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          Abducted aid worker in Iraq begs for life
          (Agencies)
          Updated: 2004-10-23 08:07

          Trembling, haggard and weeping into a tissue, Margaret Hassan, the kidnapped British aid worker who has spent nearly half her life delivering food and medicine in Iraq, begged Britain on Friday to help save her by withdrawing its troops, saying these "might be my last hours."


          Margaret Hassan, the kidnapped director of CARE International in Iraq, appears in this image made from television in a videotape aired by the Arabic television station Al-Jazeera, Friday, Oct. 22, 2004. Hassan is seen weeping and pleading with British Prime Minister Tony Blair to withdraw troops from Iraq 'and not bring them to Baghdad' because 'this might be my last hours.' 'Please help me. Please help me,' said a terrified Hassan, breaking down in tears and burying her face in a tissue. She said she might be killed like British hostage Kenneth Bigley, who was beheaded by his captors earlier this month. [AP]
          The gaunt, 59-year-old woman's wrenching, televised statement — delivered between sobs — puts new political pressure on Prime Minister Tony Blair's government, a day after it agreed to a U.S. request to transfer 850 British soldiers from southern Iraq to the Baghdad area to free American forces for new offensives against insurgents.

          "Please help me, please help me," Hassan, who heads CARE International's operations in Iraq, said in a grainy videotape broadcast by Al-Jazeera television. "This might be my last hours. Please help me. Please, the British people, ask Mr. Blair to take the troops out of Iraq, and not to bring them here to Baghdad."

          Blair's decision to redeploy the troops drew strong criticism from within his Labour party, and Hassan's desperate appeal is likely to stoke opposition among the British public, where support for the Iraq mission has never been as strong as in the United States.

          "That's why people like Mr. Bigley and myself are being caught," Hassan said, referring to British hostage Kenneth Bigley, who was beheaded this month. "And maybe we will die like Mr. Bigley. Please, please, I beg of you."


          A video grab image shows British-Iraqi hostage Margaret Hassan making an emotional appeal for British forces to withdraw from Iraq in a videotape broadcast an Arabic television channel October 22, 2004. "Please help me, please help me," Hassan, who works for aid agency Care International, was shown saying while crying. She said she could face the same fate as British hostage Kenneth Bigley, who was decapitated by his captors earlier this month. [Reuters]

          A video grab image shows British-Iraqi hostage Margaret Hassan making an emotional appeal for British forces to withdraw from Iraq in a videotape broadcast an Arabic television channel October 22, 2004.

          A video grab image shows British-Iraqi hostage Margaret Hassan wiping her face as she makes an emotional appeal for British forces to withdraw from Iraq in a videotape broadcast by an Arabic television channel October 22, 2004. [Reuters]
          Iraqi extremists have often subjected foreign hostages to such humiliating performances, exploiting their agony to win concessions from their employers or governments, stir up opposition to U.S.-led operations in the country and win recruits from within the Muslim world.

          Unlike most previous hostage tapes, however, this one featured no hooded gunmen, no banners identifying the militant group and no explicit demands for the captive's freedom. Al-Jazeera, the Qatar-based station, said it received the tape Friday but did not say where or how.

          In an interview with Fox News, Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi called the Hassan kidnapping a "tragedy" but added: "Nobody is going to ... give in to their demands."

          "We have to remain very strong and adamant that we should bring the terrorists to justice," Allawi said.

          Hassan, who is married to an Iraqi, was seized by gunmen Tuesday in western Baghdad as she rode to work in her car. She appeared in the Friday tape wearing what appeared to be a robe or house dress. A tape released on the day of her abduction showed her wearing a white blouse with a round collar.


          A file photo of Margaret Hassan. [AFP]
          Evan F. Kohlmann, a terrorism expert in Washington, noted that Hassan was abducted after Britain and the United States refused to release women prisoners as demanded by Bigley's kidnappers.

          Militants have kidnapped at least seven other foreign women over the past six months, and all were released. In September, Italian aid workers Simona Torretta and Simona Pari, both 29, were kidnapped from their Baghdad offices; they were freed three weeks later.

          By contrast, at least 33 foreign male hostages have been killed, including three Americans beheaded by their captors. Insurgents, nevertheless, have targeted Iraqi women working for the Americans or their allies, including a deadly ambush Thursday on a bus carrying female airline employees on their way to work at Baghdad airport.

          Dawoud Abdullah of the British Islamic Council told Al-Jazeera from London that his organization was making "official and unofficial contacts" to try to win Hassan's release.

          "We are disappointed. We hope that it is not a Muslim group that is behind this act, especially that this woman has done a lot for Iraq throughout the years," Abdullah said. "A Muslim does not repay good with evil."

          In London, British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw described Friday's videotape as "extremely distressing" and called for Hassan's immediate release.

          Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern noted that Hassan "is a person who has selflessly worked for the benefit of her Iraqi fellow citizens and fought for the rights of the Iraqi people for many years."

          Hassan is a citizen of Britain, Ireland and Iraq, and has done aid work in this country for nearly 30 years. She joined CARE soon after it began operations in Iraq in 1991, managing a staff of 60 Iraqis who run nutrition, health and water programs throughout the country.

          She was a vocal opponent of international sanctions on Iraq and warned British lawmakers before last year's U.S.-led invasion that a conflict could produce a humanitarian crisis in a country already severely weakened by the embargoes.

          Hassan is the most prominent of the more than 150 foreigners kidnapped in Iraq. She is widely known for her charity work in the Middle East, was born in Dublin and was naturalized as an Iraqi after her marriage. Her age had been unclear, but CARE said Friday that she is 59.

          The Macedonian Foreign Ministry confirmed Friday that three Macedonian contractors kidnapped in Iraq on Aug. 21 had been beheaded. A Turkish welder, Abdurrahman Yildirim, escaped this week from his Iraqi captors who left a door open, his uncle said Friday.

          Bigley's kidnappers identified themselves as members of Tawhid and Jihad, Iraq's most feared extremist group, led by Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. Bigley was kidnapped on Sept. 16 along with two Americans, who were beheaded within days.

          U.S. officials believe al-Zarqawi's headquarters is in Fallujah, the insurgent bastion 40 miles west of Baghdad. American forces have clashed with militants around Fallujah for weeks, and it is widely believed that the move to redeploy British troops is a signal that an all-out assault on the city is near.



           
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