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    Home»Latest News»Ecuador’s disappeared: Inside one family’s search for answers | Human Rights News
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    Ecuador’s disappeared: Inside one family’s search for answers | Human Rights News

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteJune 4, 2026No Comments2 Mins Read
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    While it might be true that the cases are progressing, families of the missing argue they are moving at a snail’s pace.

    Since early December, Fault Lines has spent time with families who are pushing for accountability and pleading with the government to learn what happened to their loved ones.

    In some cases, they have spent years without receiving any direct response.

    “It gets harder every time my nephew asks when his father will come home and I don’t have any answers,” said Rosario Villon, whose brother, Jonathan Villon, has been missing for almost a year and a half.

    The 31-year-old father of three was last seen on December 9, 2024, when he left to pick up groceries in his hometown of Guayaquil.

    Addressing a vigil for Jonathan last December, Rosario explained the toll his disappearance has taken on her family.

    “Seeing my mother cry for her son, not knowing what to do next to bring him home — it isn’t easy,” she said.

    Jonathan Villon, who disappeared in the custody of Ecuadorian soldiers, leaves behind a partner and three children, pictured here [Fault Lines/Al Jazeera]

    Fault Lines has reviewed footage of the day Jonathan was detained. Security cameras show soldiers patrolling Jonathan’s neighbourhood, Nueva Prosperina.

    A neighbour’s mobile phone video also captures the moments after Jonathan was forced into the truck’s bed, under a wooden bench. The truck then drives off, and he has not been seen since.

    The family recorded the licence plate numbers of the municipal vehicle the soldiers were using, but the military has refused to respond to requests about Jonathan’s case.

    “We have the evidence, we have videos, we have the licence plates of the truck, and they won’t give us a concrete and exact answer. What happened to my husband?” asked Jonathan’s partner, Yadira Bohorquez.

    Lawyers representing the family say the military simply declared that it had no operations in that area on that date, despite the video evidence.

    “The case of Jonathan Villon is completely paralysed by the refusal of the Ministry of Defence to cooperate in handing over information that the Prosecutor’s Office has already requested,” said Fernando Bastias, a lawyer with CDH Guayaquil, a human rights nonprofit representing the family.



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