300 tons of medication, food gave over to Afghan specialists

300 tons of medication, food gave over to Afghan specialists

ISLAMABAD: Another 27 trucks conveying 300 tons of prescriptions and food were given over to the Afghan experts on Friday, as Pakistan keeps on supporting the Afghan individuals during the weakening philanthropic circumstance.


 ISLAMABAD: Another 27 trucks conveying 300 tons of prescriptions and food were given over to the Afghan experts on Friday, as Pakistan keeps on supporting the Afghan individuals during the weakening philanthropic circumstance.

Under the Pak-Afghan Cooperation Forum, the alleviation things organized by the Alkhidmat Foundation were given over to the Afghan specialists at Zero Line at the Torkham line. Pak-Afghan Cooperation Forum Chairman Habib Ullah Khattak, Alkhidmat Foundation President Khalid Waqas, the overseers of Alkhidmat Foundation, Ijaz Ullah Khan and Asif Jamal Dir went to the occasion.


On Afghanistan's side, the transfer was gotten by Deputy Health and Education Minister Engineer Muhammad Ismaeel Rohani, Director Refugees Molvi Sherzad, and Incharge Coordination at Torkham Hafiz Mohammad. Prior, the discussion additionally organized a free eye camp at Kabul and Khost, where the Pakistani specialists did medical procedures just as actually took a look at the patients with next to no charge.


The Pakistani specialists had done 530 waterfall medical procedures and inspected 8,120 patients in Kabul and Khost. Around 324 waterfall medical procedures were performed and 2,670 patients were inspected at the free eye camp organized at the Public Health Office, Khost.


Around 206 waterfall medical procedures were performed and 5,450 patients were inspected at the free eye camp in the Jinnah Hospital, Kabul. A patient, later his medical procedure, expressed gratitude toward the discussion for his therapy, saying it would have been troublesome as the wellbeing foundation of the conflict-torn nation was in a bedraggled condition.


He said whenever done secretly, the medical procedure would have cost him colossal cash, while at the eye camp, it was managed without costing even a solitary penny. In his remark, a Pakistani specialist alluding to the WHO information said around 400,000 individuals in Afghanistan were visually impaired and one more 1.5 million individuals experienced visual incapacity.

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