The brother of the late Sudanese doctor, Amjad Al-Hourani, who passed away after being infected with the Corona virus while performing a duty in the front rows at Cowen Brighton Hospital in Britain, revealed that his late brother was a football fan and paid his love to contribute to the maintenance of the Sudanese Mars Club.

Amal Al-Hourani told BBC News today, Sunday, that his brother had always remembered his upbringing in Sudan and that he was very proud of being a Sudanese and he was a football fan and encouraged the Mars team and Manchester United to ensure that the team’s stadium would be painted in Khartoum.

The death of the two doctors, Amjad Al-Hourani and Adil Al-Tayyar, attracted the attention of the British, who are of Sudanese origin. They were the first doctors who died due to the Corona virus in Britain and the two men did not know each other, they may never meet, but in death they had a strange match.

The report states that the two doctors married and had children, and that Al-Hourani settled with his small family in Burton upon Trent. The pilot stayed with his small family in Isleworth, west of the capital, London, and they became major pillars in their societies, and they maintained their relationship with their country of origin, Sudan, which they both loved.

The report stated that Amjad was a philanthropist and climbed the Himalayas in 2010 to raise funds for the Queen's Hospital Burton's CT scanner, where he was working.

The report added that the friend of the late, Mattondo, was visiting Um Umm Amjad house in Bristol and they were eating "fava beans", traditional bean soup, and feta cheese with pepper.

Amjad al-Hawarni grew up in 1964 in Sudan, the second of six males. His father was a doctor, then he immigrated to Britain at the age of 11 and in 1975 the family moved to Taunton, Somerset, before settling in Bristol four years later.

Amjad's younger brother, Amal, said: "My father was one of the first waves to come from Sudan in the seventies. We did not know any other Sudanese families who grew up in Britain and we only lived among the British and felt as though the adventure of everything new and different."

The late Amjad was inseparable from his one-year-old brother named Ashraf, and Amal said about this relationship: “They could have done anything.” They enjoyed intelligence and were multi-talented. They loved football and technology, learned everything and mastered everything.

Amel laughed, Amjad, who liked to own things, remembering, “He always brought this set of tools he just bought, and he says to me (look, I bought this projector that can be put in the pocket, so let's watch a movie!)”

Amjad and Ashraf both studied medicine, just like their father, and then a tragedy occurred for the family in 1992, when Ashraf died due to an asthma attack, at the age of 29, Amal says about it: “The tragedy had a great emotional impact on my brother Amjad but he became the family rock later on so that our father His nickname is Ashraf, in memory of his brother. "

Amjad was a great curious thinker and speaker. His brother Amal says: "He was one of those people who had encyclopedic knowledge of everything and was also a fan of Formula 1 racing and was a lover of Brazilian driver Ayrton Senna.

And his friend, Dr. Simba Oliver Matondo, recounts: "It was Amjad Karima, and he did not know cunning we met together in the same semester at the university, and they spent years studying together and we were eating pizza and watching kung fu movies.

His late mother, Amjad, had recently recovered from a pneumonia episode, and in late February, after completing a long work shift, he went to Amjad Al-Hourani to Bristol to see his mother, but Amjad felt unwell in the car, but he assumed he might have been exhausted from work.

By March 4, Al-Hourani was admitted to Burton's Queen's Hospital and his colleagues put him on a respirator while he was later transferred to Glenfield Hospital in Leicester, and placed on a more sophisticated ECMO rationing device, to supply himself and Amjad on this device has been fighting for his life for about three weeks.

Amjad Al-Hourani was sticking to life, but on March 28, the doctors decided to remove Amjad from the ration apparatus and he was wearing protective clothing, and he allowed one of the brothers of the deceased to enter his room, to hold his hand while others were watching what was happening from behind the window.

Amjad will be buried in Bristol, next to his father, and until he is close to his mother for a visit