We have lift-off!
(Or should that be lift-on?) Another container
takes its first step on the voyage to Africa
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On
their way!
More medical supplies are en route to where they're
desperately needed...
wo
forty-foot containers filled with medical and educational supplies are
finally on their way from Tavistock to Africa. On Friday morning 28th
April, each container was lifted onto a freight lorry and began their
journey to Western Uganda.
The supplies are being sent under the care of Great Lakes (Africa) Mission
(GLAM), the mission arm of Tavistock Community Church at the King's.
Colin Bond, pastor of the church at King's, said "We've been so blessed
by the generous support and encouragement this project has received from
the townsfolk in Tavistock and the South West. We've received financial
help for the containers from the Lion's Club in Tavistock, people local
to the area and from further afield, and of course from Tavistock Community
Church."
Pastor Colin
Bond (front far left) with members of Tavistock Community Church
and the Landrover ambulance
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ost
of the supplies and equipment going to help in Africa was donated by hospitals,
clinics, businesses and private individuals in the South West and across
the country. An especially vital donation was a Landrover ambulance, given
by St. John Ambulance Brigade in Lytham-St-Annes (near Blackpool). Colin
also expressed his thanks to Mark-Kelly Landrover Services for their help
in preparing the vehicle for its new life in Africa, and to Superwinch
for the gift of a very useful front-mounted winch for the vehicle. "This
Landrover ambulance will bring hope to expectant mothers awaiting delivery,
and to children needing blood transfusions," he said. "Many have died
because they couldn't get to the hospital in town."
The ambulance, along with the clinic set up in Western Uganda with the
help of GLAM, will serve a population of 250,000, plus refugees from the
war in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The container contents will be
distributed to help set up and equip clinics and schools in Western Uganda
and two First Aid posts in the slums of Nateete in Kampala, as well as
restocking and equipping a clinic that was bombed in the Congo.
The
crane & container boys relax after a job well done.

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