UN strives to work with new Syrian government to determine the fate of the missing

A general view shows the Sheikh Maqsoud neighborhood of Aleppo, Syria, Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Omar Albam)
A general view shows the Sheikh Maqsoud neighborhood of Aleppo, Syria, Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Omar Albam)
Secretary of State Marco Rubio, right, and Syrian interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa arrive ahead of a meeting at the Lotte New York Palace Hotel, on the sidelines of the 80th United Nations General Assembly at the United Nations headquarters, Monday, Sept. 22, 2025. (Bing Guan/Pool Photo via AP)
Secretary of State Marco Rubio, right, and Syrian interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa arrive ahead of a meeting at the Lotte New York Palace Hotel, on the sidelines of the 80th United Nations General Assembly at the United Nations headquarters, Monday, Sept. 22, 2025. (Bing Guan/Pool Photo via AP)
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UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The head of a U.N. body established to determine what happened to potentially hundreds of thousands of people missing in Syria said Wednesday it was essential to find a way to work together with a new Syrian commission.

Assistant Secretary-General Karla Quintana said the Independent Institution on Missing Persons in Syria, established in 2023, was only able to enter the country in January, a month after the overthrow of President Bashar Assad, whose family had ruled Syria for more than 50 years.

Quintana said the most important challenge now was to coordinate with the Syrian Commission on Missing Persons, established in May by the transitional government.

Before Assad’s ouster, 130,000 people were estimated to be missing in Syria. But the Syrian commission’s head, Mohammed Reda Jalkhi, said in August that estimates ranged from 120,000 to 300,000 and there “could be more.”

The U.N. institution is investigating “forcible disappearances” by the Assad regime, missing children placed in orphanages by security services, and disappearances by the Islamic State group, Quintana said.

“Everyone has someone or knows someone that is missing in Syria," she told U.N. reporters.

She is returning to Damascus next week and hopes to sign a memorandum with the Syrian commission.

“I truly believe that in this moment, the question is not if we are going to work together, but how In practice, this is going to look like,” Quintana said. “I am positive that we are going to find a way forward.”

She said her organization has opened several lines of inquiry, has developed data analysis capabilities and is developing a forensic network. She said developing a registry with detailed information on the missing is crucial for all parties.

In addition to meeting Syrian families with missing loved ones, she said the U.N. institution has been meeting with representatives of countries whose citizens are missing in Syria, including the United States, Greece, Iraq, Italy, Jordan, Lebanon and Poland.

”We don’t want the families or the mothers of the missing to start dying before us being able to find an answer," Quintana said. " We need to work as fast as possible.”

 

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