Afghanistan expresses gratitude toward Turkey for medical aid against coronavirus
A Turkish shipment carrying medical aid against COVID-19 pandemic reaches Kabul, June 11, 2020. (AA)


Afghanistan thanked Turkey for sending generous medical supplies that reached Kabul on Thursday to help the country's fragile health system fight the coronavirus pandemic.

Health Minister Ahmad Javad Osmani said the shipment came at a crucial time for Afghans in the fight against the coronavirus and vowed the aid will be distributed fairly among the most needy and vulnerable.

Turkish Ambassador Oğuzhan Ertuğrul highlighted the historic and brotherly ties between Afghanistan and Turkey and stressed this cooperation will further strengthen bilateral ties.

Letters from President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his Afghan counterpart Mohammad Ashraf Ghani were exchanged.

"A Turkish Armed Forces aircraft, carrying the medical supplies, prepared by the Health Ministry at the direction of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, for use against the COVID-19 outbreak, took off from Ankara Etimesgut Airbase for Afghanistan," the National Defense Ministry said on Twitter.

It carried 10 ventilators, 10 defibrillators, 10 oxygen regulators, 3 PCR machines, 10 nebulizers and 30,000 COVID-19 RT-q PCR diagnostic test kits, 25,000 N95 face masks and 50,000 surgical and normal masks.

The aid also carried a message for Afghans.

"After hopelessness, there is so much hope and after darkness, there is the much brighter sun," it said, quoting the words of 13th-century Islamic scholar Mevlana Jalaluddin Rumi, who was born in Afghanistan and has his final resting place in Turkey.

Turkey has helped at least 125 countries with humanitarian aid during the outbreak, including the U.S., U.K., Italy and Spain, making it the world's third-largest provider of aid during the pandemic.

Afghanistan health officials announced Thursday that 748 people tested positive for COVID-19 in the last 24 hours. The number of positive cases in the country stands at 22,890.