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Developing standards in international forensic work to identify missing persons

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 April 2010

Abstract

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Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Committee of the Red Cross 2002

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References

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5 Over the last 16 years PHR, based in Boston, has sent more than 75 medical and forensic teams to dozens of countries to carry out forensic investigations, including exhumations and autopsies of deceased victims of alleged torture and extrajudicial executions in Brazil, Israel, Czechoslovakia, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Iraqi Kurdistan, Kuwait, Mexico, Panama, Rwanda, Thailand, the former Yugoslavia and very recently, Afghanistan. <http://phrusa.org/research/forensic/croatia/forvuk3.html>.

6 <http://www.phrusa.org/research/forensics/index/html>.

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9 <http://hrdata.aaas.org/ceh/report/english/recS3.html>.

10 E/CN.4/RES/1993/33 Preamble and para. 3.

11 E/CN.4/RES/1993/31, para. 3.

12 See E/CN.4/1993/2O, 5 February 1993, para. 3 and E/CN.4/1993/20 para. 18.

13 E/CN.4/1998/32, 5 January 1998, 1, D, 3.

14 Blewitt, , op. cit. (note 7), p. 284.Google Scholar

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20 Ibid., pp. 277–8.

21 Ibid., p. 288. Emphasis added.

22 A Danish-Swedish team of forensic scientists working for the ICTY have also made this observation. Sprogoe-Jakobsen, et al. op. cit. (note 17), p. 1395.Google Scholar

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27 Ibid., p. 171.

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30 Available from the Interpol website <http://www.interpol.int>.

31 These include World Medical Association; Indo Pacific Association of Law Medicine and Science (INPALMS); World Association of Societies of Pathology; Physicians for Human Rights; European Network of Forensic Science Institutes; American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors (this organization accredits many laboratories outside the US); European Academy of Forensic Sciences; and International Academy of Legal Medicine.