New Airstrip Gets Malaria Medicine to the Congo

BUNIA,Congo—Mission Aviation Fellowship is using a new airstrip to bring desperately needed medical supplies to remote parts of the Congoplagued by malaria.

“We made our first landing at the new Zobia airstrip on June 9, and on Tuesday we conducted four more flights delivering 1,300 kg of supplies,” said Jon Cadd, the aviation ministry’s chief pilot in eastern Congo. “The Cessna 206 was loaded with bulky meds and other medical equipment. We had the smaller medicine boxes stuffed into every available nook and cranny.”

Mission Aviation Fellowship is a Christian ministry organization that uses aviation and other technologies to support some 1,500 church, medical and relief organizations working in isolated areas. With a fleet of 142 bush planes, the ministry reaches the most difficult regions of 32 countries.

According to Cadd, the villages in northern Congo have been severely affected by malaria this year. The medical clinic in Zobia is underequipped and unable to effectively treat all those who are ill. In nearby Nebobongo, the small hospital was treating 88 malaria-infected children in a ward with 22 beds. Mission Aviation Fellowship staff in Uganda obtained medical supplies and flew them to the Congo, where they were then flown out to the small villages in need.

The new airstrip at Zobia was carved out of the jungle by villagers using hand tools to remove trees, brush and grass. Saturday’s flight was the first to the area in some 20 years.

“We had been told that many people were dying for lack of malaria treatment, and the whole community was out for the great celebration when the little plane landed,” Cadd said. “People from the village had been working tirelessly to get the strip rehabilitated so the aircraft could bring the meds and medical teams that would help them. The paths through the forest are not big enough to accommodate a car, and until the airstrip opened everything had to come in by motorcycle or by foot.”

Malaria is the leading cause of death in the Congo. According to Doctors Without Borders, there has been a 250 percent increase in malaria cases in the country since 2009, with a marked increase in cases in 2012. A period of relative malnutrition and lack of mosquito netting have contributed to the increase. In the Congo, 180,000 children under age 5 die from malaria each year.

Mission Aviation Fellowship has been serving the people of the Congo for more than 50 years from its bases in Bunia, Kinshasa and Lubumbashi.

Mission Aviation Fellowship is a global family of organizations with a singular mission: to share the love of Jesus through aviation and technology so that isolated people may be physically and spiritually transformed. A significant part of this global network, Mission Aviation Fellowship-U.S. is headquartered in Nampa,Idaho. In addition to its aviation services, the ministry also provides communication systems and learning technologies to share the Gospel and improve the quality of life in remote areas of Africa, Asia, Eurasia andLatin America.

How Does Church Planting Benefit the Sending Church?

Can giving away your best people be a good thing?

How Does Understanding God’s Happiness Change Lives?

As much as I believe in the holiness of God, I also believe in emphasizing God’s happiness as a legitimate and effective way to share the gospel with unbelievers or to help Christians regain a foothold in their faith.

You Can’t (and Shouldn’t) Please Everyone

Learning to balance the natural tension of loving and caring for people, but not allowing someone to leverage their personal agenda or hijack the vision of your church is part of the leader’s responsibility.