download pdf

COVER

CONTENTS

 EDITORIAL

COVER STORY

- Never Again To Ask Question: Where are You?

NEWS Features

FROM VICTIMS TO HEALERS
PSYCHO-MORAL SUPPORT TO
THE FAMILIES OF VICTIMS OF
ENFORCED DISAPPEARANCE

The Brave
Women
Human Rights Defenders

The Ordinance Anticlimax and its Aftermath...

Expression of Pain
Wives of the Disappeared
Bare Their Hearts...

A Glow in the Dark:
The AFAD’s 11th Anniversary

Eleven years of trials and
triumphs towards a world
without desaparecidos

NEWS FEATURES

To See With The Heart
A Sharing 


The State of human Rights in the Philippines:
Wearing off the Facade 

Peru: A Milestone in the Struggle for Justice
Fugimori is sentenced to 25 years in prison
for crimes against humanity
 

A Reflection: Between the Devil
and the Deep Blue Sea


Sri Lanka: Human Rights Under Fire

Report on the Lobby for the United Nations Convention For the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance and Workshop of Women Human Rights Defenders

announcement
Helping the Families of the
Disappeared help themselves...

Solidarity Message


literary
Mothers of the Disappeared
 

Announcement


Helping families of the disappeared help themselves...
Asian experiences, successes and difficulties...
 

By Katharina Lauritsch

The “First Asian Conference on Psychosocial Support in the Search for Involuntarily Disappeared, in the Struggle for Truth and Justice and in Exhumation Processes,” co-organized by the Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances (AFAD) as a regional partner of Equipo de Estudios Comunitarios y Acción Psicosocial (ECAP) - Team of Community Studies and Psychosocial Action from Guatemala and Gemeinnützige Entwicklungszusammenarbeit GmbH (GEZA) - Non- rofit Development Assistance Association from Austria, will be held in October 2009. It will be part of an international conference cycle that began in Guatemala in 2007 and will culminate with the Second International Conference that will be conducted in Bogotá, Colombia in May 2010.

This regional conference, which will also be convened in Africa and the Middle East, aims to present, share, discuss and learn from the experiences in the different Asian countries – in the various political, historical, social and cultural contexts – in the range of psychosocial support for families of the disappeared.

A tool to share and compare the experiences is the proposed Minimum Standards in psychosocial work with families of the disappeared and in exhumation processes. The document, which is a validation form that hopes to achieve an international consensus, originated in Latin America. An integral part of the preparations for the Asian Conference is a discussion of these proposed standards in the Asian context. Hence, preparations for the said conference necessitate the gathering of information about the practice of psychosocial support and the situation of families of involuntary disappeared in general, taking into consideration commonalities as well as differences.

The target objective is to collectively formulate an Asian position that will be presented to an international audience in Bogotá.


Why A Conference on Psychosocial Support?

Some may ask why so many conferences? Wouldn’t it be better to use the limited resources to work on the subject and help the families directly?

One of the founding ideas regarding this initiative was a quite related question: How could we use our limited resources better? The most evident answer might be by learning to improve our work based on the successes and difficulties others experienced in similar situations. Keeping this in mind, the planned conference offers the space to share and learn and to intensify the collaboration within the Asian community.


Making the Conference Results Available

In order not to lose the results of the validation of the minimum standards, the conference results will be made available to as many organizations and individuals as possible. Thus, a book, which would compile the varying situations in the different Asian countries, will be published. The idea is that the people working with the families, the “local experts,” will come together and write an article about the situation of enforced disappearance in their country and the different forms (religious, psychological, ritual, etc.) of support for families of the disappeared that are being practiced.

The main objective of the whole project is to show the range of strategies and approaches to help families of involuntary disappeared people help themselves in coping up with the pain and live a self-determined life again. The Asian region has rich and valuable experiences to impart.

If you are interested and want more information on the event or the project itself or share your experiences in the field of psychosocial support, contact the AFAD (afad@surfshop.net.ph) or Katharina Lauritsch (mk. lauritsch@gmx.at), the officer in charge with organizing the conference.
 

 


VOICE August  2009

 

Copyright 2008  AFAD - Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
Web Design by: www.listahan.org