Blogs highlighting the work of staff and volunteers within the British Red Cross, part of the largest humanitarian organisation movement in the world.
By Jamie
August 3, 2009 at 11:45 am
Sara Bainbridge is one brilliant supporter.
When Sara was awarded a spot on the Fourth Plinth last Thursday, she decided to use her time publicising the importance of refugee services. The Fourth Plinth is a public art exhibit that gives individuals the opportunity to do pretty much anything they want, for one hour, high above the ground in Trafalgar Square.
Here’s a video of Sara describing her efforts:
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During her hour on the plinth she spent her time quizzing the public on their knowledge of refugees in the UK. Here are two of her quiz questions:
Question: How many missing family members did the British Red Cross trace in 2008?
Answer: When families are separated due to conflict, disaster or migration, we work worldwide to trace missing relatives and put them back in touch. In 2008, the British Red Cross traced 476 people.
Question: When is the Day of the Disappeared?
Answer: The International Day of the Disappeared is on August 30. It is a United Nations-recognised annual commemoration day for individuals who have gone missing in armed conflicts or other situations of violence and whose fate is unresolved.
>>Do you have a family member you’d like to find? Learn more about international tracing or contact your local Red Cross office.
Tags: 4th plinth, day of the disappeared, fourth plinth, international tracing and message service, itms, plinth, red cross
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This entry was posted on Monday, August 3rd, 2009 at 11:45 am and is filed under Health and social care. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
I'm the social media officer at British Red Cross.
Other posts by Jamie
The British Red Cross values comments both complimentary and critical. However, we will not tolerate the following: aggressive or personal criticism of the blogger, breach of copyright, obscene, defamatory, profane, sexually oriented, racially offensive or likewise objectionable comments.
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