Health Improvement Initiatives in Africa and Kimse Yok Mu


Date posted: July 25, 2013

While the fight against the long-persisting health problems continues, the African continent has eventually witnessed a change for the better. In this regard, the eight Millennium Development Goals established by UN in 2000 consist of three relevant chapters, namely, reducing child mortality rates, improving maternal health and combatting epidemics including HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis.

The efforts made towards the target chapters to date and findings in 2013 UN Development Program report have indicated an upturn particularly in Africa.

Thanks to the recovery initiatives in Africa, maternal mortality decreased by 42% between 1990 and 2010 and under 5 child mortality by 47% over the same period. As for the epidemics, particularly in HIV diagnosis, transmission rate decreased from 5.9% to 4.9% between 2001 and 2011. And although malaria and tuberculosis still pose a threat to the continent, curbing their spread across the continent yielded a decrease in the mortality rate caused by these two epidemics.

Despite the positive turn in the continent, the targeted solution to health problems has not been achieved yet. Due to continent-wide poor living conditions, 32% of the population is suffering from severe cataract. Moreover, due to again poor conditions, undernourishment and such approximately 60% of the child population is suffering from frequent occurrence of umbilical hernia and uraniscochasma incidents.

Improvement of sanitation services and water wells established over the recent years by NGOs -such as Kimse Yok Mu- from countries all over the world including Turkey have contributed to the continent-wide recovery in Africa stricken with draught and health problems.

Such aid organizations including Kimse Yok Mu (KYM) still continue to support the African countries considerably in the way of recovery, by building hospitals and water wells, with volunteer doctors performing health screenings and cataract surgery in areas where it’s seriously needed, and by providing medical equipment and food aid.

Kimse Yok Mu Foundation -which operates through 41 chapters and humanitarian aid projects in 97 countries worldwide- in cooperation with Office of Prime Minister, Ministry of Health and TIKA (Turkey International Cooperation and Development Agency), carries on with various aid activities across the African continent. The activities are reinforced with emergency aid campaigns and project targeting sustainable development goals. The hospitals, schools, dormitory, soup kitchens, water wells and orphanages by KYM can be listed as examples of these initiatives.

Continent-wide deficiency of infrastructure and sewage treatment system -two indispensable prerequisites of a healthy living condition-, life threatening levels of polluted water in countries with drinking water systems, over-polluted waterholes, cesspools resulting in occurrence of epidemics such as malaria and many more call attentions to the need for water wells and sanitation service to provide clean drinking water, in particular, to the region.

As is known, over 2 million people around the world do not have access to sufficient and safe drinking water while 2.5 million have to survive unhygienic conditions. If the current trends continue, two-thirds of the world population is predicted to face a severe water scarcity by 2025. The Northern Africa and Middle East are reported to be the regions likely to suffer most. The cities particularly in these two regions are already faced with an increasing demand for water and sanitation services due to fast urbanization pace.

Through the permanent projects conducted by Kimse Yok Mu Foundation, a total of 383 water wells have been made available to the locals in nine countries over a 18-month period. Additionally, 109 water well projects in 5 different countries are well underway.

To date, a total of 64 medical screenings in seven countries in need have been performed across Africa by 350 volunteer doctors and supporting medical professionals from Turkey.

The foundation is organizing cataract campaigns across the continent in general and equatorial zone in particular. 13,841 cataract sufferers to date have restored their eyesight through the cataract surgeries in Sudan, Chad, Kameron, Niger and Central African Republic. In addition, the groundwork for future cataract campaigns in Mali, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Benin, Togo and Sierra Leone is underway. The campaigns are planned to launch by the end of the year.

The ongoing hospital constructions in Somalia, Uganda, Ethiopia and Kenya can be listed as the most typical examples of the foundation’s sustainable development projects which are aimed at fulfilling the medical needs. The hospitals underway in four different countries will be equipped with 35 beds, 2 operation theatres, 2 delivery rooms, 1 intensive care and newborn unit, 12 outpatient service rooms, radiology service and labs.

The hospitals will serve at the most needed departments in the region, namely, emergency service, oral and dental care, anesthesiology, pediatrics, general surgery, ophthalmology, internal medicine, gynecology, delivery and labor, otorhinolaryngology, neurosurgery, orthopedics, traumatology and urology.

Radiology departments of all the hospitals will offer tomography, X-ray and ultrasound scans while the labs provide blood, urinary, hormone and pathology tests. Besides, the hospitals aim to meet qualified staff shortage in healthcare across the continent by training local doctors and medical staff in respective departments. 35 medical professionals from Somalia and Sudan to date have received three to five months of practical trainings in ophthalmology, general surgery, gynecology and delivery, otorhinolaryngology and laboratory departments of medical schools and training/research hospitals in Turkey. The staff to be employed at all the hospitals will receive training in any department needed.

Such positive and promising medical developments in Africa will achieve even better results with ever-growing cooperation and joint projects from international aid organizations, NGOs and locals, and thus reducing the health problems to minimum.

Attainment and sustainability of these projects will be possible only through cooperation of dependable partners in Africa. Kimse Yok Mu cooperates with local administrations and authorities besides NGOs in order to be able to benefit the region more. It is of great importance that such partnerships increasingly continue for the initiatives to grow and be more effective.

It is KYM’s hope that through all these initiatives and efforts carried out with contributions from local administrations and authorities, all troubles of the African people will yield to a bright future.

Source: HizmetMovement.Com , July 19, 2013


Related News

Nigerian Turkish Foundation donates educational materials to Lagos schools

Lagos State Commissioner for Education, Mrs. Olayinka Oladunjoye has restated the need for individuals and private organizations to partner with the State government in order to raise the standard of education in the State.

Turks Fleeing Persecution Find Haven in South Africa

Gulenist businessman Nevi Gozur says he has been denounced as a terrorist for the charity work his family does with Hizmet in exile. “They say even my wife is a terrorist, for giving food to the poor, but we won’t renounce living according to our values,” he said.

Kimse Yok Mu to attend Global Consultation ahead of World Humanitarian Summit

Turkish charity Kimse Yok Mu (Is Anyone There?) has been invited to attend the Global Consultation, a meeting being held at the International Conference Centre (CICG) in Geneva, Switzerland between Oct. 14-16 to negotiate proposals concerning humanitarian aid that will serve as a basis for the World Humanitarian Summit scheduled for May 2016.

Earthquakes strengthen Taiwan, Turkey friendship

Christie Chen Friday 21 September, 2012 Two major earthquakes that struck 13 years ago far apart from each other, have brought two distant countries – Taiwan and Turkey – together on the path of humanitarian aid. “I was certain that my house was going to collapse,” Turkey-based Taiwanese businessman Faisal Hu recalled the night of […]

NGO: plot to take over Turkish schools will fail in Africa

Mrs. Osuji said Hizmet Movement schools, otherwise known as Turkish schools, are contributing to the development of education in Nigeria and other African countries. She urged African governments to resist any plot by the Turkish government to undermine their sovereignties and respectability by accepting its disguised order to hand over the Turkish schools to Maarif Foundation.

Swinging between hope and despair – Opposing news from Yemen

Levent Koç* We are in an era where we are swinging between hope and despair. More things push us towards despair than what makes us hopeful. Recently, I read two news stories about Yemen; one hurt my hope, the other refreshed it. Yemen is a poor country, often mentioned in the world media because of […]

Latest News

Turkish inmate jailed over alleged Gülen links dies of heart attack in prison

Message of Condemnation and Condolences for Mass Shooting at Bondi Beach, Sydney

Media executive Hidayet Karaca marks 11th year in prison over alleged links to Gülen movement

ECtHR faults Turkey for convictions of 2,420 applicants over Gülen links in follow-up to 2023 judgment

New Book Exposes Erdoğan’s “Civil Death Project” Targeting the Hizmet Movement

European Human Rights Treaty Faces Legal And Political Tests

ECtHR rejects Turkey’s appeal, clearing path for retrials in Gülen-linked cases

Erdoğan’s Civil Death Project’ : The ‘politicide’ spanning more than a decade

Fethullah Gülen’s Vision and the Purpose of Hizmet

In Case You Missed It

Pakistan submits to Turkey’s ‘authoritarian demands’ on Gulen

Jailed police chief’s children, aged 15 and 17, detained in new post-coup probe

Plot against Gülen movement in tatters as suspects confess to false testimony

Think over extradition request [for Gulen] with care

Or is it Gülenophobia?

Police detain another woman shortly after delivery, bringing total to 16

Students visiting Turkey bid one another a teary farewell

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News