
Robert Pether released on bail after four years in Iraqi jail
Simon Harris
has been informed that an
Australian
citizen who has been living in Ireland has been released on bail after spending four years in an
Iraqi
prison.
Robert Pether and his wife Desree have been living in Elphin,
Co Roscommon
for a number of years.
The engineer was helping to design the central bank in Baghdad and was set to work on three hospitals.
However, there was a contract dispute between his employer and the Central Bank of Iraq, which led to him and his Egyptian work colleague Khalid Radwan being imprisoned.
READ MORE
The pair were sentenced to five years and fined $12 million by an Iraqi court.
Mr Pether was detained in April 2021 and was found guilty of deception in a 'kangaroo court', according to his wife.
Mr Pether has been in an Iraqi jail since then and his family have feared for his health.
They have been lobbying the Government for help since his arrest.
In a statement the Tánaiste said that he has been 'informed' of Mr Pether's release and whose 'imprisonment in Iraq has been a case of great concern'.
The Tánaiste said he had spoken with Iraq's foreign minister Fuad Hussein last month to urge him to release the Australian.
'I was informed that Robert has been released on bail and for the moment he remains in Iraq, but I welcomed this as a first step to his being allowed to return to his family in Roscommon,' Mr Harris said.
'We remain concerned about Robert's health and outstanding charges, but I am hopeful now of a positive resolution in this case.'
He also confirmed that he had spoken with Ms Pether about the 'positive development' in her husband's case and thanked the ongoing work of Irish officials living in the region on the issue.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Journal
2 hours ago
- The Journal
Should road tolls be lifted for the All-Ireland final?
AS THE ALL-IRELAND football final approaches this weekend, Michael Healy-Rae is suggesting that road tolls should be lifted to make it easier for Kerry and Donegal fans heading to Croke Park. Speaking to Newstalk Breakfast this morning, the Kerry TD proposed removing motorway tolls to reduce both traffic on the roads and the financial burden on supporters, calling it 'the right thing to do'. Advertisement Healy-Rae said that he wouldn't be as passionate about implementing a similar measure for other big events, such as concerts, arguing that they don't draw the same number of people travelling for the All-Ireland final. So, what do you think: Should road tolls be lifted for the All-Ireland final? Poll Results: No (480) Yes (162) It should happen for all big events (100) Unsure (13) Yes No It should happen for all big events Unsure Vote


Irish Times
6 hours ago
- Irish Times
Parents at ‘wits end' over failure to provide special care bed for teenager with ‘overdose tendencies'
The parents of a vulnerable teenager are 'at their wits end' as there is no bed available for their child across three units, the High Court has heard. As recently as last week, a judge ordered that the teenager be taken into special care for their own safety. There are 'significant concerns' for the safety of the child who is 'suicidal' with 'overdose tendencies', said Sarah McKechnie, barrister for Tusla . 'It is my understanding a bed won't be available until in or around August 25th.' The young person is in hospital following a recent overdose and the parents are refusing to allow them to be discharged, said Brendan Hennessy, barrister for the parents, adding this approach was 'a last-ditch effort' to keep the teenager safe. READ MORE Mr Justice John Jordan last week granted orders to Tusla in respect of three children who the agency said needed special care – the most secure form of care available – for their own safety. No beds were available then, but two became available on Tuesday, leaving one child in crisis with no place. 'My clients can't understand why the High Court order has not been complied with,' said Mr Hennessy. Thursday's sitting was the first weekly special-care list since June 19th to include a 'no beds' section. Five weeks ago, Mr Justice Jordan said it was like 'winning the All-Ireland' to know every child in crisis who needed a special care bed had one. It was, he said, the 'first time' in more than six months there wasn't a 'no beds' list. 'I want to see the situation which is now existing maintained,' he said, adding that he hoped he was 'not tempting fate'. On Thursday, he said it was 'quite absurd that we are seeing no-bed cases reappear on the list . . . I hope that [the child] will get a bed without any further delay'. Though there are 26 special-care beds in the State, just 16 are operational due to difficulties recruiting and retaining staff, the court heard. Mr Hennessy said he would be issuing plenary proceedings against Tusla for its alleged failings in the child's care. The bed due to be available in August 'isn't guaranteed' and the child's parents wanted the court 'to utilise any tool available . . . to try to get compliance with court order', Mr Hennessy said. He suggested a 'per diem fine' be levied for every day the child was not in special care. The judge said 'trotting out a solution like per diem fines' while he was 'on [his] feet' was not 'how [suggested solutions] should be done'. He said 'a lot of findings will have to be made' before he could consider it. His court had examined why 10 special care beds remained unavailable in June of last year and found inadequate staffing to be the main reason. 'It is difficult to find culpability where there is inability to solve a problem despite the best efforts of [Tusla],' he told Mr Hennessy. 'So I will consider what you said but frankly, it is not a discussion that should be had at all. [Tusla] and the relevant departments are aware of a court order in existence . . . which is not being complied with in circumstances where the State agency knows the life, safety, development and welfare of this child is in jeopardy.' The court earlier heard one of the other children in respect of whom a special care order had been made had not been located. The young teenager had been discharged from special care some months ago but had repeatedly absconded from their follow-on placement and was found on one occasion in an overdosed state. 'Steps are being taken to locate [them],' the court heard on Thursday.


Irish Times
6 hours ago
- Irish Times
Thirty two children from the West Bank watched the All-Ireland in Jordan. This wasn't the plan
The cheering coming from a hotel room in Amman last Sunday sprang from an astonishing source. Gathered in front of a big screen, 32 Palestinian children from the West Bank were watching the All-Ireland final on the GAAGO streaming service. Some were sporting Tipperary jerseys, a gift from a donor. After the final whistle, one of the boys produced a length of string and fashioned it into a clothes line over the bath upon which he hung his precious Gaelic jersey to dry after washing it. Such resourcefulness is second nature to a child who has lived all his life in a refugee camp; as have his parents and his grandparents. The children – avid hurlers and camogie players aged from nine to 16 – should have been in Ireland, but they and 14 adult mentors were refused visas by the Department of Justice . 'But Ireland loves us,' they responded, confused, when the tour organisers, GAA Palestine, told them their visit to 152 waiting host families had to be cancelled . When Mohammed cannot come to the mountain, the mountain must come to Mohammed. A group of volunteers flew from Ireland to Jordan last Friday to give the children an alternative holiday there. One teenager failed to make it across the border from the West Bank because his requisite school certificate had burned to ashes when the Israel Defense Forces attacked his camp. On the day the other 32 left their homes in Ramallah and the Tulkarm, Jenin and Am'ari camps, soldiers shot a 13-year-old boy dead. Amr Ali Qabha had unwittingly walked down a road in Jenin where soldiers were present during violent raids by Israeli settlers. When he rounded a bend and saw them, Amr turned to go back. They shot him seven times – in the neck, abdomen, back, groin and right thigh. As he lay dying, the soldiers prevented an ambulance from going to his aid. READ MORE 'But Ireland loves us,' the children said. That is true, the GAA Palestine volunteers reassured them and showed them videos on their phones of last Saturday's solidarity protests when tens of thousands of people took to the streets of this country. These children need tender loving care. They've lost parents. They have family members in prisons, in detention with no charges. They are refugees all their lives. They are repeatedly displaced. They see the crops being burned, the sheep being killed. They need to be able to spend time without a gun in their face — Volunteer Claire Liddy 'Let them come,' the marchers had chanted. 'They say that for us?' wondered the children. They are not the only ones who are confused by the contradiction between Ireland's policy of solidarity on the Occupied Territories and how it treats the victim-occupants. The Government, admirably, has withstood orchestrated international opprobrium for its decision to officially recognise Palestinian statehood, which culminated in Israel shutting its embassy in Dublin. The Occupied Territories Bill currently before the Oireachtas has elicited accusations of anti-Semitism and warnings of ruination for the Irish economy. The US ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee , a Southern Baptist pastor and former Fox News talkshow host, dredged the muck of drunken-Paddies stereotypes, unapologetic for his own racism. [ Heartbreak as Palestinian GAA players are refused visas to visit Ireland Opens in new window ] To its credit, the Oireachtas appears resolved to outlaw trade with illegal Israeli settlers in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Injecting steel into that resolve is the knowledge that since last January and up until last week, according to United Nations agency OCHA , 162 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. At least 32 of the dead were children. The killings and illegal seizures of Palestinian homes and farms, with the assistance of Israeli soldiers, have been a fact of life throughout the lives of the children watching Tipperary beat Cork last Sunday. As it becomes ever more obvious that Israel is trying to kill as many Gazans as it can while it still can with complicit way-leave by the US, Germany and the EU, Micheál Martin's condemnations have become more forthright and fearless. Yet Ireland's defence of Palestinians' freedom is a strange kind of love. GAA Palestine applied in February for the summer tour visas. It was only at the eleventh hour this month that the Department of Justice notified the organisation the visas were being refused, citing a failure to produce sufficient documents. Stephen Redmond, GAA Palestine's chairman who is currently in Jordan, countered that all required documentations had been submitted; in fact, more than ever before for past tours. One West Bank group having to abandon its plans might be presumed a glitch or merely the pedantry of some stickler officials in the department's visa section, but two suggests a pattern. The Lajee Centre in the West Bank town of Bethlehem has had to postpone its planned tour to Ireland by 40 musicians and dancers this month after failing to obtain timely decisions on their visa applications. It would have been the third visit organised by the cultural centre. The hurt, confusion, upheaval and disappointment caused by these aborted tours can but be imagined. [ Exhausted and imprisoned: how life in the West Bank is getting worse for Palestinians Opens in new window ] 'These children need tender loving care,' volunteer Claire Liddy told me on the phone from the Jordanian side of the Dead Sea on Tuesday, during an outing with the young Palestinian hurlers. 'They've lost parents. They have family members in prisons, in detention with no charges. They live in camps. They are refugees all their lives. They are repeatedly displaced; some twice since May alone. They see the crops being burned [by Israeli settlers], the sheep being killed. They need to be able to spend time without a gun in their face.' Ireland's stringent admission policy for Palestinians also strikes a contrast with how it has treated Ukrainians, who do not require a visitor's visa. Within months of the Russian invasion in February 2022, this country was, rightly, accommodating 42,000 Ukrainian war refugees. Meanwhile, 208 Palestinians have been refused short-stay visas since Israel began its killing rampage in Gaza in October 2023 , according to data published by While there is a distinction to be made between a campaign of all-out war and a prolonged campaign of violent and illegal annexation, the ultimate consequences are the same for those on the receiving end. The common factor between what Israel is doing in Gaza and in the West Bank is an international crime called ethnic cleansing. The methods may differ – aerial bombardment, mass killings and man-made famine in Gaza; systemic discrimination, forced displacement and murders in the West Bank – but they belong to the same grand plan to colonise the Palestinian territories.