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Margaret Hassan

# margaret-hassan - 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.

# margaret-hassan - Wednesday 14 July, 2010

THE FAMILY of murdered aid worker Margaret Hassan have been informed that the man waiting to stand trial in connection with her murder has gone missing.

Ali Lutfi Jassar was sentenced to life imprisonment for his involvement in Hassan’s death in 2009 but won his right to a retrial.

Hassan’s sister, Deirdre Manchanda, said that her family had had previous concerns about Jassar’s whereabouts.  Their lawyer in Baghdad had expressed concern about Jassar’s  absence at all his appeal hearings.

Hassan was born in Ireland but had   lived  and worked in Iraq for over 30 years. She was married to an Iraqi and had joint Irish, British and Iraqi nationality.

Hassan was the director of CARE International’s operation in Iraq, and was abducted in October 2004 as she drove to work in western Baghdad.

She was shot several weeks later and her body has never been recovered.

The missing suspect, Jassar, was granted a retrial after he claimed that he was forced into signing a confession after being beaten and given electrical shocks during questioning.