Since the civil war of 2013, CAR has been marked by cycles of intensive violence. Fighting between the government and non-state armed groups, spurred by an election process, escalated in early 2021.
MSF sees the direct consequences of violence on the health of individuals and entire communities. There is a severe lack of access to healthcare; trained health workers are scarce, health services are poorly resourced and often targeted by the conflict; and patients need to travel hundreds of kilometres on dangerous roads to reach medical structures.
In CAR, we focus on treating victims and survivors of sexual violence; provide sexual and reproductive healthcare, including maternal healthcare; and provide treatment to people living with HIV.
Our activities in 2023 in Central African Republic
Data and information from the International Activity Report 2023.
2,499
2,499
€70.6 M
70.6M
1997
1997


725,700
725,7
10,600
10,6
9,230
9,23

6,030
6,03

MSF provides medical assistance for displaced people in Carnot

Global health community slithers away from snakebite crisis as antivenom runs out

After 18 months in locked compound, displaced families decide it is safe to go home

Local health worker killed near Bossangoa

Emergency team finishes 3 month intervention in Kouango after performing almost 1,500 consultations

“Without healthcare in Boguila our children would be like dead leaves falling from a tree”.

In the Carnot enclave “All I dream of is getting out of here and starting all over again”

MSF starts an emergency intervention in Kouango amid ‘a terrible mix of violence, displacement and lack of basic healthcare’
