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Nigerien a Giant for His Country’s Health

Mohamed  Salissou  KanéIf you want to get things done in Niger, it helps to know Mohamed Salissou Kané. The Carter Center’s country representative in Niger seems to have connections everywhere.

He’s earned his insider status. Few individuals have done as much as Kané to improve public health in Niger, one of the world’s poorest countries.

“In Niger, most of the diseases are related to low hygiene and poor environmental health practices as well as inadequate education on nutrition. There are very few well-trained health personnel,” Kané said. “I felt that the way to best help my country was to dedicate my career to public health.”

After completing his education in the United States, Kané served as the Niger Ministry of Health’s national director of hygiene and sanitation. He then became an advisor on community water supply and sanitation for the World Health Organization (WHO). In 1996, Kané joined The Carter Center; he led the campaign that eliminated Guinea worm disease throughout Niger.

“Salissou has been a huge advocate for his country men and women, and he worked tirelessly to rid Niger of Guinea worm,” said Kelly Callahan, director of the Center’s Trachoma Control Program and a former member of the Guinea worm team.

Kané is humble in the face of such praise.

  • Mohamed Salissou Kané speaks to a community in the Matameye district of Zinder region, Niger, about how to prevent trachoma, the world's leading cause of preventable blindness. (Photo: The Carter Center/ A. Mosher)

    Mohamed Salissou Kané speaks to a community in the Matameye district of Zinder region, Niger, about how to prevent trachoma, the world's leading cause of preventable blindness. (Photo: The Carter Center/ A. Mosher)

  • Kané (right) examines Guinea worm archives with Ousseini Mahamane, chief of Goulouské village in Zinder region and its former Guinea worm village volunteer.

    Kané (right) examines Guinea worm archives with Ousseini Mahamane, chief of Goulouské village in Zinder region and its former Guinea worm village volunteer. (Photo: The Carter Center/ S. Phelps)

“I’m proud to have contributed to alleviating the community’s suffering from that dreadful disease,” he said.

Kané and his tight-knit staff are now close to eliminating another disease that causes and perpetuates poverty, the eye disease trachoma. Again, Kané’s expertise in water and sanitation suits him perfectly for the job.

Eighty percent of Niger is desert. In some places, a thick stratum of granite makes drilling for water virtually impossible. A lack of sufficient water for drinking, cooking, cleaning, and bathing creates an environment where pathogens can thrive.

“People don’t get enough water from good sources, so they are forced to get it from unsafe sources like rivers and ponds, resulting in Guinea worm and other infections,” Kané explained. “Or there is not enough water to maintain hygiene, which is a key to preventing trachoma.”

With a kindly manner, quick wit, and ability to speak four languages, Kané is equally at home conversing with governors and sultans as he is with goat herders and subsistence farmers. He and Ousseini Mahamane, 80, the chief of Goulouské village in Zinder region, recently sat on the floor of Ousseini’s mud-brick home to catch up and peruse archives from Ousseini’s time as a Center-trained village volunteer.

Kané has a talent for developing outstanding public health specialists. A revolving-door policy allows health experts to move fluidly between the Ministry of Health and nongovernmental organizations such as The Carter Center and back again; the ongoing talent exchange makes both partners better and stronger.

Kané, a member of the Lions Club, said he simply wants to be known as a good family man who serves his country, “an experienced person who focuses on results and is dedicated to making a better life for my community.”

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