Skip to main content
Skip to sub-navigation
About USAID Our Work Locations Policy Press Business Careers Stripes Graphic USAID Home
United States Agency for International Development Folder/Subfolder USAID
Click for the Telling Our Story archive
 About Telling Our Story »
 Contact Us »
 Frequently Asked Questions »

 Submit a Story:
Success Story»
Case Study»
First Person»
Before and After»
Photo and Caption»
 
Iraq Updates

Get Acrobat Reader...

How Can I Help?

Search


Mobile Medical Team Helps Survivors

Photo of Dr. Sinor Qadir
Photo: USAID/Ben Barber
“U.S. assistance is paying our salaries, the cost of our vehicle, and for basic medicines such as antibiotics, analgesics and anti-parasitics. If we didn’t have the U.S. funds we could not do as much as we do -- we treat more people, provide more free medicine. If I could speak to Americans, I would say thank you for your humanitarian aid to the Kurdish people who have been suffering from torture and oppression”

- Dr. Sinor Qadir

Some 15 years after Saddam Hussein dropped poison nerve gas on this north eastern city and surrounding villages, USAID is helping Dr. Sinor Qadir treat people who survived the attacks. The U.S.-funded medical team is not only treating people but teaching people about sanitation and other health issues.

The 25-year-old doctor is part of a mobile medical team visiting villages such as Tawela, perched in steep valleys around Halabja. The team provides medical care and training in literacy and sewing -- to help people earn a living. The project, supported by USAID with a $7,000 grant for three months and carried out in cooperation with the Coalition Provisional Authority, supports four mobile teams including Dr. Qadir's.

Print-friendly version of this page (244kb - PDF)

More Information:

Back to Top ^

Star