The Scotsman

Harbour boat to take healthcare to Amazon

● Edinburgh charity embarks on epic voyage from Rosyth

- By ALASTAIR DALTON adalton@scotsman.com

A ferry designed for a fiveminute harbour crossing has left Scotland for a 6,600-mile voyage to become a floating medical centre in the Peruvian Amazon.

The 117-feet-long (35m) MV Forth Hope set sail from Rosyth yesterday to provide healthcare in South America, a decade after being built to shuttle commuters between Portsmouth and Gosport in Hampshire.

It was taken over by Vine Trust before being completed and fitted with an ocean-going hull to become the Edinburghb­ased internatio­nal developmen­t and volunteeri­ng charity’s first brand new vessel.

The ship will travel by ocean and river to reach remote city of Iquitos in northern Peru in six weeks’ time.

It is expected to provide 100,000 free primary healthcare consultati­ons each year, using on-board facilities including an operating theatre, dental surgery, consultati­on rooms and pharmacy.

MV Forth Hope will be staffed by medical and dental volunteers from a range of countries, working with local clinicians to serve communitie­s without access to the most basic medical care.

The ship will operate with Amazon Hope 2, the charity’s other Peru-based vessel, to cover 160 communitie­s on the river and its tributarie­s.

The Princess Royal named the new vessel in Rosyth in May at the Babcock’s site, where the firm and 30 other firms supported its fitting out.

It is sailing to Las Palmas on Gran Canaria in the Canary islands off Africa before crossing the Atlantic to Macapa at the mouth of the Amazon in Brazil.

The vessel will then sail up the river across the country and into Peru.

Vine Trust medical programme manager Kenny Holt said: “MV Forth Hope will enable Vine Trust to significan­tly increase and enhance muchneeded primary healthcare services.”

Chief executive Willie Mcpherson said: “Vine Trust has always sought to make a significan­t and lasting impact on the people we support, offering effective help to vulnerable and isolated communitie­s living in poverty.

“The delivery of MV Forth Hope to the Amazon will double the current capacity of our Peru medical programme, providing invaluable primary healthcare services to remote riverine villages.”

Babcock Rosyth managing director Ian Donnelly said: “It was a real honour for Babcock to be involved in such a worthwhile project.

“Everyone involved in the project should be very proud of what they’ve achieved.

“Our relationsh­ip with the trust is further strengthen­ed through our homebuildi­ng partnershi­p, which offers our employees a volunteeri­ng opportunit­y to contribute to its work of providing homebuildi­ng support to communitie­s in severe poverty.”

 ??  ?? 0 The Forth Hope on it’s way from Rosyth to the Amazonian city of Iquitos. The boat will be staffed by medical and dental volunteers and will operate with Amazon Hope 2
0 The Forth Hope on it’s way from Rosyth to the Amazonian city of Iquitos. The boat will be staffed by medical and dental volunteers and will operate with Amazon Hope 2
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