Iraq needs law to confront crisis of disappeared people: UN
GENEVA: When his mother phoned, the Iraqi man was stopped at a checkpoint, on his way to visit a cousin, and said he would call back right away.
He never did, according to the mother’s testimony reported Tuesday by a UN committee which urged Baghdad to establish a legal framework for tackling the “heinous crime” of disappearances.
The man, who disappeared from the checkpoint set up by “men in uniform,” is among up to one million Iraqis estimated to have gone missing over the past five decades scarred by dictatorship and war.
He never did, according to the mother’s testimony reported Tuesday by a UN committee which urged Baghdad to establish a legal framework for tackling the “heinous crime” of disappearances.
The man, who disappeared from the checkpoint set up by “men in uniform,” is among up to one million Iraqis estimated to have gone missing over the past five decades scarred by dictatorship and war.