Humanitaire et Philanthrope passionné depuis ses débuts, Harish a été la seule personne à prendre le risque de se rendre dans les régions du Congo touchées par la guerre pour assurer la provision.
While Harish Jagtani may have been born outside the Democratic Republic of Congo, his heart has long belonged to Kinshasa. For over two decades, this vibrant city has been his home, and through his work, he has earned the admiration and respect of many as one of the country’s most influential business leaders.
Mr Harish Jagtani’s HJ Foundation—a non-profit organization focused on providing healthcare services to underprivileged sections of society—opened a new healthcare center in Kinshasa on Saturday. This new facility will exclusively serve residents of the local community who are struggling to access affordable healthcare.
The Harish Jagtani Foundation (HJ Foundation) has responded swiftly to the recent devastation caused by floods and landslides in South Kivu province of the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, where over 400 individuals died or were injured and missing in the villages of Bushushu and Nyamukubi in the hills overlooking Lake Kivu.
Ces Avocats rappellent aussi à la retenue, à la responsabilité de tous et à davantage de professionnalisme des médias, tout en se réservant le droit de poursuivre les auteurs des propos et informations proférées à l’encontre de leur client. Ils espèrent que les investigations que mènent les services du Conseil National de Cyberdéfense se feront dans le respect des règles des procédures pénales et qu’elles n’aboutiront pas à garder indûment leur client en détention.
Harish Jagtani’s HJ Foundation—a non-profit organization focused on providing healthcare services to underprivileged sections of society—opened a new healthcare centre in Kinshasa on Saturday. This new facility will exclusively serve residents of the local community who are struggling to access affordable healthcare.
He was not yet twenty years old when he arrived in Congo. This year, 1995, the young Indian who does not have a penny in his pocket serves meals that his mother prepares to serve Indian workers working in shops in downtown Kinshasa. He lives in a two-room apartment that he shares with a few compatriots near a public dump, not far from the city’s Grand Marché.