The
call came around noon on Sunday. "What do you mean, Tita's
missing? Who was the last person to see her? Who was she with? Did
she go to work on Saturday? What exactly did she tell her mother?"
Establish-ing facts is always a good way to hold back one's feelings
in a time of personal crisis.
These were the facts. Tita was Margarita Guzman. Salvadoran citizen.
Age: 27. Height: 55. Weight: 140 pounds. Hair: Black.
Eyes: Brown. No distinguishing marks. Single mother of two. Employed
as a secretary with a social service organization. Last seen wearing
blue jeans, a light blue blouse with small flowers, and black pumps,
leaving her office at 1:15 P.M. on Saturday morning, May 4, and
heading up Avenida Pablo Segundo.
These things happened. They happened to the poor, to the rich, to
the faithful, and it had just happened to my friend Tita. She would
never see her children grow big, never light up a room with her
sense of humor, never hold her boyfriend again, and never walk the
streets of San Salvador as a city at peace. She had disappeared
or rather, been disappeared.
When used as a transitive verb, to disappear means to arrest someone
secretly, to imprison and/or to kill them. It has become such a
common occurrence in dirty wars ranging from El Salvador and Argentina
to Kurdistan and Kuwait that the word seems almost self-explanatory.
In international humanitarian law, however, disappearance is complicated
for it involves the commission of several separate war crimes including
unlawful confinement, failure to allow due
process, and failure to allow communication between the arrested
person and the outside world. It often involves torture and cruel
and inhuman treatment, and too commonly it involves murder.
The first stage of a disappearance is capture. Humanitarian law
states that State authorities may not make arbitrary arrests, and
they must have sound legal bases for taking a person into custody
and holding them against their will. The second stage is imprisonment.
Additional Protocol II to the Geneva Conventions states that once
in custody, a person has the right to humane treatment; the right
not to be tortured or otherwise cruelly treated; the right to send
and receive letters; the right to due process, including being informed
of what he or she stands charged with. A person being detained is
presumed innocent, must be granted all the necessary rights and
means of mounting a defensepresenting evidence, calling witnesses,
and the likeand may not be forced into a confession.
The last stage in a disappearance is murder, or what is sometimes
euphemistically referred to as extrajudicial
execution. Passing and carrying out of a death sentence without
the sanction of a regularly constituted court is obviously illegal.
The question, though, as in all cases of disappearance and presumed
murder is establishing State responsibility. That is both the essence
of the task that confronts investigators and the essence of the
issue in international law. Not surprisingly, it is the most difficult
task as well.
Most disappearances, however, occur in situations other than in
international armed conflicteither in internal wars or situations
that do not rise to the level of internal conflicts, i.e., disturbances
or police actions. Both examples are dealt with in human rights
law and the former is addressed in Article 3 common to the four
Geneva Conventions. Additionally, the Statute of the International
Criminal Court adopted in Rome in 1998 explicitly cites enforced
disappearances . . . by or with the authorization, support or acquiescence
of a State or a political organization as a crime
against humanity if committed in a widespread or systematic
manner.
Try as we did, we never found Tita, nor did we establish with any
certainty who had abducted her. We did learn something of her fate,
though. Near the Lempa River, outside San Salvador, an old woman
stared at her photo for a long time before shaking her head and
telling us she was sorry. We tried not to imagine what had happened,
but we could not. We'd seen enough of the bodies dumped, sometimes
headless and almost always with the clear marks of torture on them,
in conspicuous places where passers-by could not avoid seeing them.
Rumors from informants who had seen Tita in the hands of the Policia
Nacional came and went. But we never found her body, and eventually
all of us stopped asking questions except for her little boys, who
kept asking why their mother never came home.

|