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Egyptian surgeon Yacoub one of three Zayed Award for Human Fraternity winners

- SHIREENA AL NOWAIS

Sir Magdi Yacoub is among the winners of the Zayed Award for Human Fraternity.

The founder of the Magdi Yacoub Heart Foundation in Egypt and the Chain of Hope charitable organisati­on in the UK, he is well known for his pioneering surgical techniques that have helped save thousands of lives, including those of children.

Sir Magdi, 88, a retired professor of cardiothor­acic surgery, has opened cardiac centres in Ethiopia and Mozambique, with a centre in Rwanda’s capital Kigali that is currently under constructi­on.

He has also received honours including a British knighthood and the Order of Merit from Queen Elizabeth II, as well as the Grand Order of the Nile from Egypt.

The Zayed Award for Human Fraternity allocates $1 million to a person, group or organisati­on from any walk of life working to further peaceful coexistenc­e. Three winners were announced at a media briefing held in Abu Dhabi on Friday and will share the $1 million prize.

“I am humbled to be receiving this award for many reasons but most importantl­y because it will help us continue to offer the best treatments to patients who do not have access to medical care and need to be looked after,” Sir Magdi said.

“We are active both in developed and developing countries in Africa and Central Africa to try to alleviate suffering and offer the very best [treatment] free of charge, while respecting [patients’] dignity and looking after them at the highest level.”

Sir Magdi said that there were many talents in the region and around the world who need to be nurtured and used to make these services more sustainabl­e and ensure continuity.

The others honoured included Indonesian organisati­ons Nahdlatul Ulama and Muhammadiy­ah, and Chilean grassroots leader Nelly Leon Correa.

Mother Nelly, as she is widely known, is the president and co-founder of the Woman Standing Up Foundation in Chile.

Her organisati­on focuses on supporting incarcerat­ed women and aiding their reintegrat­ion into society.

“We want to be a beacon of hope for women and want them to be seen,” she said.

Having supported about 700 women in Chile’s largest prison, she told The National that her hope was to extend her programme to other detention centres in Latin America.

“A woman means family and even though she is incarcerat­ed and doesn’t have her freedom, it doesn’t mean she stops being a mother,” she said.

“My dream is to bring hope to humanity and when my time comes, I would like to die in prison among these women.

“The award and the fact that I am here today in the UAE means that we are finally being seen.”

The Zayed Award for Human Fraternity is the first monetary award that the foundation has received.

Nearly 94 per cent of the twoyear programme’s participan­ts remain conviction-free within two years of release.

Nahdlatul Ulama and Muhammadiy­ah, Indonesia’s largest Islamic organisati­ons with more than 190 million members, have also been recognised for their humanitari­an and peace-building efforts.

Through the establishm­ent of educationa­l institutio­ns, hospitals and anti-poverty projects, the organisati­ons have improved the lives of countless Indonesian­s and vulnerable people around the world. “This award is very important for us because we consider it as recognitio­n of our humanitari­an work in Indonesia,” Ulil Abshar Abdalla told The National.

“Muslims in Indonesia are the largest [part of the Islamic world] but the knowledge of Islam and Muslims in Indonesia is very minimal and we hope that with this award, our work in humanitari­an issues will be known by the outside world.

“We believe this is the beginning of a better understand­ing of Islam and what we are doing in Indonesia.”

The winners will be recognised during an award ceremony today at the Founder’s Memorial in Abu Dhabi.

The prize was first establishe­d on February 4, 2019, to mark the meeting between Pope Francis and Grand Imam of Al Azhar Ahmed Al Tayeb in Abu Dhabi.

Previous winners include UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres and Moroccan-French activist Latifa Ibn Ziaten.

 ?? ?? Sir Magdi Yacoub also has a British knighthood and received the Order of Merit from Queen Elizabeth II, as well as the Grand Order of the Nile from Egypt Rob Greig / The National
Sir Magdi Yacoub also has a British knighthood and received the Order of Merit from Queen Elizabeth II, as well as the Grand Order of the Nile from Egypt Rob Greig / The National

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