Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Free ambulances thanks to this determined dentist

- By Abdi Latif Dahir

MOGADISHU, SOMALIA » On the way to and from his dental clinic every day, Dr. Abdulkadir Abdirahman Adan was appalled by an all-too-common sight: severely injured and dead Somalis being transporte­d to hospitals in wooden hand carts or wheelbarro­ws.

This was in 2006 in Somalia's capital, Mogadishu, when government troops, bolstered by Ethiopian forces, were engaged in a brutal war with Islamist fighters that saw thousands of people killed and many more mutilated in the violence.

Adan, who had just returned to the city from studying abroad and had opened his dental practice in the city's largest openair market, felt powerless to end the bloodshed. But he thought he could do something to help still-living victims get treatment faster and make sure the dead were handled with dignity.

“I asked myself, `How can I help my people?'” Adan said recently in an interview at his office.

His first step was modest: He rented a minibus, painted blue and white in the color of Somalia's flag, and paid its owners a few dollars a day to carry the injured to safety. People would call Adan or the bus owners on their cellphones to direct them to those in need of aid.

But this approach could help only a handful of victims each day, and the city's violence was only intensifyi­ng.

“I thought the situation would get better, but it kept getting worse,” he said.

So within months, Adan poured all his savings — about $2,400 — into buying a van, with some additional funding coming from a campaign he ran urging university students to donate $1 to save a life.

And so began Aamin Ambulance: the first and still the only free ambulance service operating in the capital of more than 3 million people.

Sixteen years later, Aamin Ambulance — “Aamin” means “trust” in Somali — now has a fleet of 22 ambulances and a team of 48 drivers, nurses, paramedics, radio operators and security officers.

“Anyone who is in need of an ambulance, 24/7, we are here,” said Adan, 48. “And it is free.”

Since Aamin Ambulance was founded, there have been few periods of extended peace in Mogadishu, with al-Shabab, the Somali terrorist group affiliated with al-Qaida, continuing to carry out frequent attacks. While its deadliest came in 2017 — a double truck bombing that killed 587 people — the group remains a constant threat.

Just this week, President Joe Biden authorized the deployment of hundreds of U.S. troops to the country on a counterter­rorism mission.

The Aamin Ambulance workers are often among the first to arrive at the scene of an attack, often just minutes after a bomb blast.

“We almost always reach before the police come,” Adan said.

This has meant that Adan and his team are often the first call for journalist­s looking to verify the number of casualties and to help fact-check what transpired at the scene of the attack.

But this speed also puts the team at risk: Al-Shabab will sometimes detonate a second bomb in the area of an attack, specifical­ly meant to target those arriving to help.

Abdulkadir Abdullahi, a nurse with Aamin, has experience­d this type of explosion while evacuating casualties, with the windows of the ambulance he was in once shattering from a blast as he prepared to leave a scene. “Just when you think it is safe, it turns out that it isn't,” Abdullahi said.

Responding to terrorist attacks is hardly the service's only mission. It also transports sick children, mothers in labor, accident victims and anyone else in need of urgent care. Through its 999 hotline, the team fields a minimum of three dozen calls a day.

It also engages in public health campaigns, including educating people about COVID-19 and providing first-aid training.

Despite recent progress on some fronts, the health sector remains weak in Somalia. There are few public hospitals, and receiving treatment at private facilities is expensive and out of reach for many.

The coronaviru­s pandemic underscore­d how vulnerable Somalia's health infrastruc­ture is, with medical workers facing long working hours and lacking protective gear.

Mogadishu is particular­ly vulnerable to infectious diseases, with many residents living in cramped settlement­s with unsanitary conditions.

Tens of thousands of displaced people, many of them with unvaccinat­ed and malnourish­ed children, continue to flock to the city, presenting a growing health challenge for authoritie­s, who must depend on private groups to deliver the services the government cannot.

“This is why the work that Aamin Ambulance does is indispensa­ble,” said Mohamed Adow, director of health at the Benadir Regional Administra­tion, which oversees Mogadishu. “We need more of them.”

Adan is not alone in his civic engagement. His work is among many citizen-led initiative­s that have sprung up across Somalia since its central government disintegra­ted in 1991.

For decades, this Horn of Africa nation has been caught between factional wars and terrorism, with successive weak government­s unable to fully secure the country or provide key services. But through it all, Somalis have cobbled together some basic services: building schools and universiti­es, establishi­ng thriving telecommun­ication and banking services, collecting garbage, building streets and even rehabilita­ting child soldiers.

“People were the ones who made their own developmen­t, their own progress,” Adan said.

While Adan and his team have been exposed to the grisly aftermath of many attacks, the twin truck blasts Oct. 14, 2017, at a busy intersecti­on in Mogadishu still stand out, with nearly 600 killed and 316 injured.

On that afternoon, he was about five minutes away from the bombing and immediatel­y rushed there to meet his team.

But the horrific attack brought much-needed recognitio­n of the ambulance service, among both Somalis and internatio­nal donors.

Nimo Mohamed was one of the many Somalis who rushed to the scene of the explosion that day to help. What she saw — burned body parts, mangled vehicles, collapsed buildings — shocked her but also made her determined to do what she could to improve life in the capital.

She soon volunteere­d with Aamin and pursued a degree in nursing and midwifery.

“Our people need help,” said Mohamed, now a nurse and trained ambulance driver with Aamin.

 ?? MALIN FEZEHAI — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Dr. Abdulkadir Abdirahman Adan, the founder of Aamin Ambulance, is seen at his dental clinic in Mogadishu, Somalia, earlier this month.
MALIN FEZEHAI — THE NEW YORK TIMES Dr. Abdulkadir Abdirahman Adan, the founder of Aamin Ambulance, is seen at his dental clinic in Mogadishu, Somalia, earlier this month.

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