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Chad

Deadly attack on Koulfa Island

A triple suicide attack that took place on the island of Koulfa in the Lake Chad area in Chad on Saturday morning has reportedly killed 30 people and wounded up to 200. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams present in the area have immediately mobilised to provide support to the Chadian Ministry of Health. Project Update - 7 Dec 2015
 
Hermenegilda. Albazine’s Health Center. Maputo, Mozambique.
Access to medicines

Stockouts: Testimonies from patients and medical staff

Testimonies from AIDS patients. “Once I was two weeks without my ARVs. When I arrived at the health centre I was told there was no nurse there and no one found an alternative solution for me, so I went back home empty handed and desperate, " Sanculani Langui, from Marara Centro, Tete province, Mozambique. Voices from the Field - 30 Nov 2015
 
Yebbi camp, in Bosso, Diffa region, in south-eastern Niger. 
At the beginning of May, thousands of people fled their villages on islands in Lake Chad, after Nigerien authorities urged them to leave the area following the deadly attack of Boko Haram on the island of Karamga. Most of them are settled around two camps, one in Bosso (Yebbi) and another one in Nguigmi (Kimegana), two towns located near the lake.
Niger

MSF assists victims of new wave of violence in Diffa region

An attack on a village in the Diffa region of Niger on 25 November has left 18 dead and 16 wounded, according to local authorities. The wounded were treated on site by local health staff, while six people with severe injuries have been transferred to Diffa hospital with the help of a team from MSF. Press Release - 27 Nov 2015
 
A patient affected by meningitis is cared by an MSF doctor Clement Van Galen.
Epidemics and pandemics

Epidemics: Neglected emergencies?

MSF draws attention to the challenges and choices that may impair effective response to emergencies, epidemics and outbreaks. Report - 25 Nov 2015
 
Patients waiting to be attended at the Zombedze clinic, where MSF has decentralised ingrated TB and HIV services, in the Shiselweni region, south of Swaziland.
HIV/AIDS

Countries should take up new WHO ‘test and treat’ guidelines

MSF welcomes progress on getting HIV treatment to more people and urges all affected countries to take up new World Health Organization (WHO) ‘test and treat’ guidelines before next June’s UN High-level Meeting on HIV/AIDS, where donor governments should commit to a funding plan to close the global treatment gaps. Press Release - 24 Nov 2015
 
Situated in the Lake Chad region, the site of Koulkimé in Chad hosts approximately 1,800 displaced people according to OCHA. They have fled Islamic State's West Africa Province (ISWAP), also known as Boko Haram, as well as military operations carried out by the Chadian government.  MSF is working together with the Chadian Ministry of Health to support the primary health centre in Koulkimé.
Lake Chad Crisis

“The only certainty is that people will remain uprooted and continue to live in fear”

Interview with MSF Director of Operations in the Lake Chad region about the effect of continued attacks by the Islamic State’s West Africa Province (ISWAP) group, also known as Boko Haram. “In the Lake Chad area, we are seeing a regional crisis with large-scale humanitarian consequences. People continue to flee from violence, across borders and inside their own countries." Voices from the Field - 23 Nov 2015
 
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South Sudan

Activity Update, October 2015

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) employs more than 2,937 South Sudanese staff and 329 international staff to respond to a wide range of medical emergencies and provide free and high quality healthcare to people in need 18 projects in seven out of 10 states in the country and the Abyei Special Administrative Area. Project Update - 18 Nov 2015
 
In the daytime it gets stifling hot inside these shelters, but the camp is so packed with thousands of tents and temporary shelters there is very little communal space. In the most
crowded section of the camp, there is less than 4.5 square meters of space per person, less than one seventh of the space required by minimum humanitarian standards. Only about half a square kilometre has been designated by the United Nations for the displaced population to live in, comprising a population the size of a small city.
South Sudan

Malakal, An Inadequate Refuge

The number of patients treated by MSF on a weekly basis in the UN Protection of Civilians Camp (PoC) in Malakal has tripled since June, as the health of the population sheltering in the camp is being jeopardized by overcrowding and substandard living conditions. Presently, almost 48,000 people are living in the Malakal PoC following an influx of more than 16,000 people in July and August. Many came from areas where humanitarian access was cut off by insecurity for months, forcing thousands to flee from conflict and hunger. Most people arrived with nothing. Photo Story - 18 Nov 2015
 
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Burundi

MSF treats 60 people wounded in grenade explosions

60 injured people were treated by MSF at its trauma centre after grenades exploded in several Bujumbura neighbourhoods. Project Update - 18 Nov 2015
Four mothers posing in a corridor of the Hospital in Bili. All four of them are staying in the hospital with their child, that's suffering from a severe case of malaria. Since the beginning of the project in 2016, the pediatric ward already treated more than 4.000 cases of complicated/severe form of malaria.
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)

Independent medical humanitarian assistance

We provide medical assistance to people affected by conflict, epidemics, disasters, or exclusion from healthcare. Our teams are made up of tens of thousands of health professionals, logistic and administrative staff - most of them hired locally. Our actions are guided by medical ethics and the principles of independence and impartiality. We are a non-profit, self-governed, member-based organisation.

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