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Sightsavers brings hope to thousands

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Published Date: 25 November 2007
SHE waits patiently outside a government health centre for her brother to be screened for eye disease.
Like thousands of children in Tanzania, she and her family are at risk of developing trachoma, a distressing and painful eye condition, caused by a tiny bacteria spread by flies and a lack of basic sanitation.

Yet health services in the former British colony in East Africa are short of funds to pay for the 50p tube of ointment that will successfully treat it, or the £5 operation required if the disease progresses to the stage where blindness is the inevitable outcome.

In some remote Tanzanian villages located on dry, dusty plains hundreds of miles inland, up to 50% of the children and adults who care for them suffer from trachoma. It deprives already hard-pressed communities - where families have to live on an income of less than 50p per day - of the workers it needs to ensure their survival.

Scotland on Sunday today launches its Christmas fund-raising appeal for Sightsavers International, the charity that aims to prevent blindness in developing countries around the world.

During the past three years, readers have raised more than £80,000 for the charity, which has established a Scottish fund-raising office, for eye-care projects in Pakistan and Sierra Leone in West Africa. This year, the appeal focuses on Tanzania and the range of eye diseases, including trachoma, that its population faces. Just 50p can make a difference.

Today, we launch the appeal in Spectrum magazine. Next week, we will be announcing a 'Bring a 50p to Work Day', in which we hope companies large and small throughout Scotland will participate. Finally, on December 9 we will be launching our online auction, in which readers will be invited to bid for a wide range of exciting lots.

A video diary of Jeremy Watson and photographer Robert Perry's visit to Tanzania can be seen at The full article contains 324 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
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1

whatsyourname,

25/11/2007 09:40:33

That is wonderful Bless them, They should also be treating the water I am sure they could do something for that ?

2

Boy Wonder,

25/11/2007 09:42:35

One thing you can do when sorting out your monthly or weekly budget, is sort out your loose change and bag it up for giving out to charities. All those coppers and 5ps you normally don't use on a given day ...

Did you know you can hand in your old spectacles to charity shops too? These are sent out to places where there is a desperate need for optical care.

3

Equal Rights for Autism,

Ayrshire 25/11/2007 10:31:09

Jennifer #3 - quite so - that would also deal with the many deaths of children under 5 from diarrhoea and other water-borne infections and diseases.

I just hope that the Scotsman doesn't try and blame the parents for this disabling disease, as their track record of `campaigning` for charities is that they put out banal drivel one week in support of charities, and then completely undermine the people that the charity is claiming to support the following week:- http://scotlandonsunday.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=1819462007 - Scotland on Sunday Sun 18 Nov 2007
Expert links autism to mothers drinking

MODERATE drinking during pregnancy could be the hidden cause of thousands of serious childhood disorders including autism, Scotland's leading authority on alcohol and health warned last night.

4

Caora Dubh,

Croit sheasgair 25/11/2007 13:27:16

Over the decades one sees and hears about so many catastophic epidemics and famines, often occurring repeatedly in exactly the same places, that inevitably one questions the entire system.

There are good natural reasons why Africa is cursed with appalling diseases, but on top of this there are entirely human causes. People in both the developed and developing nations are to blame for the lethal cocktail of political instability, corrupt dictatorships, unfair trade practices, bloody warfare, and poverty, that many Africans are forced to swallow. A trickle of money donated for specific charitable acts is better than nothing, but I suggest that western companies found guilty of colluding with corrupt practices in Africa, e.g. in the oil-rich countries of Equatorial Guinea, Nigeria, Angola and Gabon, be made to pay fines directly into massive educational, sanitation, housing and other social upliftment programmes, and that these programmes are closely monitored by both charities and auditors.

5

Caora Dubh,

Croit sheasgair 25/11/2007 13:38:51

#4 Equal rights for autism: Be careful! Poverty breeds crime just as it breeds disease. There is a certain kind of person peculiar to developed countries whose mind is frozen in the era of Rousseau's "Noble Savage", an image that is in its own way as racist and patronising as the opposite. It is difficult to disburse aid freely and fairly in countries where people are desperate and many grasp machine guns. In several African countries you would be shocked by the amount of medicaments sold at roadside stalls, almost all of which have been stolen from charities, as well as government clinic and hospital pharmacies. In fact the disbursement of aid in developing countries is a great problem.

6

,

25/11/2007 21:53:52
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason: Scotsman Import, Original comment id: 1173396, Article id was mapped to record!

 

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