👉 Ana Rosa Llobet, responsable de Missing Children Argentina, discute la desaparición de Lian, un niño de tres años perdido en Córdoba. Con temperaturas extremas y un contexto geográfico desafiante, la búsqueda lleva ya 48 horas. La activación de la alerta Sofía ha movilizado a las autoridades y medios para intensificar los esfuerzos. Aunque Córdoba no es una zona habitual para estos casos, el país está atento a cualquier pista. Llobet destaca la importancia del apoyo mediático para presionar a quienes puedan tener información. La situación recuerda otros casos sin resolver, subrayando la urgencia y complejidad del problema.
👉 Seguí en #BuenDíaA24
📺 a24.com/vivo
👉 Seguí en #BuenDíaA24
📺 a24.com/vivo
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NewsTranscript
00:00Ana Rosa Llobet, who is responsible for Missing Children Argentina.
00:05Ana, thank you for attending. I'm Luis Novarizio.
00:08Hi Luis, it's a pleasure to speak with you and the audience.
00:12Well, once again we face a case that should not be judged on TV,
00:17but what impression do you have of the little we know so far?
00:22The truth is that since there is a secret summary, we know very little.
00:25We have communicated with the prosecution,
00:29making ourselves available, we are from the first moment
00:32spreading the little face of Lian.
00:35And well, the truth is that the feeling is of impotence,
00:39to think that a little boy of three years,
00:42in a very complex geographical context,
00:45with temperatures above 45 degrees,
00:48is lost for almost 48 hours.
00:54Ana, here at least the alert was quickly given to Sofia,
01:00there are traces, what can be done?
01:03In other words, how can we collaborate from the media
01:05and from the authorities to guarantee an exhaustive search?
01:10We always think that the media dissemination,
01:13the weight of the media on those who investigate,
01:17always contributes something productive.
01:22The fact that the whole country is aware of Lian
01:26will help those who know something
01:29feel forced to tell.
01:36Those who investigate and search and receive the information
01:43feel that there is a whole country that has been aware of this little boy.
01:47It cannot happen inadvertently to lose a three-year-old boy.
01:51A little while ago we were talking to the Minister of Security of Cordoba
01:56and from my ignorance, I asked him,
01:59it is not usual, because we know that there are sadly hot areas
02:03in the disappearance of children.
02:04I think of Corrientes, I think of Chaco, I think of Misiones.
02:07Tell me about your experience in Missing Children.
02:11Is Cordoba such a complex place?
02:14We do not have too many cases in Cordoba,
02:19but I clarify that Missing Children has a limited number of cases,
02:25because if we do not have many,
02:27not all the searches that occur in the country,
02:31not all the children who are lost in the country,
02:33are reported in Missing Children.
02:36So there are many more than we have.
02:39And we, in our experience,
02:41we do not have a large number of boys who have been lost in Cordoba.
02:47At the moment I do not remember precisely the name of any,
02:51surely some of the area of Cordoba we have,
02:55but it is not especially a situation like the one you are asking me.
03:03Now, Ana.
03:04A hot area.
03:05In general, the areas of the north, of the border, of Jujuy, of Corrientes, of Chaco,
03:11are much more complex areas.
03:15Ana, I appeal to your experience, without entering perhaps specifically in this case,
03:20but in all the cases that Missing Children has worked.
03:24A three-year-old boy whose search takes 48 hours.
03:30In how many similar cases has Missing Children had to work
03:36or has been aware, those boys appear?
03:42Well, what a difficult question.
03:45We actually have very few boys who get lost.
03:52We have had throughout the existence of Missing,
03:55many, many of which have not yet appeared.
03:59Notice that we have on our page 42 boys who got lost being minors
04:04and now they are adults and 30 years have passed.
04:07Bruno Gentiletti case, for example, from Santa Fe.
04:12There are many cases that have never appeared.
04:16And we also have many cases that are solved,
04:19because on our page, if you look, there are many little boys
04:24that in many cases are parental kidnappings.
04:29That is, they have gone with the mother or the father
04:32and they have crossed the border very easily
04:36without anyone stopping them and they are still lost.
04:41Well, we hope that at some point they will appear,
04:46but in reality it is difficult to establish a parameter
04:52because, well, so many boys appeared, it is difficult.
04:57There is also, I don't know if you have statistics
05:01or have an answer to this,
05:04most of the children who have been lost
05:07are suspected to be for illegal adoptions,
05:11for any type of abuse,
05:13whether it is child pornography or whatever,
05:16or what? Is there some kind of pattern in this?
05:21It is quite difficult to determine that too
05:24because the boys who do not appear,
05:26we do not know why they did not appear.
05:29It is a matter of logic.
05:31Now, most of the boys who appear
05:35are boys who have been lost
05:39because they have lost contact with their parents,
05:43they are teenagers, most of the province of Buenos Aires,
05:48who go on their own and return on their own.
05:51In some cases we suspect
05:53that there was a possibility of human trafficking,
05:57but since our task is to collaborate with the search,
06:03many times what happens after the boys appear,
06:08we don't even know it
06:10and we don't have to investigate to see what happened.
06:14That myth that they are taken for organ donation,
06:18I mean, is it true?
06:20Because once a colleague of yours told me
06:22that the structure that organ transplantation supposes
06:25is much more complex.
06:27Yes, we are in permanent contact with INCUCAI
06:31on this issue,
06:33because recently there was a lot of talk
06:36about the issue of organ sales
06:39and from INCUCAI they explain to us
06:42that it is very difficult
06:44because once an organ is obtained,
06:48it does not last more than 48 hours.
06:51And to be able to find an organism
06:54compatible with that organ
06:56and to have all the infrastructure
06:58that allows the transplant,
07:00it is almost impossible.
07:04So this organ sale,
07:07at least in our experience
07:09and in the cases that we have had
07:11obviously solved,
07:13we cannot say that this is a reason
07:17for the boys to be taken
07:19in our experience.
07:21Ana, I hope this case is different.
07:23What happens is that one finds many similarities,
07:26I don't know what your view is
07:28about the Loan case,
07:30about the Guadalupe Lucero case,
07:32because of the age of the child
07:35and because of the way it disappears.
07:38And the problem is that those cases
07:41that one sees as similar to today's
07:44are children who have not appeared anymore.
07:47Yes, obviously there is a lot of similarity
07:50especially with the Loan case.
07:52I think there is a difference.
07:55Well, first the alert was activated
07:58quite early,
08:00maybe there was also a delay
08:03because 24 hours later is a long time
08:07to find a lost child.
08:10But well, the alert was activated earlier
08:14and there is an attitude of justice
08:18that seems to me to protect information,
08:21which seems to me to be very good
08:24because evidently in the Loan case
08:27from the beginning the field got very dirty
08:31to put it in a metaphorical way,
08:36and I think that played against
08:39the number of contradictory versions
08:42that still exist because there are still
08:45a lot of detainees and we still don't know
08:48what happened with the Loan.
08:50So I think the difference is in that.
08:53In some cases, Ana,
08:55and this happens on my behalf,
08:57I think that many contradictory versions
09:00were launched to confuse,
09:02not to investigate.
09:04Ana, I don't know if we have Alejandro
09:06there in Ballesteros.
09:08Alejandro, tell me if there is any news
09:10about the meetings and what happens.