Bringing Light to the Niger Delta: The 3-Rivers Cataract Project

Dr. Gabriel Mejuya Okorodudu (front left) with colleagues on the river. (Source: Africa Cataract and Eye Foundation)

In the remote waterways of Nigeria’s Niger Delta, where communities perch on stilts above oil-polluted waters and the nearest hospital requires hours of dangerous boat travel, blindness has long meant isolation. The Africa Cataract and Eye Foundation, led by Nigerian ophthalmologist Dr. Gabriel Mejuya Okorodudu, has partnered with the Cure Blindness Project to launch the 3-Rivers Project—an ambitious initiative targeting over one million people across the Ijaw, Itsekiri, and Ilaje communities of the Forcados-Escravos-Benin river systems.

The project addresses a stark reality: nearly 60% of cataracts in the Niger Delta are bilateral, meaning patients face complete blindness from a condition that requires only a simple surgery to cure. Rather than forcing patients to endure treacherous journeys to distant medical facilities, the partnership is establishing surgical centers directly within these riverine communities. Two centers—at Tsekelewu on the Olero Creek and Ogheye on the Benin River—are already operational, with plans to expand across additional tributaries by 2026.

Map of Nigeria in north Africa, and inset showing the Niger Delta. (Sources: Map: NDLA, inset: Protect the Deltas)

The Cure Blindness Project brings three decades of global experience to this collaboration. Founded in 1995 as the Himalayan Cataract Project by Dr. Geoff Tabin and Dr. Sanduk Ruit, the organization has facilitated millions of surgeries, screenings, and treatments across 30 countries. Their model focuses on developing sustainable, high-quality eye care systems in underserved regions—precisely what the Niger Delta communities need.

Beyond surgery, the initiative employs outreach boats equipped as mobile clinics, working with traditional leaders and local councils to spread awareness about blindness prevention. The foundation plans to conduct over 3,000 surgeries and establish a permanent eye care training hub for local practitioners by 2026.

Dr. Okorodudu (left) on the river. (Source: ChatGPT, modified from a photo in This Day newspaper)

As Dr. Okorodudu told This Day newspaper: “We’ve always had the commitment, but now we can scale. We can train more local providers. We can equip more community surgical suites. We can reach more people.” His determination reflects the project’s broader mission—ensuring that geography and poverty no longer sentence anyone to preventable blindness in one of Nigeria’s most marginalized regions.


Read the full article from This Day newspaper: 3-Rivers Cataract Project: A Quiet Mission to Cure Blindness in the Niger Delta

Related Articles

Colorado Ophthalmologist Restores Sight to Hundreds in Ethiopia

Dr. Blake Marleau Snyder recently performed 800 cataract surgeries in Ethiopia with the Cure Blindness Project, a global effort to eliminate preventable blindness through a rapid, cost-effective procedure.

Cure Blindness Project Celebrates World Sight Day, and its 30th Anniversary

Cure Blindness Project has joined the international eye health community in marking World Sight Day on October 9. Celebrating its 30th anniversary, the organization is expanding programs across Asia and Africa.

The Flying Eye Hospital Touches Down in Rwanda: A First for Orbis International

Orbis International’s Flying Eye Hospital makes its first-ever landing in Rwanda, training 100 medical professionals and performing 40 surgeries while establishing the country as a regional eye care hub.


Subscribe to the newsletter so that you never miss an uplifting story of medical humanitarians improving lives worldwide.

About Angels in Medicine

Angels in Medicine is a volunteer site dedicated to the humanitarians, heroes, angels, and bodhisattvas of medicine. The site features physicians, nurses, physician assistants and other healthcare workers and volunteers who reach people without the resources or opportunities for quality care, such as teens, the poor, the incarcerated, the elderly, or those living in poor or war-torn regions. Read their stories at www.medangel.org.

Interested in writing for Angels in Medicine? Know about an Angel we should interview? Drop me a note at harry@medangel.org.

Leave a Comment