Hours after Recovery, Man Returns to Fight Virus on Khartoum Streets

Mujahid Abdallah Ahmad
Mujahid Abdallah Ahmad
TT

Hours after Recovery, Man Returns to Fight Virus on Khartoum Streets

Mujahid Abdallah Ahmad
Mujahid Abdallah Ahmad

Hours after recovering from the coronavirus and leaving quarantine, healthcare activist Mujahid Abdallah Ahmad, known as “Mujahid Qadeem”, says he was certain he would get infected.

“As healthcare volunteers, my colleagues and I were certain that at some point we will catch the coronavirus. However, we knew that we could not stop working despite the risks,” he tells Asharq Al-Awsat.

Mujahid Qadeem is an activist in the Shareh al-Hawadeth initiative that provides medicine to poor children who cannot afford it. It takes its name after the street facing Khartoum Teaching Hospital’s Emergency Department and the Children’s Hospital.

Members of both sexes are spread across the street to catch the tears of a mother unable to afford her sick child’s medication or a father who has been nearly killed by the frustration caused by his child’s illness.

The initiative later started to provide medicine and healthcare to the poor, establishing a hospital that was made possible by popular effort.

After Qadeem and his comrades, Ahmed Idris and Youssef Handousa became infected with COVID-19, all three recovered and returned more determined than ever.

Qadeem tells Asharq Al-Awsat, “As a result of social mixing, our colleague Dr. Nuhad and others caught the virus. Since we worked together and were in contact with them, we were tested on April 28”.

Qadeem says that he suffered from severe symptoms but "I resisted them, and I isolated myself away from home until the results came back”.

He and his comrades received the positive test result with laughter. He says, “We knew that we were going to get infected at some point”.

He continues, “I was afraid at the beginning of the quarantine but the presence of friends and the social support we were provided with, helped raise our morale to fight the illness”.

With a high spirit, Qadeem says, “I left my experience with coronavirus believing that us Sudanese youth are capable of defeating any enemy.”

“I would like to tell my parents that the illness is not something to be ashamed of and should not be stigmatized".

Qadeem considers his experience with the coronavirus and his recovery to have revealed to him both his strength and endurance.

He emphasized the importance of staying at home to protect loved ones. He tells Asharq Al-Awsat, “If I had a choice, I would have stayed at home to protect my loved ones from the illness. However, I have no choice but to help patients.”

“Stay at home and protect the souls of those around you; this illness kills both the beloved and the opponent”.



UK's Landmark Postwar Elections: When Labor Ended 13 Years of Conservative Rule in 1964

FILE - The War Cabinet at No. 10 Downing Street in London, Oct. 15, 1941. Seated from left, Sir John Anderson, Lord President of the council; Prime Minister Winston Churchill; C.R. Attlee, Lord Privy Seal; Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, standing from left, Arthur Greenwood, Minister without portfolio; Ernest Bevin, Minister of Labour; Lord Beaverbrook, Minister of Aircraft Production, and Sir Kingsley Wood, Chancellor of the Exchequer. (AP Photo/File)
FILE - The War Cabinet at No. 10 Downing Street in London, Oct. 15, 1941. Seated from left, Sir John Anderson, Lord President of the council; Prime Minister Winston Churchill; C.R. Attlee, Lord Privy Seal; Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, standing from left, Arthur Greenwood, Minister without portfolio; Ernest Bevin, Minister of Labour; Lord Beaverbrook, Minister of Aircraft Production, and Sir Kingsley Wood, Chancellor of the Exchequer. (AP Photo/File)
TT

UK's Landmark Postwar Elections: When Labor Ended 13 Years of Conservative Rule in 1964

FILE - The War Cabinet at No. 10 Downing Street in London, Oct. 15, 1941. Seated from left, Sir John Anderson, Lord President of the council; Prime Minister Winston Churchill; C.R. Attlee, Lord Privy Seal; Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, standing from left, Arthur Greenwood, Minister without portfolio; Ernest Bevin, Minister of Labour; Lord Beaverbrook, Minister of Aircraft Production, and Sir Kingsley Wood, Chancellor of the Exchequer. (AP Photo/File)
FILE - The War Cabinet at No. 10 Downing Street in London, Oct. 15, 1941. Seated from left, Sir John Anderson, Lord President of the council; Prime Minister Winston Churchill; C.R. Attlee, Lord Privy Seal; Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, standing from left, Arthur Greenwood, Minister without portfolio; Ernest Bevin, Minister of Labour; Lord Beaverbrook, Minister of Aircraft Production, and Sir Kingsley Wood, Chancellor of the Exchequer. (AP Photo/File)

Britain’s upcoming general election is widely expected to lead to a change of government for the first time in 14 years. Many analysts believe it will be one of the country’s most consequential elections since the end of World War II.
Ahead of the July 4 vote, The Associated Press takes a look back at other landmark UK elections since the war.
In 1964, the Conservative Party had been in power for 13 years and was on its fourth prime minister, Alec Douglas-Home.
That has echoes of the current Conservative government, which has been in power for 14 years and is now on its fifth prime minister of the period, Rishi Sunak.
Douglas-Home had only become prime minister the year before, when his predecessor Harold Macmillan stepped down following a huge reversal in fortune. The buoyant economy had faltered, and Macmillan had been snubbed by French President Charles de Gaulle in his application for Britain to join the recently formed European Economic Community.
A sex scandal rocked his government and the British establishment, adding to the general feeling that the Conservatives had lost touch. Macmillan, known as “Supermac,” stepped down soon after his minister for war, John Profumo, resigned for lying to Parliament over his affair with model and showgirl Christine Keeler.
So the 1964 election was a race between the aristocratic Douglas-Home and Labor leader Harold Wilson, who was buzzing with ideas such as harnessing the “white heat of technology” to modernize the ailing British economy.
Wilson also had the common touch, particularly important in the new world of television and with Britain showing signs of a cultural renaissance in the “Swinging Sixties.” Wilson was more than able to hold his own with The Beatles, as evidenced in March 1964 when he presented the Fab Four an award.
When the election came about on Oct. 15, 1964, Labor was widely expected to return to power for the first time since 1951. “13 Wasted Years" was its message. But the party didn't do as well as many had expected, and Labour only won a majority of four in the House of Commons.
Wilson, who at 48 became the youngest British prime minister in 70 years, would need a bigger majority to get major legislation through — and he got it 18 months later when he called a snap election.
Wilson lost the election in 1970 to Ted Heath's Conservatives, but would go on to serve a second term as prime minister from 1974 to 1976, becoming the longest-serving Labor premier in the 20th century. By that second period in office, Wilson was clearly exhausted and lacking the dynamism of his early years.
Britain was widely considered to be the “sick man of Europe” and it was fertile ground for radical change. Step forward, Margaret Thatcher.