COLOMBO, Sri Lanka – Sailors from the Nimitz Carrier Strike Group and members of the U.S. Embassy
in Sri Lanka visited children at Lady Ridgeway Hospital in Colombo, Oct. 29, during a port visit.
Volunteers from Ticonderoga-class cruiser USS Princeton (CG 59) and Arleigh Burke-class destroyers
USS Howard (DDG 83), USS Pinckney (DDG 91) and USS Kidd (DDG 100) gave some of their liberty
time to help out.
“This was great opportunity to really interact with some folks out in the community,” said Lt. Cmdr. Scott
Mehaffey, from Norfolk, the air warfare officer for Princeton. “We got to play with kids. That was the
best part – seeing little kids and to be here for them. This is what it’s really about. This is what we value
as Americans – to be part of a bigger world, not just us.”
The group split up and visited four children’s wards during the visit. They talked with children and
parents, passed out fruit and drinks, did crafts, and sang with children.
“It was good time, painting pumpkins and just interacting with the children,” said Fire Controlman 1 st
Class Landon Menard, a Princeton Sailor. “I wanted to set a positive example for the sick children and let
them know that it can and will get better.”
According to Dr. W. K Wickramasinghe, hospital director, this is the first time U.S. Navy Sailors have
visited the hospital.
“I think it’s a change,” said Wickramasinghe. “Everybody sees the Sailors as military people, but there’s
a human side to them also.”
Open since 1895, Lady Ridgeway is a teaching hospital that receives patients from across the country.
The hospital treats around 1,000 children in the outpatient ward along with around 300 in the inpatient
ward and is one of the largest children’s hospitals in the world. All services at the hospital are free of
charge in keeping with the free state health care policy of the Sri Lankan government.
Patient care is a priority at the hospital, said Wickramasinghe, which often limits the amount of time staff
can spend interacting on a personal level with children. That made the Sailors’ visit even more special.
“I think every parent would welcome somebody to come talk to them [the children] from the heart,” said
Wickramasinghe. “People are busy and there’s not much time for [staff] to interact, other than the patient
care. Having other well wishers come in and interact helps to get [patients] cured.”
This is the first time a U.S. Navy carrier strike group has pulled into Sri Lanka since 1985. The Nimitz
Carrier Strike Group is on a regularly scheduled deployment in the 7th Fleet area of operations in support
of maritime security operations and theater security cooperation efforts.
For more information about Nimitz Carrier Strike Group, visit http://www.nimitz.navy.mil/csg_11.html
or www.facebook.com/carrierstrikegroupeleven.