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BrainHelp - Registered No:SCO35814
The key aim of our charity is to open Scotland's first UK Drop-In Neurocare Centre.
These 'Drop-In' centres will be designed to offer Brain injury victims and families specialized after care and rehabilitation facilities, regardless of ethnical, racial, cultural, age or financial background, with the first of these centres being earmarked for the Aberdeen area. Each centre will be staffed by qualified medical and advisory personnel who will offer a range of benefits.
This is a major undertaking, and one that cannot be achieved without the generosity and support of all sectors of the Scottish business community as well as recognition from the general public, and we are hopeful that you will appreciate the validity and vital necessity of our undertaking and contribute meaningfully to our project to enable us accomplish our objectives as early as possible.
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Suicide attack in Pakistani capital kills 15 (AP)

A Pakistani Police helmet is seen next to blood stains at the site where a bomb exploded next to Islamabad's radical Lal Masjid or Red Mosque, in Pakistan, on Sunday July 6, 2008. A suicide attacker detonated explosives near a police station in Pakistan's capital on Sunday, killing more than 10 police officers, officials said. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)AP - A suicide bomber targeted police officers in Pakistan's capital Sunday, killing at least 15 people and wounding dozens while thousands of Islamists marked the one-year anniversary of a deadly military crackdown on a mosque nearby.


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AP IMPACT: US wavered over S. Korean executions (AP)

In this photograph taken by the U.S. Army in April 1951, provided by the U.S. National Archives, South Korean troops shoot political prisoners near Daegu, South Korea. The South Korean government's Truth and Reconciliation Commission is investigating such mass political executions during the Korean War, and the U.S. military's connection with them. (AP Photo/National Archives, U.S. Army)AP - The American colonel, troubled by what he was hearing, tried to stall at first. But the declassified record shows he finally told his South Korean counterpart it "would be permitted" to machine-gun 3,500 political prisoners, to keep them from joining approaching enemy forces.


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