Key Points
- Chile's government has launched a national search plan to unearth new leads in the victims of forced disappearance.
- Thousands of victims in Chile, Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay have yet to be found.
- On 11 September, Chile will mark half a century since the 1973 coup against then president Salvador Allende.
Luz Encina, 94, sets out from San Antonio in Chile in a small, rented boat clutching a fistful of red flowers to cast into the Pacific Ocean, which she believes to be the final resting place of her son.
Mauricio Jorquera was only 19 when he became one of at least under the military regime of Augusto Pinochet five decades ago. More than fled into exile.
Every August, Encina repeats the ritual: travelling about 110 kilometres from Santiago where she lives to the port city of San Antonio to shed tears at what she believes to be the watery grave of her son, on his birthday.
"The soldiers said that they threw various people into the sea and that my son could be there," Encina, who is nearly blind and walks with difficulty, told AFP.
"I've been looking for my son for 50 years and I still have no answer," she said. "When I find something, some little thing, anything, I'll feel better."
Encina is one of a dwindling number of mothers of disappeared leftist activists -- real or presumed - still alive.
She saw her son for the last time on 5 August 1974, on his 19th birthday, when he was arrested by Pinochet's political police.
He was a university student and activist for the Movement of the Revolutionary Left (MIR).
Encina spent years looking for any clues as to his fate at the many centres where the regime detained and tortured political opponents.
Women at an activity in Santiago, Chile to commemorate the International Day of the Detained and Disappeared. Source: AAP / Karin Pozo
Decades after Pinochet's downfall and the arrival of democracy in Chile, the fates of only 307 have been determined.
Women dancing in Santiago, Chile to commemorate the International Day of the Detained and Disappeared. Source: AAP / Karin Pozo
'The whole truth'
On Wednesday, the government of leftist Gabriel Boric unveiled a plan - the first-ever such government initiative in Chile - to find out what happened to the remaining 1,162 people listed as disappeared.
"Justice has taken too long," he said at the launch.
"The only way to build a future that is more free and respectful of life and human dignity is to know the whole truth," the president added.
Until now, the onerous task of tracing the disappeared has rested solely on the shoulders of loved ones and family members such as Emilia Vasquez, 87, whose eldest son Miguel Heredia was 23 when he was arrested in December 1973.
Today, a mural of his face adorns the street in which she lives, and where she raised her children. It is one of few mementos she has left: soldiers took most of Heredia's belongings when they arrested the Communist Youth member.
After he was taken away, Vasquez brought blankets and medicines to the prison where he was being held, but was never able to see him.
Miguel Heredia was 23 when he was arrested in December 1973. Today, a mural of his face adorns the street in which his mother lives, and where she raised her children. Source: AAP / Esteban Felix
She never saw him again.
"In the year 2000, some people from I don't know where, told me not to look for my son anymore because they had thrown him into the sea," Vasquez said.
But she still does not know for sure.
In 2014, six retired soldiers were sentenced to between five and 15 years in jail for the kidnapping of Miguel Heredia.
And in March this year, Chile's Supreme Court convicted 59 former soldiers for the "kidnapping and torture" of 16 leftist activists, including Mauricio Jorquera.
How they died, and their final resting places, however, remain unknown.