representatives of the Government met with the Working Group at its fifty-eighth
          session and reported that their country had been at war for 30 years and continued at war.
          Concerning the four outstanding cases, they stated that a long time had elapsed since the
          disappearances and that thousands of citizens had disappeared during the war.
          Argentina
          97. During the period under review, no new cases of disappearance were transmitted by the
          Working Group to the Government of Argentina.
          98. The vast majority of the 3,453 reported cases of disappearance in Argentina occurred
          between 1975 and 1978 under the military dictatorship, in the context of its so-called war against
          subversion.
          99. As in the past, a number of non-governmental organizations have continued to address
          themselves to the Working Group with regard to their ongoing quest to have the fate of the
          persons who disappeared in Argentina brought to light. The Working Group received reports of
          a campaign of harassment, intimidation and threats against members of non-governmental
          organizations. The campaign was said to be related to the start of various legal proceedings in
          Europe against former members of the Argentine armed forces. In this context, the Working
          Group was informed that Esteban Cuya, a Peruvian citizen and member of the German Coalition
          against Impunity, was attacked on 17 November 1998 in Buenos Aires. The attackers apparently
          robbed him of various documents belonging to German citizens in Argentina.
          100. The Working Group also learned that the Government refused to cooperate with the
          judicial authorities of Germany, Spain and Italy in the proceedings referred to above for reasons
        
          
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          of sovereignty, independence and exclusive jurisdiction. With regard to article 20, paragraph 3,
          of the Declaration, the Group was informed that those responsible for the abduction of children
          of disappeared persons and children born to mothers in captivity had been neither tried nor
          sentenced. The Working Group was further informed that no progress had been made in the trial
          for abduction of minors begun in 1996 in the Federal Administrative Court, where those
          involved had pleaded that the civilian courts did not have jurisdiction and had invoked the statute
          of limitations. It would also seem that no progress was made in the proceedings for illegal
          deprivation of liberty brought in 1998 against members of the armed forces who had previously
          been pardoned, which included cases of enforced disappearances of various women and children.
          101. It was finally alleged that the rights to truth and justice of the families of the disappeared
          persons and victims of human rights violations continue to be ignored.
          102. A representative of the Government of Argentina met with the Working Group at its
          fifty-ninth session and made reference to two notes verbales transmitted by the Government in
          response to the allegations of non-compliance with provisions of the Declaration made by
          non-governmental organizations. The Government reported that on 9 December 1998, in the
          context of the efforts to trace and return minor children of disappeared persons, the Congress of
          the Nation passed a law whereby the Historic Reparation Fund for Tracing and Returning
          Children Abducted and/or born in captivity was created within the legislature. It also reported
          that nine persons have been prosecuted for the crime of abduction of minors during the period of
          the former de facto Government (1976-1983). Those currently being prosecuted include
          Jorge Videla, first President of the de facto regime, Reynaldo B. Bignone, last de facto President,
          and Emilio Massera, first Chief of the Navy during the de facto Government. Mr. Videla, at
          present under house arrest, is linked to 10 cases of appropriation of minors and Mr. Massera is
          being prosecuted as the indirect perpetrator of all the thefts of children that took place in the
          infamous Navy Engineering School (the ESMA).
          103. Investigations into the case of Esteban Cuya Yuyale are continuing. The judicial
          authorities have ordered the production of an identikit picture and a check of the photographic
          archives of known criminals to enable Mr. Cuya Yuyale to identify his aggressors; this was
          carried out at the offices of the Federal Police and investigations are continuing.
          104. With regard to cases now pending before the German, Italian and Spanish courts in
          connection with the forced disappearance of nationals of those countries in Argentinean, the
          Working Group was reminded that those incidents took place in Argentina. Responding to
          requests from foreign courts on these cases would diminish the authority of the Argentina courts
          which have been and are taking the necessary action; it would also be against the universal
          principle of non bis in idem . Argentina, as a collective entity, has shaped a legislative and
          judicial solution that has restored peace within the country.
          105. Regarding the extraordinary appeal lodged by Carmen Aguiar de Lapacó in an attempt to
          ascertain what had happened to her daughter, Alejandra Lapacó, missing since 17 March 1977,
          there is no reason to conclude that the “right to truth”, a matter of substance, has been denied
          when only the procedural means chosen to secure it have been rejected. The Government sent a
          copy of the Amicable Settlement Agreement signed in Buenos Aires between the Government
          and Mrs. Aguiar de Lapacó on 15 November 1999. Lastly, the Government of Argentina
        
          
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          advised that on 19 December 1998 the National Congress passed a law awarding a monthly grant
          of US$ 25,000 to the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo Association to subsidize the costs of
          locating, identifying and returning abducted children and children born in captivity. The
          payments began in January 1999 and will continue for two years.
          Burundi
          106. During the period under review, information concerning developments in Burundi having
          influence on the phenomenon of disappearances and the implementation of the Declaration on
          the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance was received from
          non-governmental organizations. It was alleged that many cases of enforced disappearance
          continue to occur following arrests by soldiers resulting from ethnic and political rivalries. It
          was said that when family members seek information from the police on detained relatives, all
          knowledge of the missing person is denied in breach of article 10 of the Declaration relating to
          the provision of accurate information on the detention of persons deprived of liberty to their
          family members.
          C ameroon
          107. In response to a request by the Working Group, the Government provided the court
          judgement concerning a person who was reportedly charged with making false claims and with
          the use of a false birth certificate. The Government also provided information on the six
          outstanding cases.
          Egypt
          108. The Working Group retransmitted seven cases to the Government, updated with new
          information from the sources. The Government submitted information regarding one
          outstanding case.
          109. Non-governmental organizations pointed out that the Government of Egypt is failing to
          fulfil its obligations under article 13 of the Declaration to conduct thorough and impartial
          investigations into all cases of enforced disappearance for as long as the fate of the victim
          remains unclarified, particularly in the cases in which the victims were detained by members of
          the State Security Investigation.
          El Salvador
          110. The Working Group was informed of the successful efforts by a Salvadoran
          non-governmental organization, the Asociación Pro-Bñsqueda de Niños y Niñas Salvadoreños,
          which has been able to find 98 missing children and reunited them with their families, which are
          currently in 10 different countries.
        
          
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          111. The Working Group was also informed that the crime of the enforced disappearance of
          persons had been included in the Salvadoran Penal Code, in articles 364 to 366, under the
          chapter entitled “Crimes against humanity”. The amendment to the penal law had been carried
          out within the framework of the Agreement on Human Rights of San José and the Peace
          Agreement, signed in 1991 and 1992, respectively, between the Government of El Salvador and
          the Farabundo MartI National Liberation Front (FIVIILN).
          Eritrea
          112. The Government transmitted information on 21 outstanding cases and requested further
          information on 13 cases. According to the Government, most of the missing persons are of
          Ethiopian nationality and were arrested in front of the Ethiopian Embassy in Asmara on
          23 August 1998, when the Chargé d'affaires of Ethiopia requested the intervention of the
          Eritrean police because some Ethiopian demonstrators were trying to enter the embassy
          compound. They subsequently left Eritrea and the International Committee of the Red Cross
          registered them when they crossed the border.
          Kuwait
          113. The Working Group retransmitted to the Government one case, updated with new
          information from the source.
          114. The Government stated that the case occurred when the situation in Kuwait was not fully
          under the control of the legitimate authorities and reiterated its willingness to cooperate in the
          manner the Working Group deemed appropriate. The family requested the Working Group to
          continue its efforts to clarify the case. The Government later indicated that a committee
          composed of senior officials representing the Ministry of Justice, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
          the Ministry of the Interior and the Department of Public Prosecutions had been established with
          a view to resolving this case. This committee reportedly had held two meetings to examine all
          possible ways and means of bringing the case to a satisfactory conclusion and was continuing its
          investigations into the case. The Government further stated that this case had also received the
          attention of the National Assembly's Commission for the Defence of Human Rights. Finally, the
          Government expressed its wish to invite a member of the family of the missing person to visit
          Kuwait in order to resolve this outstanding case. The family advised the Working Group that on
          20 August 1999 it had received the invitation from the Government to pay a visit to the country.
          However, the invitation was not considered sufficient by the relatives nor was it a solution to the
          case.
          Malaysia
          115. The Government informed the Working Group that investigations were continuing
          regarding the outstanding case of disappearance, which concerns a permanent resident of
          Malaysia who is neither an asylum-seeker nor an illegal immigrant.
          116. The Government of Malaysia also informed the Working Group that the allegations
          transmitted to it by several non-governmental organizations during 1998 were not true. Malaysia
          does not distinguish between the country and the region of origin of migrants. The only
        
          
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          distinction made is between legal and illegal migrants. All aliens entering Malaysia should have
          valid travel documents. Malaysia has not used the Internal Security Act, 1960 to restrict the
          rights of assembly, free speech, open communications or personal freedoms. The Act, which
          includes provision for preventive detention, has only been invoked to prevent subversion and
          organized violence against persons and property in specified areas of the country.
          Peru*
          117. The Government of Peru provided the Working Group with replies on three individual
          cases. In one case, the court of Padre Abad had decided to put an end to the judicial
          investigation, given that the responsibility of members of the security forces could not be
          established. In the two other cases, a new examination of the register of detainees showed that
          the missing persons were never arrested or detained by the security forces. However,
          investigations were continuing into these three cases.
          118. The Working Group was informed that the Peruvian Congress had approved legislation
          in February 1998 incorporating the crime of enforced disappearance in the Penal Code.
          Enforced disappearance was included in the section on crimes against humanity and would be
          punishable by a sentence of 15 years in prison. Those accused of the crime would be tried in
          civilian courts.
          119. The Working Group was informed by several non-governmental organizations that
          thousands of cases of enforced or involuntary disappearances and other grave human rights
          violations perpetrated by the security forces between 1980 and 1995 continued to go unpunished.
          It was said that judicial investigations continued to be blocked by the 1995 Amnesty Act and its
          Articles of Interpretation, which granted members of the armed and security forces immunity
          from prosecution.
          120. The Working Group also received allegations that the government authorities continued
          to ignore judgements handed down by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and
          recommendations by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to pay financial
          compensation or grant other measures of redress to the victims of enforced disappearances or
          their families. In this regard, mention was made of the disappearance in 1991 of Ernesto Castillo
          Páez, whose family had still not received the corresponding indemnity. The Working Group also
          learned that in 1999 the Inter-American Court of Human Rights had taken up several cases
          concerning Peru and determined, in proceedings carried out with all judicial guarantees and
          respect for due process and attended by Peruvian judges and lawyers, that the human rights of a
          number of people had been violated in Peru.
          121. The Working Group was also informed that on 7 July 1999 Congress decided to approve
          the withdrawal of Peru from the jurisdiction of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights with
          immediate effect. That decision is alleged to constitute a grave backward step in the promotion
          and protection of human rights in Peru, leaving Peruvians without the possibility of turning to
          supranational bodies. It is particularly serious given the alleged lack of independence of the
          * Mr. Diego GarcIa-Sayán did not participate in the decisions relating to this subsection of the
          report.
        
          
          E/CN.4/2000/64
          page 27
          judiciary and the Public Prosecutor's Office and the existence ofjudicial proceedings that
          systematically disregard minimum international standards of due process. Peru had recognized
          the Inter-American Court's jurisdiction unconditionally in 1991, without reservations and for an
          indeterminate period, and by doing so had granted Peruvian citizens the benefit of access to
          independent international judicial proceedings in cases where their rights had been violated and
          it had not been possible to obtain suitable redress through the national courts.
          122. It was also alleged that the Peruvian Government and Congress's decision to remove the
          country from the jurisdiction of the Inter-American Court robbed article 205 of the
          1993 Constitution of all meaning. That article guarantees the right of citizens of Peru to apply to
          international tribunals and organizations for redress once internal remedies have been exhausted.
          Peruvian citizens no longer can have recourse to any international court. This decision was one
          of a series of legislative and governmental measures that have undermined the rule of law and
          the protection of human rights. Those measures include: the suspension of the Constitution for
          nine months in 1992; the enactment of the Amnesty Act and its Articles of Interpretation
          in 1995; the measures aimed at limiting the independence of the judiciary and the Public
          Prosecutor's Office adopted in 1996 and of the National Magistrature, adopted in 1998, and
          Congress's removal from office of three Constitutional Court judges in 1997, leaving the Court
          unable to carry out its main duties.
          123. Although the Working Group has received no reports of enforced or involuntary
          disappearances since 1995, it has continued to receive allegations concerning the lack of
          independence of the judiciary and the Public Prosecutor's Office, failings in the rule of law, the
          non-observance ofjudicial guarantees and the rules of due process, the judgement of civilians by
          military tribunals and the competence of those tribunals to hear cases of human rights violations
          committed by members of the armed forces. It has also been alleged that even in the few cases
          in which a judicial authority was willing to investigate cases of enforced or involuntary
          disappearances, it was unable to do so because of lack of cooperation from the members of the
          armed forces or because of threats made against prosecutors, the victims' lawyers and witnesses.
          Those threats and acts of harassment and intimidation contravene article 13, paragraph 3, of the
          Declaration. They have included acts of administrative and fiscal harassment.
          124. With regard to articles 16, paragraph 2, and 17 of the Declaration, it has been stated that
          the Amnesty Act of 1995 and its Articles of Interpretation provide for total impunity,
          undermining the right to justice, truth and social and financial redress for the relatives of victims
          of enforced or involuntary disappearances committed in the campaign against the organizations
          calling themselves the Communist Party of Peru, Shining Path and the Tñpac Amaru
          Revolutionary Movement. Particular concern was also expressed about the high number of cases
          of enforced or involuntary disappearance submitted to the Working Group and still outstanding.
          Uruguay
          125. The Government of Uruguay informed the Working Group that it had no new
          information to convey to it.
          126. The Working Group was informed by several non-governmental organizations that
          members of the armed and security forces accused of having committed enforced or involuntary
        
          
          E/CN.4/2000/64
          page 28
          disappearances and other grave human rights violations in previous decades had not been
          brought to court. On the contrary, some had been promoted to important positions in their
          institutions. It was also alleged that no serious or independent investigation had been made of
          cases of enforced disappearance.
          127. The Working Group was informed that the Immunity from Prosecution Act (Act
          No. 15848 of 1986), ratified by national referendum in 1989, remained in effect. Enacted during
          the first Government of President Julio Maria Sanguinetti in December 1986, the Act exempts
          the members of the armed and security forces from penal sanction for violations of human rights
          committed up to 1 March 1985, if those violations were committed for political reasons or on
          orders from a superior.
          128. Although article 4 of the Immunity from Prosecution Act stipulates that the executive
          must inquire into the fate and whereabouts of disappeared persons, that provision has allegedly
          not been fulfilled. It is said that in practice two military prosecutors were asked to conduct an
          inquiry, but they themselves had been accused of committing human rights violations. The
          Working Group was told that their inquiry simply concluded that no evidence or proof had been
          found of involvement by members of the armed forces in enforced disappearances or other
          human rights violations.
          129. It has also been alleged that senior armed forces officers continued publicly to justify the
          commission of crimes of enforced or involuntary disappearance as acts of war against
          subversion, political enemies and dissidents who had to be eliminated. The Working Group was
          informed that the officers making those statements had not been subjected to any form of
          punishment. It was also alleged that Uruguay had never acknowledged its own State
          responsibility in the crimes and cases of enforced disappearance that Uruguayan military officers
          had committed or been party to in some way in neighbouring countries. It was also stated that
          unlike other countries, Uruguay had never set up a truth commission or carried out any public or
          official inquiry into human rights violations committed in the past. Contrary to the provisions of
          Uruguayan legislation, the State had not applied the decision of the Administrative Court of
          25 March 1999 and continued to treat the Immunity from Prosecution Act as a government
          decree.
          130. Furthermore, the Working Group was informed that no inquiry has been launched into
          statements by Uruguayan Senator Rafael Michelini that there are corpses at the Battalion 13
          barracks. The corpses are said to be the remains of victims of enforced disappearance.
          IV. COUNTRIES FROM WHICH THE WORKING GROUP RECEIVED
          NO INFORMATION OR COMMENTS
          131. During the period under review, no new cases of disappearances were transmitted by the
          Working Group to the Governments of the following countries: Afghanistan, Bangladesh,
          Bolivia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Burkina Faso, Chad, Croatia, Cyprus, Dominican Republic,
          Ecuador, Equatorial Guinea, Greece, Guinea, Haiti, Israel, Lao People's Democratic Republic,
          Lebanon, Mauritania, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Paraguay, the Russian Federation,
          Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Seychelles, Syrian Arab Republic, Tajikistan, Thailand, Togo, Uganda,
          Ukraine, Venezuela, Yemen. No new cases were transmitted to the Palestinian Authority.
        
          
          E/CN.4/2000/64
          page 29
          132. During the period under review, no new information was received from these
          Governments, or from the Palestinian Authority, with regard to the outstanding cases. The
          Working Group is therefore unable to report on the fate and whereabouts of the persons
          concerned.
          V. COUNTRIES Th1 WHICH ALL REPORTED CASES OF DISAPPEARANCE
          HAVE BEEN CLARIFIED
          South Africa
          133. During the period under review, the Working Group clarified the one outstanding case of
          disappearance on the basis of the information provided by the Government. The source made no
          observations to the response by the Government within the six-month period.
          VI. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
          134. The Working Group draws to the attention of all Governments that the full
          implementation of the Declaration on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced
          Disappearance is crucial for the prevention and the termination of this human rights violation. In
          particular, the Working Group wishes to stress the importance of measures aimed at reducing
          periods of administrative detention to an indispensable minimum, at establishing accessible and
          up-to-date registers of detainees, and at guaranteeing access and appropriate information to
          relatives, lawyers and doctors of persons deprived of their liberty.
          135. Bearing in mind that the effectiveness of its mandate depends on the cooperation received
          from Governments, especially of those countries in which enforced disappearance is an ongoing
          phenomenon, the Working Group appreciates the mechanisms of communication and dialogue
          that exist with almost all the Governments of the countries concerned, many of which have sent
          high-level representatives to its sessions.
          136. The Working Group wishes to emphasize that it is essential to its activities to continue to
          receive cooperation from non-governmental organizations concerned with the problem of
          disappearances. Their activities deserve full support considering that they are a key ingredient
          for the clarification of cases. The Working Group expresses its appreciation for the cooperation
          and support it has received from these organizations. At the same time, it notes with deep
          concern that in some countries these organizations suffer harassment and persecution which
          prevent them from fulfilling their duties. The Working Group calls upon the concerned
          Governments to take all measures to guarantee complete protection to these organizations and
          their members.
          137. One of the major achievements of the United Nations human rights programme has been
          the establishment of thematic mechanisms by the Commission on Human Rights to deal with the
          essential task of receiving complaints, investigating gross violations of human rights and
          reporting on their findings publicly. These mechanisms are accessible to everybody and have
          demonstrated in practice, for the past 19 years, that they can perform an effective role in the
          protection of human rights throughout the world, especially with regard to persistent and
        
          
          E/CN.4/2000/64
          page 30
          extensive violations such as enforced disappearances. The non-governmental organizations
          acknowledge that these mechanisms have certainly acted as a deterrent to a greater increase of
          this particular international crime.
          138. As is well known, the Working Group was the first of these mechanisms to be created
          and had to play a pioneering role as a channel of communication between victims, families and
          non-governmental organizations on the one hand, and Governments on the other. Since its
          establishment in 1980, the Working Group has transmitted more than 49,000 cases to
          Governments; in many of the 69 countries concerned, new cases have been reported. Although
          some 3,000 cases have been clarified, more than 46,000 cases are still outstanding.
          139. It is crucial for the countries that have a large backlog of outstanding cases to make
          consistent and effective efforts to identify the fate and whereabouts of the disappeared. At the
          same time, in agreement with the relatives of the disappeared persons, mechanisms are being
          explored for the clarification of cases, including acknowledgement of the responsibility of the
          State and the award of appropriate compensation. The Working Group renews its offer of
          cooperation to the parties concerned.
          140. The Working Group stresses once again that impunity is one of the main causes -
          probably the root cause - of enforced disappearance, and at the same time one of the major
          obstacles to clarifying past cases. It is very important that all States comply with the
          Declaration, which obliges them to make all acts of enforced disappearance offences under
          domestic criminal law, to promptly, thoroughly and impartially investigate any allegation of
          enforced disappearance and to bring the perpetrators to justice. In addition, the Working Group
          strongly urges all States to comply with article 18, which establishes that perpetrators of
          enforced disappearance shall not benefit from any special amnesty law or similar measures that
          might have the effect of exempting them from criminal proceedings or sanctions.
          141. In some countries, the Working Group was unable to achieve progress in clarifying cases
          because of the lack of appropriate cooperation on the part of the Government. The Governments
          of Burkina Faso, Burundi, Chad, Equatorial Guinea, Mozambique and Tajikistan have never
          replied to any requests for information from the Working Group. It recommends once again that
          the Commission on Human Rights appeal to these countries to cooperate with the Group.
          142. It is crucial that, in accordance with the Declaration, Governments take effective
          legislative, administrative and judicial measures aimed at preventing the occurrence of
          disappearances in the future. Although article 4 of the Declaration is very clear and applies to all
          States, i.e. not only to those in which enforced disappearances actually take place, in very few
          States have the criminal laws been amended in order to ensure that acts of enforced
          disappearance as such are offences punishable by appropriate penalties. The enactment and
          effective implementation of such legal measures would be a major step forward towards
          preventing acts of enforced disappearance.
        
          
          E/CN.4/2000/64
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          143. The Working Group wishes to express once again its sincere appreciation to the
          secretariat for its dedication in the pursuance of the difficult tasks it has to undertake. The Group
          avails itself of this opportunity to appeal again to the Commission to meet the needs of the
          secretariat by allocating the appropriate resources, considering that the number of secretariat
          staff has been dramatically reduced during the last years from nine Professional and four General
          Service staff members to one Professional and one secretary working on a part-time basis.
          VII. ADOPTION OF THE REPORT AND SEPARATE OPINION OF
          TWO MEMBERS OF THE WORKING GROUP
          144. At the last meeting of its fifty-ninth session, on 3 December 1999, the present report was
          adopted by the members of the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances:
          Ivan Tosevski (Chairman-Rapporteur) (the former Yugoslav Republic of
          Macedonia)
          Agha Hilaly (Pakistan)
          Diego GarcIa-Sayán (Peru)
          Manfred Nowak (Austria)
          (Jonas K.D. Foli (Ghana) was not present at the fifty-ninth session).
          145. Diego GarcIa-Sayán and Manfred Nowak wish to express the following separate opinion
          to be added to the Working Group's report:
          “We strongly object to the fact that the present report had been reduced to the
          general limit of 32 pages requested by the General Assembly in its resolutions 37/4 C
          of 22 November 1982 and 47/202 B of 22 December 1992.
          “While we fully understand the desire of the Member States and the Secretariat of
          the United Nations to save funds by reducing the number and the size of its documents, it
          has been always recognized that this general 32-page limit cannot be applied to thematic
          mechanisms of the Commission on Human Rights, the annual reports of which should
          adequately reflect the situation of gross and systematic human rights violations on a
          country-by-country basis throughout the world. That is why many of the thematic
          working groups and special rapporteurs in the past have requested and been granted
          waivers by the Secretariat in this respect. At the same time, the Working Group on
          Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances during the last years made considerable efforts
          to streamline its annual reports and in fact reduced them from 172 pages in 1993 to
          roughly 100 pages in 1998 (the 1999 report of 70 pages is an exception as it has remained
          incomplete).
          “During the present year, the secretariat again has prepared a draft report which,
          together with the necessary annexes and graphs, would have amounted to some 100
          pages. Since the High Commissioner for Human Rights on 8 November 1999 explicitly
        
          
          E/CN.4/2000/64
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          requested the Chairman of the Working Group not to exceed the 32-page limit, the Group
          decided to comply with this request by restructuring the report and drastically reducing
          its contents. The general part of the report does not contain comments on the draft
          convention on disappearances or on the implementation of the Declaration, including
          general comments on its provisions. The country-specific part has been restructured so
          as to report only on countries in which new cases were reported and/or new information
          was received. Even this information was reduced to an extent which made it difficult for
          the reader to understand the situation in the respective countries.
          “The United Nations Declaration stipulates in article 17 that ‘Acts constituting
          enforced disappearance shall be considered a continuing offence as long as the
          perpetrators continue to conceal the facts and the whereabouts of persons who have
          disappeared and these facts remain unclarified'. That is why it is important that the
          Working Group in its annual reports continue to put equal emphasis on ‘new' and ‘old'
          cases as long as they have not been clarified. The present report neither adequately
          reflects the situation of enforced disappearances throughout the world nor the efforts of
          the members of the Working Group, of its secretariat, of Governments and non-
          governmental organizations to clarify the fate and whereabouts of almost 50,000
          disappeared persons in more than 70 countries of the world.
          “We express our hope that the General Assembly, through a request by the
          Commission on Human Rights, will clarify the page limit for future annual reports of the
          thematic mechanisms of the Commission.”
        
          
          E/CN.4/2000/64
          page 33
          Annex
          DECISIONS ON INDIVIDUAL CASES TAKEN BY THE WORKING GROUP DURING
          1999
          Country
          Cases
          which
          allegedly
          occurred in
          1999
          Cases transmitted to the
          Government during 1999
          Clarifications by:
          Discontinued
          cases
          Urgent
          actions
          Normal
          actions
          Government
          Non-
          governmental
          sources
          Algeria 1 - 146
          Belarus 1 1 - - -
          Brazil 3 3 1 - 3
          China 1 1 6 9 -
          Colombia 27 27 - 5 4
          Democratic Republic 5 5 - - 2
          of the Congo
          Ethiopia 1 1 - - -
          Guatemala - - - 8 -
          Honduras 1 1 - - 1
          India - - 6 5 -
          Indonesia 50 50 - 1 1
          Iran (Islamic 3 3 1 - -
          Republic of)
          Jordan 1 1 - - -
          Lebanon - - 1 -
          Libyan Arab - 1 - -
          Jamahiriya
          Mexico 1 6 - 16 -
          Morocco - - 2 - -
          Nepal 5 6 - 2 -
          Pakistan - 3 - - -
          Philippines 1 3 - 1 2
          South Africa - - - 1 -
          SriLanka 2 7 - - 2
          Sudan 3 3 - -
          Tunisia - 1 - 1
          Turkey 2 2 6 5
          Uzbekistan 7 1 6 -
        

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