On December 4 this year, a Japanese alumni who had dedicated his life to charity and aid to the Afghan people since 1984, was assisted by unknown persons in Jalalabad city with his five Afghan donors. Killed together, in this week’s analysis we write about the life, charity and support activities and activities of this physician, as well as aspects that can illuminate Afghanistan’s future.
Tetsu Nakamura; Profile and Biography
Dr. Nakamura was born (1946) in Fukuoka, Japan, a city of 2,000 years old, and the shadow of technology long ago flourished. He received his early and advanced education in medicine in the city of Kyushu University School of Medicine and served for a while in local clinics. In 1984, he moved to Peshawar where he started treating newly admitted Afghan refugees free of charge in addition to local people for a number of other diseases, including the Leprosy Run. In 1991, he opened a health center in Dara-i-Nur area of Nangarhar province, because he believes Afghans are more able to help. He opened a hospital called PMS (Peace Japan Medical Services) in Peshawar in 1998. There has been a drought in Afghanistan since 1970, the level of which has increased slowly, and diarrhea in the region, Cholera and several others made their way to the hospital, attracting the attention of Dr. Nakamura and his team, He also stated: A hospital cannot do enough to provide nutrition and clean water to the people, so we want to go back out of this narrow area and feed people. Work to deliver fundamental and long-term benefits in the area of clean water supply.
Nakamura; who has devoted his life to Afghanistan
Dr. Nakamura removed the holy medicine cloth to seek the basic solutions to the poverty and health problems of Afghans. In many areas of Nangarhar province, they dug clean water supply, 1600 wells, 33 canal and 13 groundwater wells, and most of the people who were ready to leave the area due to the drought. Bring back from doing, in 2001, he founded the Afghan Fund for Life, which helped feed 150,000 displaced people through drought and wars until 2002, and has made it a priority in Afghanistan. Green Ground Project, which was later implemented by his doctor, the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan by foreigners led to the closure of several aid agencies. But Dr Nakamura would say that we, unlike others, want to go to a place where people need help and not everyone is reluctant to go there. In 2003, a 25-kilometer canal stretching from the Kunar River to the Gambiri Desert began with the help of locals. Areas where people had deep problems with access to clean water, and most of the time there were conflicts over local water. While he was struck by the lack of modern equipment, machines and manpower, these two shortcomings did not hamper his canal’s planning because of his birth cities (Fukuoka) and Nangarhar. The area in which he planned to build the canal was very similar in his opinion. In addition to the manpower he helped greatly to the water canal in Fukuoka City, which was done 220 years ago. As he believed 220 years ago was neither a modern resource nor manpower, but the people of this area had built a joint co-operation and support canal, which at present seems impossible to implement. We want to do this long with the help of the people of the area who eventually finished the construction in 2010. Dr. Nakamura was a person with strong leadership and management skills, respected the culture and religion of the Afghan people and would always say that if you want to do good things, you should pay attention to these areas. Explained to the Afghan people how they can better and properly utilize their natural resources. He was involved in practicing the canal in Nangarhar for practically any work with the general public. Until the construction of the canal, civilian personnel were at great risk of conflicts and bombings between US forces and the Taliban, and it was once reported that US forces were conducting canals in the area where they were operating. Made of rain from the air. But Dr. Nakamura’s strong intentions did not fade and his courage gave the general practitioner the courage to do more. It is here that the heroes of true and genuine peace can be clearly seen, a group called the bombing of the general public, and by spending billions of dollars on their false promises, they still cannot do it even to the poor of the Afghan nation. Levels up, but on the contrary, killing and intimidation works, On the other hand, the Gambiri Desert not only irrigated the dry land, but it also built mosques and madrassas around it, which not only irrigated a dry wasteland of two percent (6 percent) of the entire population of Afghanistan. 800 students are studying and in this area, instead of fighting, they lead to peace and a better future.
Conclusion
Dr. Nakamura was a genuinely supportive and humanitarian man of humanity, and especially of the Afghan people, whose murder is the work of the enemies of the Afghan people and the population of the country. The Afghan government should not only praise and support all aid agencies and their staff, but especially pay special attention to their lives. Because charities and aid agencies reduce heavy loads in various parts of the Afghan government’s shoulders, although the Afghan people supported him by his great ambitions, which was the support of the Afghan people and the common people, during his lifetime, he named a park and even honored Afghanistan’s proud citizens. The Afghan government should launch the largest donation of Allama Syed Jamal-ud-din’s government sign in his name and major donor projects to his doctor’s family without any appreciation. Dr. Nakamura’s charitable donation gives messages to international donors who want to do charitable work in Afghanistan, saying that they should continue to work in the most fundamental areas that can have long-term benefits for the Afghan nation. It is not as if the aid collected in the name of the Afghan people goes back into the pockets of those who implement the projects in Afghanistan to the international community. The Afghan people should start to fill the leadership and good governance gaps. Those who hinder their basic projects must stand against it, and better implement the remaining and incomplete plans and plans of Nakamura. On the one hand, the deepest regret of the Afghan nation, on the one hand, shows that the enemies of the people of Afghanistan and Japan are united because both nations want peace and good living and are supporters of humanitarian aid. On the other hand, they leave the message to the killers that the Afghan nation is a source of water and other natural resources, with the help of these donors and their strong intentions from international donors such as the Japanese people who are human-friendly. Nevertheless, the bright future of Afghanistan will certainly be guaranteed, and the group that devised the Nakamura assassination will never give up on achieving their goals.