• last month
Transcript
00:00When my grandson was six years old, I told him that people die and become stars and go to heaven.
00:15He looked up to the sky and said,
00:18Look, that's my father, isn't it?
00:21I said, yes, son.
00:25He still doesn't know that his father was murdered, he doesn't know that he died.
00:33But until today I didn't have the courage to tell him how it happened.
00:48The disappearance is a crisis of information.
01:16It is not possible to disappear because we are matter, no one really disappears.
01:23Each document is a person.
01:26And it is necessary to have this perception.
01:28This is not just a record for criminal purposes or for criminal investigation purposes.
01:34The quality of this is what will determine whether this person will be located or not.
01:38If this family will continue to look for the rest of their lives or not.
01:47About our incidence, this is very classic.
01:50Young man, African nationality.
01:53Our day-to-day includes a lot of this profile here.
01:59When we find a body, deliver a body, we feel privileged to be able to bury our entity.
02:06And people can't understand.
02:08I said, I feel privileged to be buried, to give a worthy burial, to have a good burial.
02:14To experience this mourning because many can't.
02:18And then life becomes a collapse.
02:26I came across the two who were involved in his death.
02:31Of course, there is no body here.
02:33If we want the body for us to bury.
02:36And they say, no, there was no body here.
02:38And it was forbidden to look.
02:40They say, no, there was no body here.
02:42And it was forbidden to look.
02:51Everyone knows that it is like this there.
02:54They kill and throw in the tide.
02:58Only in this episode of the militias there, there were many, more than 20.