 We bring in Sionians in the diaspora who are now working at Kabbalah and also beyond Kabbalah Hospital as far as to Kurobola. Sojourn, Midwifery, Nurses, I mean different areas in the health sector. We are trying to improve the quality and the quantity of the human resources in Konya Dog District. In Konya Dog District is one of the biggest districts in the whole of Sierra Leone. But only two official doctors are there to support 400,000 people. Diaspora and experts working in a wide range of specialty areas has worked on this project to strengthen health systems in rural communities. And so I'm quite happy that this particular project was spearheaded, initiated by the IOM and the Office of the Diaspora Affairs to get plus the Minister of Health and other partners to get us together to come down to our colleagues, work with them together as we have been doing for two weeks in Kabbalah Town, so that at least we can narrow the knowledge gap and foster effective collaboration among all our colleagues. So when I got this opportunity from IOM I actually thought oh god this is good because when I come to Sierra Leone I spend three months, sometimes six months doing stuff. I don't get paid because I'm not working full-time. I can leave my job and go back to it anytime. I took the opportunity because this was exactly what I've been wanting for somebody to like sponsor me to come and do what I have passion to do. As a diaspora expert in midwifery I work with their midwives on the antenatal ward. I work with midwives on the labor ward, doctors from other NGOs. I work with the postnatal ward midwives and we do the neonatal unit like with the sick babies where they admitted. We do theaters so it's all over areas that we cover. So if in case you get a chance now, I'll tell you now, yes they will just do quick operation for you. I graduated 2015 and since then I've been specializing in internal medicine, sub-specialty cardiovascular medicine. So I'm here for just a short term project to help the people of Kavala and to give them what I can do best. The people in the Konodugu district receive special medical services from diasporan health workers. We are in the midwifery. Some test them for me, I wouldn't say. I get emergency operation, I wouldn't for them to do payment and appendage. We are in the midwifery, I ask emotionally priced for the midwifery operation but the doctors say no, I'm afraid. In Bela, my name is Hatcham. In Bela, they are Hatcham. So the team don't come here. So I tell them not to come here. They go, they don't come here to help me and they don't put anything. They go there to help me. They don't say that they hold them fine. So let God make that they hold them fine and let us have the blessing that they will do it. Now they don't come here to help the body, they will tell God thank you for that. To guarantee lasting impact, diasporan health workers ensure they transfer their skills and knowledge to local staff. Whenever they do the surgery, because they say, only not to all the instrumentary, they say, give me this one, give me this one, give me this one. So really they learn everything from this job, from these two weeks. It has been a great time working with Dr. Tarawali. He urged me to do things, to learn how to do things on my own. So he has been a good teacher throughout these the four days we spent together at the dental department. The impact of the project is well known to the local authority and to the government of Sierra Leone. People involuntarily come, we brought our sister out from China, from America, from London. Myself what he talks to, having a feel some kind of way, but with the intervention I think I will praise God now. The diaspora community is very essential to nation building. It means we have to encourage our diasporas to facilitate, to harness their talent, bring it home for nation building. This is evident. Hopefully the circumstances will be generated where we will be happy to come here en masse. The experts in the diaspora are coming back to their country to help their people. I want to do that and I want the people who are the stakeholders to take this message on board. I'm glad there's so much for you brothers them, wouldn't and don't go. Now they don't start from memory, they can't do better thing for you. My colleagues in the diaspora are willing to come back to give to our continent of origin. Nobody can do it other than us. There's nowhere in the world where we cannot come together as a team. Together we can make it happen. Together we can push the health care system in Sierra Leone. I want to say a big thank you to our donor, the Japanese government who founded this project. And we are looking forward to see how best they can continue supporting IEM to help the people of Sierra Leone to, as I said, to go beyond Kabbalah.