Middle East & Africa | Missing people

Many thousands of Africans have disappeared in conflict

The Red Cross tries hard to find them

Nord-Est du Nigéria. Cet homme de 45 ans a été séparé de sa femme et de ses enfants quand son village, situé dans la région de Mubi, a été attaqué en octobre 2017. Il ne perd pas espoir de les retrouver un jour. North-Eastern Nigeria. This 45-year-old man was separated from his wife and children in October 2017 when his village, located in Mubi region, was attacked. He strongly believes that he will see them one day.Site web du CICR, galerie photo, 12.03.2020."The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) works with National Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies to reunite family members who have been separated during the armed conflict of Lake Chad. Providing knowledge about the fate of those who have gone missing during situations of armed violence is a core part of the ICRC's work. Presently, over 21,600 cases of missing persons have been reported in Nigeria and are actively being handled. This series of pictures depict persons who have no knowledge about their loved ones' whereabouts."ICRC website, photo gallery, 12.03.2020"The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) works with National Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies to reunite family members who have been separated during the armed conflict of Lake Chad. Providing knowledge about the fate of those who have gone missing during situations of armed violence is a core part of the ICRC's work. Presently, over 21,600 cases of missing persons have been reported in Nigeria and are actively being handled. This series of pictures depict persons who have no knowledge about their loved ones' whereabouts."
The pain of not knowingImage: Prichilla Absi/ICRC
|Yola

When The jihadists of Boko Haram attacked Lydia Adamu’s village in north-east Nigeria in 2015, her parents and their six children fled—with nothing. At first they seemed relatively lucky, reaching the safety of Yola, a city hundreds of kilometres to the south. When word came that their village was quiet, her parents ventured back to salvage a few belongings. What happened next is murky. All Ms Adamu knows is that “armed men came again, shooting. They seized my parents on motorbikes and disappeared.” She has never seen them again and has no idea if they are dead or alive.

This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “The disappeared”

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