The number of missing in the context of armed conflicts on a global scale has reached ‘unprecedented’ level, with over 56,000 new cases of this nature to be recorded in 2024, warned Wednesday Wednesday International Committee of the Red Cross and Red Crescent (DES), with the UN sharing its concern.

‘DESS records missing numbers without precedent’summoned the Fernando Forenaris, Advisor to the Commission on Humanitarian Affairs, during a meeting of the UN General Assembly dedicated to so -called forced disappearances.

Adding 56,000 missing to the lists in 2024 means that all the cases of this nature monitored by the PSE has reached almost the 255,000according to the numbers revealed yesterday.

These 56,559 new cases are ‘The greatest increase’ recorded ‘For at least 20 years’for his part, during the same meeting, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Falker Turkish.

Is the result ‘Number of large -scale armed conflict without precedent’ and ‘contempt for international humanitarian law’commented.

In any case, “The pain of not knowing what happened to your own man is one of the worst things that can happen to anyone”, The High Commissioner insisted. “He never softens, no matter how much time passes.”

During wars or armed conflict, world disappears because “It is murdered, tortured and exists abused, abducted, imprisoned arbitrarily” or runs to flee, listed.

The numbers of the missing make more bulky The “military dictatorships”which “For decades they have disappeared without the luck of being still known.” Today, the repression that continues in some states, ‘Including’ assumptions ‘Relating to anti -terrorist measures’, as well as those who disappear on migratory streets.

“The range is huge. Numbers range from tens of thousands of missing in some countries up to more than 100,000 in others’, pointed out.

Over the last 45 years, under the auspices of the UN Human Rights Council, a working group for forced disappearances has handled ‘Over 62,000 cases’ of this nature in ‘115 countries’but ”This is nothing but the tip of the iceberg ‘, pointed out.