La distancia
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Dates2017 - Ongoing
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Author
- Topics Social Issues, Contemporary Issues, Documentary
- Locations El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala
Through an emotional journey, this photography Investigation explores the meaning of forced disappearances in Central America Northern triangle.
“If we do not find her at the end of the day she will be lost forever, I’m sorry for her mum,” says the forensic anthropologist and criminologist Israel Ticas, while looking at the thick vegetation around him. He is digging into the woods in a remote area controlled by the street gang the Mara Salvatrucha to find Reina Isabella Sanchez, a 20 years old girl who disappeared in 2013. She was the girlfriend of a policeman. Reina will never be located.
In the area of the so-called “Northern Triangle,” which is home to Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala, in the last forty years, violence has become part of life like the region’s periodic volcanic eruptions. Beyond the average murder rate of a war zone, nowadays people are not just being killed, but they are actually vanishing.
Street gangs such as La Mara Salvatrucha (MS13) and other criminal organizations rule over the population by fear: "Ver, oir y callar" (look, listen and shut up) is a motto you see on the walls all around the country, where the gangs dictate people's life.
Governments’ reaction to the raising of organized crime and violence has been open war, In a sort of utopian idea in which violence should end violence.
In this context, The Northern Triangle has seen for more than a decade a systematic use of forced disappearance by criminal groups and law enforcement which blurred their role in a battlefield over the control of territory through fear.
The only Criminologist in El Salvador, mothers who can’t find their loved ones and Sicarios become the chorus of a painful melody revealing a grey area, where resilience, love, and dignity lay.