The Palm Beach Post

Military refuses to open archives for missing kids

- By Marcos Aleman

SAN SALVADOR, EL SALVADOR — More than 25 years after the end of its civil war, families in El Salvador are still searching for an estimated 3,000 children who disappeare­d in the fighting.

The country’s military has so far refused to open its archives from that period to allow an investigat­ion into the whereabout­s of children separated from their families during combat between guer- rillas and government forces.

In a decision released in January, El Salvador’s Supreme Court backed the demand of Nicolasa Rivas for a probe into the disappeara­nces of her daughters, Gladys Suleyma and Norma Climaco Rivas, who were 6 and 7 years old when they went missing in San Vicente province in 1982. Rivas blames the military for taking her daughters.

The U.N. Truth Commission, created with the sign- ing of the peace agreement in January 1992, estimated there were 5,000 forced disappeara­nces during the war.

Families and human rights advocates have documented about 3,000 more cases and estimate that about 3,000 of all the disappeare­d were minors.

The Supreme Court’s deci- sion ordered the armed forces to release informatio­n related to a military operation called “Mario Azenon Palma.” It was during that operation that Gladys and Norma disap- peared, according to their mother.

The Defense Ministry has said that “after having searched the institutio­nal archives it has been establishe­d that no documents or registries of any kind related to the alleged operation have been found.”

The court responded that if the military continues to refuse, it will ask President Salvador Sanchez Ceren to exert pressure on it to open the archives. It also asked the prosecutor’s office to investigat­e the sisters’ disappeara­nce.

Eduardo Garcia, executive director of Pro-Busqueda, a group dedicated to the war’s missing minors, said the oper- ation’s existence has been confirmed by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

“To think of reconcilia­tion in the country it isn’t enough to say that the wounds are healed,” Garcia said. “The wounds are merely suppressed. There are living peo- ple who are being denied free- dom.”

The truth commission found that during the 1980-1992 war, government forces tried to isolate guerrillas and their supporters, cutting off access to food and medicine. When soldiers moved against com- munities and guerrillas fled, women, the elderly and chil- dren often fell behind.

Fighters would return to look for their families, but often couldn’t find them. Relatives and activists say chil- dren were sometimes taken by soldiers.

“We fled with a bunch of families when we were detected by the elite battalions. The army bombed us, shot at us and deployed troops,” said Jose Lainez Ayala, a 61-yearold also from San Vicente.

When the fighting was over, Lainez said, he returned to find the dead body of his 8-yearold daughter but there was no sign of his 6-year-old. “We couldn’t find her because the army took her.”

In its ruling supporting Rivas’ call for an investigat­ion into the fate of her daughters, the Supreme Court said there was sufficient informatio­n to conclude “they were involuntar­ily disappeare­d at the hands of soldiers.”

Pro-Busqueda said its own investigat­ions indicate that soldiers took children and adopted them as their own.

“In some cases they were cared for and in others they were used as servants,” Garcia said. In other cases, he said, they were turned over to other families or the Red Cross and ended up in orphanages. The practices echo what occurred during the “dirty war” in Argentina, where relatives spent decades searching for missing children.

 ?? SALVADOR MELENDEZ / AP ?? Eduardo Garcia is executive director of Pro-Busqueda, a group dedicated to minors missing since El Salvador’s civil war. He holds portraits of Salvadoran women who lost their siblings during the war.
SALVADOR MELENDEZ / AP Eduardo Garcia is executive director of Pro-Busqueda, a group dedicated to minors missing since El Salvador’s civil war. He holds portraits of Salvadoran women who lost their siblings during the war.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States