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From The Score Concern

# concern - Sunday 22 August, 2010

THE MAN convicted of the murder of aid worker Margaret Hassan in 2004 has officially been confirmed to have escaped from prison.

Iraq’s Deputy Justice Minister said that Ali Lutfi Jassar al-Rawi had escaped his life sentence for murder, stating:

This guy, he escaped from prison… People facilitated his escape, he is gone.

The family of Hassan had raised the alarm months ago about something being wrong after their lawyer noted his alarm at Rawi being absent from all of his appeal hearings.

No group ever claimed responsibility for the kidnap and murder of Hassan, who had campaigned for the rights of Iraqis for decades.

Her body has never been found.

59-year-old Margaret Hassan has been described by her friend, journalist Robert Fisk, as “a proverbial tower of strength”.

Fisk writes in the Independent:

It was Margaret who took leukaemia medicines donated by readers of The Independent to the child cancer victims of Iraq back in 1998 after we discovered that hundreds of infants were dying in those areas where Western forces used depleted uranium munitions in the 1991 Gulf War.

…it was she – and she alone – who managed to persuade Saddam Hussein’s bureaucrats to let us bring the medicine into Iraq.

# concern - Friday 20 August, 2010

IRELAND HAS pledged a further €1.19m to Pakistan as the floods hitting the country cause yet more devastation, the Minister for Overseas Development Peter Power has announced.

The extra money will bring the total fund to €2m.

Speaking at an emergency meeting of the UN General Assembly, which coincided with World Humanitarian Day, Power said that the Pakistan disaster was of such a magnitude that it needs a global response – and the UN must be at its centre.

“Humanitarian disasters do not respect annual calendars and we are now faced with a further enormous challenge in the flooding situation in Pakistan. I would appeal to all our partner governments represented here today to keep up the momentum on the humanitarian response to this disaster.”

Speaking to the Irish Times, Power said that the sheer scale and magnitude of the Pakistan disaster is hard to convey, and added:

There are seven million people with no homes, no water, no food and increasingly, and more worryingly, no medicines. That’s at a very minimum the number in immediate need of emergency assistance. There are 15 million people who are in need of other assistance.

Ireland has so far given €810,000 to the people of Pakistan through Concern and Trócaire. A further €150,000 is being provided by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

# concern - Monday 2 August, 2010

IRISH CHARITY Concern is releasing over €500,000 in funds to aid relief efforts in flooded areas of Pakistan. The charity has also begun a €5m appeal to aid rebuilding and disaster relief in the effected areas. It is estimated that over 1,500 people are dead as a result of the worst floods in 80 years.