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Airmen Nearly Done with First of Two Humanitarian Projects in Africa 
Ghana 
Airmen with the North Dakota National Guard’s 119th Wing Civil Engineer Squadron paint the trim on a building on Burma Camp near Accra, Ghana. The building will serve as classrooms to train members of the Ghanaian Armed Forces. The two-week mission for the North Dakota Airmen is providing valuable training on contingency skills while helping Ghana — North Dakota’s pair in the State Partnership Program.
 

Fargo, N.D. – Halfway through a two-week humanitarian mission to Africa, North Dakota National Guard Airmen report the mission has been going well despite the high heat index.

 

Thirty-four members of the 119th Wing’s Civil Engineer Squadron deployed to Ghana April 19 to work on two major construction projects that were kicked off by the Michigan Air National Guard’s 127th Wing during the first week of April.

 

As of today, the North Dakota Guardsmen were 95 percent complete with one project and were well on their way with the second, according to Maj. John Gibbs, 119th Wing Civil Engineer Squadron.

 

“Our North Dakota Airmen are making great progress on these important projects. Being able to help the people of Ghana, whom we’ve come to know very well over the past six years, is incredibly rewarding. Furthermore, this mission is providing considerable real-world construction training in a foreign environment for our Airmen, which is incredibly beneficial for today’s operating environment,” said Maj. Gen. David Sprynczynatyk, North Dakota adjutant general, who is in Ghana this week to observe the construction progress and meet with key leaders involved with the State Partnership Program.

 

North Dakota has been partners with Ghana since 2004 as part of the program, which is sponsored by the Department of Defense. The program aligns states with partner countries to encourage the development of economic, political and military ties. 

 

During the past six years, more than 180 North Dakota Guardsmen, Ghana military members and civilians have taken part in State Partnership Program events and workshops. The current mission is providing valuable training on contingency skills for the Airmen while helping Ghanaians.

 

Today, the Civil Engineer Squadron was finishing painting a complex at the Acota Academy at Burma Camp, a Ghanaian military complex near Accra, Ghana’s capital. Installing doors and windows was the only task that remained after Michigan and North Dakota Airmen had replaced walls, redone electrical work, installed fans and air conditioning, plastered the exterior walls and more at the building that will be used to provide training to the Ghanaian Armed Forces.

 

“What we essentially did was gut the whole building and replace everything so it’s new,” Gibbs said in a call from Ghana.

 

Many of the North Dakota Airmen moved on to Takoradi, in Ghana’s western region, on Sunday to begin on the second major project: a complete renovation of a medical laboratory facility co-located with the Ghanaian Armed Forces’ 2nd Battalion. While it’s a military facility, “the civilian population does come in and seek medical assistance at the clinic,” Gibbs said.

 

Typically hard chargers, the civil engineers have had to slow down a bit as they face a heat index in the 104- to 105-degree range.

 

“It takes a little getting used to,” Gibbs said. “You can’t work as hard as you normally would.”

 

Proper training and follow-through on heat injury prevention has paid off, Gibbs said, and there have been no heat-related injuries for the group, which is expected home Sunday.

 

 

For more information

Happy Hooligans Prepare for Ghana Deployment (3/26/2010)

www.ndguard.ngb.army.mil/news/Pages/HooligansprepforGhana.aspx

Ghana 
 

Airmen with the North Dakota National Guard’s 119th Wing Civil Engineer Squadron work on gutting a building in Accra, Ghana. The Airmen are on a two-week humanitarian mission as part of the Department of Defense-sponsored State Partnership Program.

Ghana 
This building on Burma Camp in Accra, Ghana, needed to be gutted and renovated for use as classrooms to train the Ghanaian Armed Forces. Airmen with the North Dakota National Guard’s 119th Wing Civil Engineer Squadron took over the mission from the Michigan Air National Guard’s 127th Wing this past week. They have been installing a roof, electrical wiring, windows and doors, ceiling fans, air conditioning units, floors and more since arriving last weekend.
 
   
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