©CICV/ref. ao-e-00166
Luanda, ICRC Central Tracing Agency office. Unaccompanied child being photographed in order to be recognized by her family.
The extended civil war in Angola (1975-2002) resulted in huge displacements of population and the separation of families both within the country and across international borders. Within Angola, barriers between areas controlled by the different parties to the conflict, coupled with the threat of landmines, meant that many areas were cut off. This has resulted in a large number of cases where the loss of family contact dates back to the first decades of the war. Working in cooperation with the Angola Red Cross (Cruz Vermelha de Angola, CVA) the ICRC has set up a major tracing programme and opened 73 tracing offices in each municipality to allow the Angolan people to: re-establish and maintain family links interrupted during the war, open tracing requests to find family members whose fate or location is unknown, find families of separated children, and trace children based on parental requests.
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Please help us to clarify the fate of people who are unaccounted for.
If you see your name on the list, or the name of one of your relatives, and/or if you have accurate information on people being sought by their relatives, please click on "Contact ICRC" in the person's record.
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![]() The FamilyLinks website offers the following services to victims of this conflict: Services
The Angolan Family Links website provides three different lists containing information collected by the ICRC/CVA concerning people sought by their families in connection with the conflict in Angola.
(Last update 26.06.2008) (Last update 26.06.2008) (Last update 26.06.2008) This page in other languages: For further information:
ICRC delegations
National Red Cross or Red Crescent offices |