On April 26, 2026, the Tyler Morning Telegraph published a feature on Amigos Internacionales and the work we are doing in Uganda, Burundi, Nigeria, Tanzania, Belize, and Guatemala.
Reporter Jennifer Scott covered three areas in depth.
Medical outreach
Our teams travel into remote areas where residents have little to no access to healthcare. We turn schoolrooms into surgical centers. During one recent children's camp in Uganda, volunteer surgeons completed 36 cleft palate surgeries in three days — working by flashlight. The nonprofit reported spending about $185,000 while delivering approximately $10 million in medical services. That is roughly $55 in medical value for every $1 contributed.
Education and anti-trafficking
We support more than 1,000 students across several schools in Uganda. When a child — especially a girl — cannot afford school fees, she is sent home. Vulnerable children become targets for exploitation. Keeping children in school is how we fight sex trafficking. "If they're in school, they're not being sex trafficked," said CEO Michael Ryer.


A child in school is a child protected. Sponsor a student in Uganda today.
[Sponsor a Child →]
MissionPoint
When a village donates land, we drill water wells, build schools and churches, create community gardens, and provide vocational training — sewing, soap making, carpentry, and masonry. The goal is generational change, not short-term relief. "I'm not trying to help them today or tomorrow," Ryer said. "We want generational change."
Amigos Internacionales has operated since 1967. Dr. John LaNoue founded the organization in Athens, Texas. Michael Ryer has served as president and CEO for 16 years, connected to the organization since childhood through its founder.
Read the full article at the Tyler Morning Telegraph: From East Texas to East Africa
Source: Jennifer Scott, Tyler Morning Telegraph, April 26, 2026
Update — April 29, 2026: Three days after the online feature, the Tyler Morning Telegraph published a front-page story in its print edition headlined "Global Impact: Whitehouse nonprofit brings medical care, education to remote communities across the world." The print article goes deeper — covering Amigos' anti-trafficking work, the MissionPoint initiative, USAID partnership in Guatemala, and clean water well projects across East Africa. Two independent features in three days from the same newspaper.
Read the print edition at archive.org →
Your gift delivers $55 in medical care for every $1 contributed.
[Give Today →]
Categories



Free Medical Camps in Burundi: What Happens When a Doctor Walks Into Gisuru | Amigos Internacionales
Social Media




















