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Coimbra, Portugal
geral@hfa2019.pt
+351 919 990 326
Coimbra, Portugal
geral@hfa2019.pt
+351 919 990 326
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HFA2019
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Luísa Marinho | Coordinator
Bárbara Mendes
Duarte Nuno Vieira
Irina Oliveira
João Manata
Morris Tidball-Binz
Sara Costa
Zoi Argyropoulou

hfa2019 / Posted on November 6, 2019November 6, 2019 / 0

About

Humanitarian Forensic Action is a novel field of application of forensic sciences to humanitarian activities, including for searching for people missing in armed conflicts, catastrophic events and other humanitarian emergencies and bringing answers to their families. The Symposium aims to share lessons learned in HFA, including on the principles guiding forensic research and practice for preventing and resolving the tragedy of the missing.

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Conflit du Haut-Karabakh. Stepanakert / Khankendi. Bureau médico-légal. Le CICR maintient un dialogue actif avec le bureau concernant les standards internationaux relatifs à la gestion de dépouilles mortelles. Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Stepanakert/Khankendi.Forensic Bureau. The ICRC keeps an active dialogue with the Bureau about the international standards applicable to the management of human remains.
Soukhoum, Parc Slavi. Un anthropologue médico-légal et des médecins légistes locaux exhument un site de sépulture. Les restes humains sont présumablement liés à un accident d’hélicoptère survenu lors de la guerre d’Abkhazie en 1992-93. Sukhumi, Park Slavi. A forensic anthropologist and local forensic scientists are exhuming a gravesite in Park Slavi. The human remains are presumed to be linked to a helicopter crash during the 1992-93 Georgian Abkhaz war.
Tegucigalpa, morgue. Des experts médicolégaux travaillent à l’identification des corps des victimes de l’incendie dans la prison de Comayagua. Tegucigalpa, morgue. Forensic experts work on identifying bodies of victims of the Comayagua prison fire. ICRC website, 14/03/2012 Honduras: the challenges of identifying the victims of the Comayagua prison fire In the wake of the fire that broke out at Comayagua prison in Honduras on 14 February, in which more than 360 people died, the ICRC has been supporting the national authorities’ efforts to identify the victims using forensics and to offer psychological support to their families. In this interview, Alejandra Jiménez, the ICRC’s forensic adviser in Mexico, describes the challenges and achievements of her assignment in Honduras. What is the humanitarian situation one month on from the Comayagua fire?Because there were so many victims, many of whose remains are unrecognizable, the identification process is very complicated and lengthy. For the families waiting for the bodies of their loved ones to be released so they can honour them and say their goodbyes, the wait is extremely distressing. The main humanitarian consequence today is the psychological impact on relatives who are having to wait to begin the mourning process. What kind of support has the ICRC provided?In the immediate aftermath, the ICRC donated essential items to deal with the remains of those killed in the fire, including body bags, surgical instruments, cameras and FTA paper for genetic identification. However, the ICRC focused mainly on providing technical advice to the Honduran government. Two ICRC psychologists provided psychosocial support for relatives and for those responding to the disaster. Three forensic experts offered their assistance and made recommendations about what practices to adopt at the different stages of the response, from recovering the bodies to handing over and disposing of the remains. The ICRC was not directly involved in dealing with the remains, but it did offer guidance to the authorities on processing information about the victims, preserving the bodies and putting in place procedures in the forensic units. As in many post-disaster situations, what was lacking was a suitable information-management system. The ICRC therefore donated a database that it has developed to organize, manage and consult all the information collected during the identification process. It also provided training in the use of this database. How was psychological support organized and what was the ICRC’s role?The main challenge in these situations is communicating clearly and transparently with the families of the victims. If the authorities remain silent and fail to communicate with the families, this creates a psychological barrier, as though they are being cut off from their loved ones and the whole process. This feeling of being kept in the dark is extremely distressing. In the case of Honduras, the families were afraid that their loved ones would be buried in a mass grave or that, without international help, the bodies would not be returned to them. The ICRC advised both the government and forensic experts on establishing clear channels of communication with the families to explain what they could expect from the process, how long it might take, its limitations, and the complexities of identifying remains. The ICRC also stressed the importance of explaining forensic methods to the press, to make them aware of the tireless, rigorous work being carried out and to explain how information was being processed, thereby reassuring the families. What are the main challenges today?We have to adopt a short- and long-term approach. We need to maintain our support for, and dialogue with, the families whose loved ones have still not been identified. It is vital that all the information collected during the identification of the remains be entered into the database provided by the ICRC. A full analysis of this data then needs to be made. The ICRC needs to rise to the expectations surrounding its role in Honduras, which will in turn pave the way for its involvement in addressing the country’s humanitarian problems. The government has asked the ICRC to assess its current forensic capabilities and its forensic services nationwide in order to make practical recommendations. Violence is rife in Honduras. Many bodies are still awaiting identification and, as a result, many families are anxious for news. In these circumstances, the ICRC is keen to cooperate with the authorities and to drive forward forensic development with a view to providing humanitarian assistance.
Port-au- Prince, Prison. Après avoir distribué 100 sacs mortuaires, un expert médico-légal du CICR et des employé de la morgue ont trouvé quatre corps qu’ils ont porté à la morgue de l’hôpital universitaire. Port-au- Prince, Prison. After distributing 100 body bags, an ICRC forensic expert, along with morgue staff recover four bodies from the prison and deliver them to the University Hospital Morgue. The earthquake which ocurred in the Port-au-Prince region on the 12th of January 2010 is the worst earthquake the country has ever had to endure. Inmates escaped following the earthquake.
Port-au- Prince, Prison. Après avoir distribué 100 sacs mortuaires, un expert médico-légal du CICR et des employé de la morgue ont trouvé quatre corps qu’ils ont porté à la morgue de l’hôpital universitaire. Port-au- Prince, Prison. After distributing 100 body bags, an ICRC forensic expert, along with morgue staff recover four bodies from the prison and deliver them to the University Hospital Morgue. The earthquake which ocurred in the Port-au-Prince region on the 12th of January 2010 is the worst earthquake the country has ever had to endure. Inmates escaped following the earthquake.
Port-au- Prince. Maisons détruites par le tremblement de terre. Port-au- Prince. Houses destroyed by the earthquake. The earthquake which ocurred in the Port-au-Prince region on the 12th of January 2010 is the worst earthquake the country has ever had to endure.
Port-au-Prince. Hôpital de campagne de la Croix-Rouge norvégienne installé dans l’enceinte de l’hôpital universitaire. La plupart des blessés ont eu des membres écrasés. Port-au-Prince. Norwegian Red Cross Rapid Deployment Field Hospital, set in up in the University Hospital. Most of the people admitted to the hospital after the earthquake had had their limbs crushed. The earthquake which ocurred in the Port-au-Prince region on the 12th of January 2010 is the worst earthquake the country has ever had to endure.
Port-au- Prince, quartier de Delmas 2. Poste de premier secours mis en place et fourni par le CICR, mais géré par des volontaires de la Société nationale de la Croix-Rouge haïtienne. Port-au- Prince, Dalmas 2 district. First aid post set up and supplied by the ICRC and manned by Haitian National Red Cross Society volunteers The earthquake which ocurred in the Port-au-Prince region on the 12th of January 2010 is the worst earthquake the country has ever had to endure.
Port-au- Prince, district de Canapé Vert. Maisons détruites par le tremblement de terre. Port-au- Prince, Canape Vert district. Houses destroyed by the earthquake. The earthquake which ocurred in the Port-au-Prince region on the 12th of January 2010 is the worst earthquake the country has ever had to endure.
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