Think big; start small; act now
09 March, 2012
Khartoum, Sudan (Sudanow)- The ambassador of the United kingdom to Sudan, has been regularly publishing column in his blog, posted at the british embassy website. He once told the editor of this e-magazine that we could publish his column, after we asked if we could publish some of his writing. However we may disagree with some of the ideas expressed, but we think it is worth reading and that readers have the right to know the thnking and argument of a western diplomat who brings his ideas in and viewpoint in the open. Reactions to this might follow later.but here under is the full text of the blog.
Think big, start small, act now
“Think big; start small; act now” resonated with me and I think all the audience at the Academy of Health Sciences in Omdurman last Saturday. Professor Hassan Bella used the phrase to describe the philosophy of Mabel Wolff, who founded Sudan’s midwifery training school in 1921. The occasion was the unveiling of a plaque donated by this eminent professor to remember the work of the founders of modern midwifery in Sudan – Mabel and her sister Gertrude and their two Sudanese colleagues, Batoul M Eisa and Guindia Salih. But more than anything it was an opportunity to look ahead to the challenges of providing health care throughout Sudan. The Academy estimates a deficit of 95,000 nurses, midwives and allied professions across Sudan’s 17 states.
Saturday’s event was timely because I had just said goodbye to Stephen O’Brien, the UK Minister with responsibility for our development cooperation with Sub-Saharan Africa. While here, he had launchedDFID’s Operational Plan which sets out how we will deliver concrete benefits for the Sudanese people over the next 3-4 years, including an additional 800,000 people gaining access to clean drinking water and 3 million people reached by health and nutrition-related programmes. In the Embassy he had an initial discussion with our team about how the UK could help Sudan to tackle the problem of the 80% or more of young women who undergo genital mutilation. Sudanese health workers and the Government are determined to eliminate this practice by 2018. To do that I suspect we can all go back to the future and learn from the success of the midwifery training launched over 90 years ago.