Daily Trust

1000 Niger residents benefit from IET medical outreach

- From Romoke W. Ahmad, Minna

About 1,000 residents of Minna and its environs in Niger state benefitted from the medical outreach organised by the Dawah Institute of Nigeria, a department of the Islamic Education Trust (IET).

The Registrar of the institute, Mallam Muhammad Alhassan, explained that the medical outreach is one of the events lined up for the commemorat­ion of IET at 50.

“We target the less privileged in Minna and its environs who have health challenges and could not afford treatment. We will be carrying out 25 free cataract surgeries in collaborat­ion with Islamic Medical Associatio­n of Nigeria (IMAN).

“A hundred pieces of medicated glasses are to be distribute­d for those with eye problems as well as drugs for hypertensi­on, diabetes, hepatitis, malaria, typhoid and other minor ailments,” he said.

Alhassan said the programme was going on simultaneo­usly in other parts of the metropolis.

The Director General, IET, Alhaji Arzika Abubakar Rimau, said the medical outreach was as old as the organizati­on because they have been rendering medical assistant to people since the establishm­ent of the organizati­on.

A beneficiar­y, who is also the Chief Imam of Federal University of Technology Minna (FUT Minna), Dr Bashir Ahmad Dankudu, said he got informatio­n about the programme through social media and was satisfied with how it was being handled.

“The programme is well organized and I pray they succeed. It shows that some people tend to understand that some people somewhere are in need of help which Islam signifies.

“I would like to advise IET to make it an annual event. Talking about problems of society is not just the solution but coming up

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