and bathroom. Also provided is outside cooking facilities and a fenced back yard in which the families can grow vegetables. Each unit is provided with a bed, wardrobe, chest of drawers, settee, armchair and coffee table. Blocks 2, 3, and 4, will each contain 6 units. This work will be undertaken by a new contractor, Mr Jim Wadda, a Rotarian from Fajara Rotary Club, his nick name is Jim'll Fix It, and he does. The Rotarian motto is Service Above Self and this man epitomises that to the full; he always goes that extra mile.
This new accommodation is the key to retaining staff in Africa instead of losing them to Europe. Although we do not yet have the full funding to finish this project, for the first time in the hospitals history we have staff asking to be transferred to Bansang.
MITIE
The MITIE house has not yet been started. The sheer size of the project and the logistics of getting materials onto site have slowed things down. This house is to be totally self-sufficient and will provide accommodation for 12 single staff plus a community room and library.
Meanwhile MITIE are going to install solar power in the Children's Unit. When this is running we will have 24-hour power. Again this is not a simple, straightforward project; it involves the enormous task of moving the panels, and the 1½ tons of batteries from source to site. Parts will be coming from Canada, Australia, and Germany. Specially built battery houses will be required - you can't just put a panel up and plug it into the electrical circuit. Mark Lowrey and Adam Nott will be travelling to Bansang in late October to begin the installation as long as `Jim'll Fix It' has sailed the parts up the river Gambia to the hospital in time.
Bob Parfitt
Bob looks after the non-medical side of the hospital, lower basic school, and nurseries with a roll call of around 2000 children. Since April we have sent a further 40ft container. I do thank Bob for his dedication to Bansang. Every day sees him and teams of volunteers working to improve the lives of these people. Collecting and sorting the many donations of furniture, office equipment, school equipment and toiletries, you name it he sources it - usually free. His next visit to Bansang will be in January.
Mariama and Alhagie - latest news of our two amputees
Mariama has fulfilled her dying Grandmothers wish of visiting her. She and her uncle travelled to Guinea Bissau, a long and dangerous journey. Grandma had not seen her since she was 2 when her leg was amputated. Mariama is now back at school with a further two years to go before starting her SEN training. Meg and John, Julies' parents, sponsor her and watch over her like a daughter.
Alhagie's wife will give birth to their first child in October. Apparently I am going to be one of the Grandmothers!!
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Other News
Good news, the perimeter wall, locally known as the Perry Meter wall has been completed thanks to the generosity of the UKGSer. This will keep the site and wards safe from wandering animals such as feral dogs cats, goats etc. The full funding for the wall has not yet been reached so if anyone would like to purchase their book `Scooters in the Sahara' an account of their trip from Blighty to Bansang. This remarkable book costs £25 plus postage from Dennis Robinson.
phone 01267-222877 or on-line
SAGA Magazine.
I have become a cover girl! For the first time in their history a non-celeb hit the August front cover. Definitely my biggest claim to fame. With Alhagie making me a Grandmother and SAGA I am getting a tad concerned!!
Youth Works
Cycles donated by the public have been renovated by a group of teenagers in Kettering. Their group leader John Garner said they were keen to work for such a worthwhile cause and had learned new skills in the process. This is an ongoing project. Bicycles and wheelchairs are also being repaired and passed on to us from HM Prisons Cardiff and Swansea. Keep up the good work guys; you really make a difference to people's mobility.
Things to come
RAF Cosford Air Ambulance Team are planning to `Spread Their Wings to Bansang', as part of the Plymouth to Banjul rally. The team will consist of one pilot and two aircrew medics and the hope is to provide the hospital with an ambulance when they complete the rally.
The BBC1 Inside Out team won the One World Media Award for a Documentary, based on our trip to Bansang last November. They are returning this November with Richard Harvey, our accountant for the appeal, and me. There will be a 10 minute screening of this visit on BBC1 on either 3rd or 10th Jan 2007.
Barclaycard will be going out in February to upgrade the present computer system.
Thank you
What an incredible year. So much has been achieved. Sometimes in the face of terrible adversity, the weather, no transportation, and at one very low point no food, fuel, or certain drugs for the patients, yet still the wonderful staff battle on. So we thank the building labourers, cleaners, nurses, administration staff and Doctors and our own Dr Annabel Kerr for everything they are doing, because without them there would be no hospital.
As I shall be in Bansang twice before Christmas I shall be unable to update you again until the New Year, so Happy Christmas everyone!
Kind regards, Anita Smith MBE
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