State Responsibility

The large number of persons missing for involuntary reasons globally is a stark reminder of persistent failures to safeguard Human Rights and to implement the rule of law in a comprehensive way.

The circumstances in which people go missing vary, but often involve multiple human rights violations and abuses in respect of the missing person and their family.

Concerning the missing person, these violations and abuses can breach the right to security and liberty, as well as dignity of the person; the right to life; the right not to be subjected to torture or cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment; the right to a family life, and the right to recognition as a person before the law.

Principles on State Responsibility to Find Missing Persons

States bear a responsibility for ensuring lasting peace, reconciliation and social cohesion – resolving the fate of missing and disappeared persons, and protecting persons against disappearance, is an integral element in securing this objective. 

Many States are party to these legal instruments. However, compliance with international obligations is often incomplete and requires implementing legislation under domestic law. Examples of domestic law specific to the issue of missing persons include:

  • The Law on Missing Persons (2004) (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • The Office on Missing Persons (Establishment, Administration, and Discharge of Functions) Act, No. 14 (2016) (Sri Lanka)
  • The Decree establishing the Search Unit for Missing Persons in Colombia (2017)
  • The Law on the Missing and Forcibly Disappeared Persons, Law 105 (2018) (Lebanon) 
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