FUNDENL
Fuerzas Unidas por Nuestros Desaparecidos en Nuevo León (FUNDENL) is a non-governmental organisation formally established in 2012 in the state of Nuevo León, Mexico. Its primary purpose is to search for and locate victims of forced disappearance or by individuals, as well as to encourage and support the defence, promotion and respect for human rights. FUNDENL is formed by relatives of missing persons and people who carry out solidarity accompaniment or activists who empathise with the issue.[1]
The organisation began with two mothers of missing persons who exhausted the institutional means to search for their sons; together with solidarity activists, they gathered more families to search for their relatives and loved ones by their own means.[2] Their main slogan is "Because they were taken alive, and we want them alive".[3]
FUNDENL, in addition to carrying out search work; also has a registry of missing persons in Nuevo Leon and other states of the country; participates in national meetings on the subject of missing persons; denounces cases of disappearance in public spaces; publishes papers to disseminate their struggle and communicate the problem nationally and internationally. Among the activities and acts of collective memory that have been carried out is Embroidery for Peace in Nuevo Leon (Bordados por la Paz), among other artistic practices.[4]
Raising awareness about forced disappearance is also part of the NGO's advocacy. This is because people who have been disappeared are stigmatised and criminalised by society.[5] FUNDENL has launched campaigns on social media to make citizens aware that disappearance happens more commonly than people think.
The members of FUNDENL carried out practices of memory by appropriating and redesigning a public space in the city of Monterrey, Nuevo León, which became known as "La Plaza de la Transparencia" (The Plaza of Transparency). In that place there was a monument made of metal and glass where they began to place the names of their disappeared relatives with the intention that upon their return, their own relatives would remove their names from the monument, today this place is known as "The Plaza of the Disappeared" and the monument was transformed into a space for their memory.[5]
Among its international advocacy is the struggle of one of the members and founders, Irma Leticia Hidalgo, mother of Roy Rivera Hidalgo who has been missing since January 11, 2011. She took her case to the UN Human Rights Committee, which recognised that the Mexican State "did not prove that the investigation into the disappearance of Roy Rivera Hidalgo had been carried out with due diligence". Likewise, the Committee considered that Leticia Hidalgo "has sufficiently substantiated her allegations and that the State Prosecutor's Office has not duly refuted that the disappearance is attributable to the State".[6]