KARACHI: Pop diva Madonna, who is worth $650 million, has launched a new fund-raising force to support the work of a Malawian paediatric surgeon. Her US registered charity Raising Malawi announced, two years after she abandoned a girl’s academy project in a cloud of alleged mismanagement.
Through her charity, the “Queen of Pop” has emailed her well-wishers and fans, addressing them as Dear Friend, and asking: "Will you consider donating $5 or more to support people like Dr. Erick Borgstein, for many years the only paediatric surgeon in Malawi, who are helping orphans and vulnerable children in Malawi?"
Malawi, where 39 percent of the 13 million general public are poor, has over one million orphans and helpless children, and less than 200 doctors, creating enormous shortages in the medical system.
The charity said, “Dr. Borgstein treats thousands of paediatric patients every year, performing hundreds of life-saving operations."
He also trains medical students in general and in paediatric surgery, thanks to the financial support from Raising Malawi.
"He will now formally train a young Malawian doctor to follow in his footsteps as a paediatric surgeon," the charity added.
It was not clearly how much money Madonna is looking for in this new venture. Coming more than a year after her charity controversially cancelled the construction of a state-of-the-art $15 million Raising Malawi Academy for Girls (RMAG) in Chinkhota village, 15 kilometres from the capital Lilongwe. The academy, meant to offer 500 scholarships to girls from poor backgrounds and train them into doctors and future leaders of the country, was mired in allegations of mismanagement, including excessive spending on offices and cars.
An audit had found $3.8 million had been misused.
Madonna, who has adopted two children from Malawi, Mercy James and David Banda, said she had realised the academy would not be enough as two-thirds of Malawian girls are not educated beyond primary school and she wanted to reach "thousands and not hundreds of girls" by constructing several schools.
Madonna said she was concentrating on an approach to build 10 schools within communities across the country, which would educate at least 1,000 children a year, half of them girls.
The charity has teamed up with the non-profit group build on, which has constructed 54 primary schools in Malawi in the last 19 years.