Fuel Crisis Heightens, Staff Responds

Namikango Mission, Thondwe, Malawi … As the nationwide fuel crisis continues month after month, and shortages grow more critical day after day, the shortage of medical supplies is becoming more acute. An already supply starved nation, finds it with even fewer medical provisions. The ability to get them to places where they are needed is now grinding to a halt. While this national crisis is making it more difficult, the Malawi Project, the Namikango Mission, and its distribution network continues to function.

Church Building Becomes Distribution Site
Four years ago the Malawi Project established a strong working relationship with the Namikango Mission and Maternity Hospital, near Zomba. Forty-foot trailers of supplies had been directed to three sites in the central region for a number of years, but Namikango became only the second site for distribution in the south. A former church building was refitted to be a major warehouse, storage and distribution facility, and millions of dollars in aid started flowing through this new venue. Wilson Tembo, who had worked with the Project in the central region, moved to Thondwe to oversee the program. Tembo set up an intricate reporting and follow up system in order to track supply distribution. He started accessing various medical facilities in the south, and accumulated their needs lists. He makes site visits that are a vitally important component to this work.

Responsible Malawians Know the Territory
“With these site visits, Tembo can assess where future supplies are needed, and what items should be at the top of the list. These trips are vitally important to the health of our medical supply program throughout Malawi,” according to Richard Stephens, one of the founders of the Project. “Americans cannot be everywhere on site, all the time, in order to track these supplies. Responsible Malawians know the territory, and they are better qualified to manage the program. They form the front line management team who exercise responsible oversight of this program. We have a great team in Tembo, Bisini Mphongolo, the administrator of the mission, and his staff. They are doing a great job.”

“During their visits to the various facilities they are able to gain a better picture of the health situation and need. They can quickly communicate this information to the states, and the most critically needed items can be sourced for future shipments,” reports Suzi Stephens RN, Medical Director for the Project. “It is a great benefit to have them making these first hand, on site, visits to report what these resources mean to everyday Malawians, and how they are being effectively used.”

A Heart Warming Sight
During a recent trip to Malawi, Scott Gordon, President of the Malawi Project, looked in on the team at the warehouse and observed, “It is really heart warming to see the way the Malawi staff has taken hold of this program, and are faithfully executing it to the benefit of the people. It is very different than many other programs where upper staff and management are from the expatriate community, and the Malawians are secondary players. In our programs the Malawians take the lead. For them to be responsible for their own future is the way we think it should be. It is working.”

In coming weeks new information will be posted on this site giving first hand reports of trips by this management team to sites where millions of dollars are being distributed. New stories post every week. Sign up today for an instant email as the stories are posted.

In the picture Wilson Tembo, far right, poses with the staff of a health care facility as they receive a portion of a recent shipment of supplies from the Malawi Project.

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