FEELING BETTER Sarah (left) and Reynaldo sit in a hospital room in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum. AFP PHOTO
FEELING BETTER
Sarah (left) and Reynaldo sit in a hospital room in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum. AFP PHOTO

KHARTOUM: A dressing covers the scar where surgeons cut open Reynaldo Nilo’s chest for life-saving heart surgery, but the Philippine teenager feels stronger than he has for years after his operation in Sudan.

The 17-year-old arrived in Khartoum last month after his sister saw a television report about a hospital run by an Italian medical charity that offers free treatment.

Sitting in his spotless hospital room, his voice still hoarse after his five-hour surgery on June 16, Reynaldo said he was on the mend.

“I am feeling better, not like before. I feel stronger,” he added, smiling weakly as he sat up on his bed, his sister Sarah Joy by his side.

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Reynaldo, the son of impoverished farmers, dropped out of school two years ago after developing rheumatic heart disease.

He had strep throat as a child that developed into a deadly heart condition because it was not treated with antibiotics.

Distraught that the family could not afford the $25,000 (22,500 euro) surgery at the hospital near their home in the north of the Philippines, Reynaldo’s sister spotted the opportunity that saved his life.

Sarah Joy, 25, who had become his full-time carer, saw a television report on a documentary featuring Gino Strada, the surgeon who founded the humanitarian organization Emergency during the Rwandan genocide in 1994.

“I saw on CNN that Dr. Strada performs open-heart surgery for free,” she said. “I found hope again.”

After contacting Emergency by email and telling the charity about Reynaldo, they agreed to treat him for free.

When Turkish Airlines offered to cover the flights for Reynaldo and his sister, they prepared to travel for the surgery, but not without worries.

“We were afraid because they also said if he did not survive the operation, he would be buried here in Sudan,” she said, wiping tears from her eyes as she spoke.

“But there’s nothing we could do but to take the risk.”

Sarah Joy and her brother were also anxious about traveling to Sudan, knowing little about the country apart from reports of war and sickness on the news.

“At the start I was nervous because of Ebola,” she said.

Although Khartoum is Ebola-free, it is an unlikely location for a state-of-the-art heart hospital.

The Salam Center is an outpost of neat buildings and greenery amid squat mud brick houses and scrubby wasteland covered with litter.

Emergency picked the site after being offered the land by Sudan’s health ministry and opened the Salam Center in 2007. Since then it has carried out 6,800 heart operations, funded by the Sudanese government and international donors.

Medical director Alessandro Salvati -- who carried out Reynaldo’s open-heart surgery -- says it has a simple ethos.

“We want just to help poor people that maybe they can die because they cannot pay,” the 42-year-old surgeon from Rome said.

“This is the point of Emergency.”

AFP