Physicians for Human Rights
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public
http://physiciansforhumanrights.org/
forensic@phrusa.org
Relations to other organizations
Organization | Relation Type | Organization | Country | Date from | Date to |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Physicians for Human Rights | Cooperates with | Asociación Pro-Búsqueda de Niñas y Niños Desaparecidos (Pro-Búsqueda) | 1994 Jan 01 |
Living for more than twenty years knowing only that their child was disappeared during a violent civil war in the 1980s is a reality for hundreds of families currently searching for these lost children with the help of the Salvadoran organization Pro-Búsqueda. Fearing for the lives of their families, many parents watched as their child was forcibly taken by the military. Other children were lost when family members were killed or disappeared. An estimated 2,300 Salvadoran children were adopted in the US and Europe during these years. Many of these children have grown up in their adoptive homes not knowing what happened to their families in El Salvador. Some of them know their birth names, other remember faces, many have no memories.
Many of the missing children who were disappeared during the 1980s are now in their 20s and are beginning to come forward to search for their families. The number of known cases (787 in 2006) increases annually, with approximately 25 new cases of missing children in El Salvador presented to Pro-Búsqueda each year. The organization has confirmed the identities of over 300 children and continues to locate approximately 10 children each year.
Since 1994, the International Forensic Program at Physicians for Human Rights has supported the work of Pro-Búsqueda by arranging for DNA testing by a network of US-based DNA experts to confirm identifications of El Salvador’s missing children. In addition to DNA identifications in the 90s, the IFP has assisted Pro-Búsqueda in locating adoptive parents in the US, and in making preliminary calls to contact family members. The IFP’s role has grown to include providing guidance on legal and psycho-social support.
If you believe you may be one of the children disappeared from El Salvador during the civil war from 1980-1992, or know someone of Salvadoran decent who was adopted during this time, please contact the International Forensic Program at forensic [at] phrusa [dot] org or Pro-Búsqueda at asociacionprobusqueda [at] gmail [dot] com.
Many of the missing children who were disappeared during the 1980s are now in their 20s and are beginning to come forward to search for their families. The number of known cases (787 in 2006) increases annually, with approximately 25 new cases of missing children in El Salvador presented to Pro-Búsqueda each year. The organization has confirmed the identities of over 300 children and continues to locate approximately 10 children each year.
Since 1994, the International Forensic Program at Physicians for Human Rights has supported the work of Pro-Búsqueda by arranging for DNA testing by a network of US-based DNA experts to confirm identifications of El Salvador’s missing children. In addition to DNA identifications in the 90s, the IFP has assisted Pro-Búsqueda in locating adoptive parents in the US, and in making preliminary calls to contact family members. The IFP’s role has grown to include providing guidance on legal and psycho-social support.
If you believe you may be one of the children disappeared from El Salvador during the civil war from 1980-1992, or know someone of Salvadoran decent who was adopted during this time, please contact the International Forensic Program at forensic [at] phrusa [dot] org or Pro-Búsqueda at asociacionprobusqueda [at] gmail [dot] com.