DR CONGO / HEAL AFRICA
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STORY: DR CONGO / HEAL AFRICA
TRT: 2.46
SOURCE: MONUC / UNTV
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: 13 AUGUST 2009, GOMA, NORTH KIVU PROVINCE, DR CONGO / FILE
13 AUGUST 2009, GOMA, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO
1. Various shots, exterior Heal Africa Hospital
2. Various shots, Lyn Lusi in her office
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Lyn Lusi, Founder, ‘Heal Africa’:
"The mandate of ‘Heal Africa is to train. We’re a training centre, training people to do excellent work in many areas of community-based health and also doctors who need to do specialization. We train them so that they can return to the rural areas and do good work, because as you know clinical skills are very much lacking when doctors come out of universities in Congo. So that was the purpose of creating the hospital to give young doctors an opportunity to get good clinical skills.”
FILE – UNTV - MARCH 2009, GOMA, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO
4. Various shots, nurses tending to patients in Heal Africa hospital
13 AUGUST 2009, GOMA, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Lyn Lusi, Founder, ‘Heal Africa’:
“In areas where there is war the issues of sexual violence against women, against children, even against men is growing more and more acute and people are coming more for services because they are aware that the services exist, but to say that there is an improvement, that there is any decrease in the number of rapes we can’t say that because there’s no peace.”
FILE - MONUC - 28 FEBRUARY 2009, GOMA, NORTH KIVU PROVINCE, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO
6. Wide shot, banner on "HEAL AFRICA HOSPITAL" building
7. Pan right, from women to Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon clapping
8. Zoom in, Ban Ki-moon lifting child
9. Pan left, from women with sewing machines to Ban Ki-moon
10. Wide shot, coming out of ward
FILE – MONUC – 11 AUGUST 2009, GOMA, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO
11. Med shot, Hillary Clinton at HEAL AFRICA hospital shaking hands with staff and patients
12. Various shots, women singing for Hillary Clinton
13 AUGUST 2009, GOMA, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO
14. SOUNDBITE (English) Lyn Lusi, Founder, ‘Heal Africa’:
“Let me tell you on record that we are terribly disappointed. Yeah, when you come to a hospital you say in the hospital which is considered a center of excellence, ‘we are going to build a center of excellence in North Kivu’, I mean what more insulting thing could anybody say to you.”
15. Various shots, women sewing inside the Heal Africa Hospital
HEAL Africa is a small Congolese grassroots not-for-profit association that cares for victims of sexual violence in conflict-torn eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
The clinic has recently been highlighted through a string of high-profile visits from dignitaries ranging from UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
Based in the city of Goma on the eastern edge of the DRC, HEAL Africa was formed in 1996 by Congolese orthopedic surgeon Jo Lusi and his wife, Lyn, a prominent social activist.
SOUNDBITE (English) Lyn Lusi, Founder, ‘Heal Africa’:
"The mandate of ‘Heal Africa is to train. We’re a training centre, training people to do excellent work in many areas of community based health and also doctors who need to do specialization we train them so that they can return to the rural areas and do good work, because as you know clinical skills are very much lacking when doctors come out of universities in Congo. So that was the purpose of creating the hospital to give young doctors an opportunity to get good clinical skills.”
HEAL Africa functions with a staff of 18 Congolese doctors, 28 nurses, 70 community development advocates and educators, an administrative team, and hundreds of Congolese volunteers.
Lyn Lusi expanded the learning Center Hospital's program to include family planning, safe motherhood, women against violence, AIDS education and homecare, and community rehabilitation.
As one of the most prominent actors against sexual violence, HEAL Africa performs over 300 fistula repair surgeries a year and has done over 1,400 successful reparations since 2004. HEAL Africa also provides economic support for survivors of sexual violence and is taking legal action of behalf of the victims.
At least 200,000 cases of sexual abuse have been recorded in eastern DRC since 1996, according to the UN. The true number is estimated to be far higher.
Lyn Lusi says that this year rape has been on the rise, and is no longer just a women’s issue.
SOUNDBITE (English) Lyn Lusi, Founder, ‘Heal Africa’:
“In areas where there is war the issues of sexual violence against women, against children, even against men is growing more and more acute and people are coming more for services because they are aware that the services exist, but to say that there is an improvement, that there is any decrease in the number of rapes we can’t say that because there’s no peace.”
In February United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon visited the HEAL Africa Hospital to talk with rape victims, and took the opportunity to appeal to Congolese President Joseph Kabila to step up his government efforts in fighting sexual violence in the country.
United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also met with women victims of rape and HIV/AIDS at Heal Africa last week while visiting the DRC as part of her seven-nation trip to Africa.
Clinton announced more than 17 million dollars in new funding to prevent and respond to gender and sexual violence in the DRC, and she announced the deployment of a team of civilian experts, medical personnel and military engineers to assess how the US could further assist survivors of sexual violence.
But Lyn Lusi says that for the Heal Africa clinic, Clinton’s visit was not entirely a happy one.
SOUNDBITE (English) Lyn Lusi, Founder, ‘Heal Africa’:
“Let me tell you on record that we are terribly disappointed. Yeah, when you come to a hospital you say in the hospital which is considered a center of excellence, ‘we are going to build a center of excellence in North Kivu, I mean what more insulting thing could anybody say to you.”
HEAL Africa has also begun a ‘Healing Arts Program’ to support women who need to undergo surgery due to the effects of prolonged childbirth or sexual violence. In addition to covering the costs of surgery, the Healing Arts Program seeks to support the women emotionally and spiritually by empowering them to re-enter their villages and support themselves. The women receive counseling, literacy training, sewing instructions and are taught basic business skills that will help them as they become local entrepreneurs.









