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Mamá África, refugio para continuar el gran viaje

Mamá África, refugio para continuar el gran viaje
canarias7.es - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from canarias7.es Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Seattle DJC com local business news and data - Weekend - Canary Islands hotel offers shelter to migrants

Seattle DJC com local business news and data - Weekend - Canary Islands hotel offers shelter to migrants
djc.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from djc.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Good News Thursday: Eye doctor aids the poor, Canary Islands hotel offers shelter to migrants

The Daily Universe A Nepalese elderly patient waits for his eye patch to be removed at the Tilganga Eye Center in Kathmandu, Nepal. Nepal’s “God of Sight” eye doctor renowned for his innovative and inexpensive cataract surgery for the poor is taking his work beyond the Himalayan mountains to other parts of the world so there is no more unnecessary blindness in the world. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Dr. Sanduk Ruit is Nepal’s best eye doctor. Known as the country’s “God of Sight,” Ruit is renowned for creating inexpensive cataract surgery. He offers his surgery to the poor community in Nepal. A makeshift hospital sits next to the Mayadevi temple where Buddha was born more than 2,600 years ago. Hundreds of people line up each day to help their fading eyesight. “The whole objective, aim and my passion and love is to see there remain no people with unnecessary blindness in this part of the world,” Ruit told the Associated Press. 

Spanish hotel shelters migrants amid virus crisis

A hotel in the Canary Islands has opened its doors to migrants seeking a new life. When hotel director Calvin Lucock and restaurant owner Unn Tove Saetran said goodbye to one of the last groups of migrants staying in one of the seaside resorts they manage in Spain s Canary Islands, the British-Norwegian couple didn t know when they would have guests again. They had initially lost their tourism clientele to the coronavirus pandemic, but then things took an unexpected turn. A humanitarian crisis was unfolding on the archipelago where tens of thousands of African men, women and children were arriving on rudimentary boats.

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