Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Project HOPE ships medicine to region
By Jason Kane
The Winchester Star in Virginia
Winchester — As military tensions calm between Russia and its former republic of Georgia, a local nonprofit agency is sending a $400,000 shipment of antibiotics to help heal some of the battle wounds.
Project HOPE, a health-aid organization based in Millwood, completed its agreement to donate the medication to Georgia Tuesday after discussions with the State Department.
The organization prepared boxes containing nearly 4,000 bottles of liquid antibiotics at Project HOPE’s storage facility near the Winchester Regional Airport Tuesday afternoon. Employee Tony Hileman then loaded them onto a truck bound for Washington Dulles International Airport.
The pharmaceutical company Bristol-Myers Squibb donated the medicine to Project HOPE as “part of an inventory to be made available when a humanitarian initiative arose,” said Rand Walton, director of communications for the organization.
The antibiotics will be combined with supplies from other non-governmental agencies before being flown to Germany, then to Tbilisi, Georgia’s capital, on a military aircraft this week.
The main objective of Project HOPE — Health Opportunities for People Everywhere — is to help citizens around the world attain health care. Walton said the shipment of antibiotics met one of the initial needs of Georgia “as laid out by the Department of State.”
“This medication will help prevent some of the infections that people would be receiving in a war-like environment,” he said.
Another shipment of medical supplies from Project HOPE arrived in Georgia shortly before hostilities broke out Friday. Those supplies — worth $1.4 million — are sitting in a town now occupied by Russian soldiers.
It is unclear whether that shipment is safe or if it was looted or stolen, Walton said.
American Friends of Georgia, one of Project HOPE’s peer organizations with staff members on the ground, is investigating the situation, he said.
Project HOPE has no direct operations in Georgia, though it contributed $8 million toward a medical shipment to Tbilisi in 2007. Sandra E. Roelofs, Georgia’s first lady, traveled to the organization’s headquarters in Millwood to deliver a personal thank-you.
Walton said he hopes the relationship will grow, possibly to include a full-scale Project HOPE project in Georgia.
“We will continue to look at other opportunities,” he said, “particularly as the dust begins to settle.”
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www.projecthope.org