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Afghanistan

“By midday our hospital was on the frontline, with fighting right outside the gate”

Testimony from Dr. Masood Nasim, head of the medical team at MSF's trauma hospital in Kunduz, northern Afghanistan, describes the first 72 hours in the hospital after fighting engulfed Kunduz city on Monday, 28 September 2015. "By midday our hospital was on the frontline, with fighting right outside the gate," says Dr. Masood Nasim. "You could hear the sound of shelling, rockets and airplanes. Some bullets have come into the hospital, some even through the roof of the intensive care unit. But despite being in the middle of the fighting, our hospital and staff have been respected and we’ve been able to carry on our work." Voices from the Field - 1 Oct 2015
 
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Iraq

Syrian refugees’ endless journey

Testimony from a Syrian refugee in Domeez refugee camp, Iraq. “I am not happy to leave, I would rather stay here if I could, close to my parents but really we have no choice,” says Mohamed. Every day many families living in the camp prepare to head back into the unknown, leaving the camp and continuing on towards Europe where they hope to find long-term safety and rebuild their lives. Voices from the Field - 30 Sep 2015
 
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Afghanistan

Afghanistan: MSF hospital overwhelmed with wounded after heavy fighting in Kunduz

MSF's trauma hospital has been overwhelmed with wounded as heavy fighting in Kunduz. “The hospital is inundated with patients,” says Guilhem Molinie, MSF’s Country Representative in Afghanistan. “We have quickly increased the number of beds from 92 to 110 to cope with the unprecedented level of admissions, but people keep arriving. We have 130 patients spread throughout the wards, in the corridors and even in offices. With the hospital reaching its limit and fighting continuing, we are worried about being able to cope with any new influxes of wounded.” Press Release - 30 Sep 2015
 
Trauma Centre Kunduz
Afghanistan

MSF hospital overwhelmed after fighting in Kunduz

Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF)’s trauma hospital has been overwhelmed with wounded as heavy fighting between government and opposition forces engulfed Kunduz city on Monday.

msf.org.uk - 29 Sep 2015
 
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Greece

MSF teams help create a transit camp for refugees arriving to Idomeni

A team of MSF logisticians has helped build a transit camp with the capacity to accommodate more than 1,000 people in the Idomeni area in Greece, close to the border with the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM). The structures will serve as a facility for the thousands of refugees and migrants that pass through the area every day.

MSF has set up four large 240 square metre tents and two tents of 45 square metres to be used for our medical activities. The camp is also equipped with basic sanitation facilities and water supply.
Project Update - 26 Sep 2015
 
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Ukraine

MSF refused permission to work in Lugansk, leaving vulnerable people deprived of essential healthcare and medicines

“We find the decision unacceptable given the significant medical and humanitarian needs of people affected by the ongoing conflict in Lugansk,” says Dr Bart Janssens, MSF Director of Operations. “MSF has been one of the few international organisations providing vital assistance in Lugansk for more than a year. As in all conflict zones where MSF works, our only aim has been to help vulnerable people, no matter their political beliefs or which side of the frontline they find themselves on.” Statement - 25 Sep 2015
 
Phoenix' 8th rescue operation
Mediterranean migration

MSF will no longer provide emergency medical assistance and post-rescue care on the MY Phoenix

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), was informed that MOAS (Migrant Offshore Aid Station) has decided to stop their current search and rescue operation on the Mediterranean Sea. As a result, MSF will no longer provide emergency medical assistance and post-rescue care on board the MY Phoenix, as it has done since 2 May. Press Release - 23 Sep 2015
 
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France

MSF helping 3,500 people stuck in Calais 'Jungle'

Approximately 3,500 exiles are living in a former garbage dump on the outskirts of Calais, France. The MSF team on site since 10 September is working with Médecins du Monde. “We are humanitarian aid workers and are used to providing aid to refugees in medical and health emergencies in Sudan, Ethiopia, Jordan and elsewhere, but the situation here has been particularly shocking,” says Pierre-Pascal Vandini, the MSF project coordinator. “People have been left to fend for themselves, law enforcement turns a blind eye to violence, there are not enough water stations or showers and no one is maintaining the scanty health infrastructure. It’s organized abandonment.” Project Update - 23 Sep 2015
 
Refugee children of Kos
Mediterranean migration

“When the war is over, I want to return to my Syria – it was the best life ever”

Testimony from a Syrian refugee, in Kos. “I made this journey for the future of my children… When the war is over, I want to return to my Syria – it was the best life ever.” Voices from the Field - 18 Sep 2015
 
Adnan
Mediterranean migration

"There was no other choice but to leave Syria."

Adnan’s father, a Syrian refugee arrived in Kos, shared some of his experiences with MSF. "Our family have been put in a situation where there was no other choice but to leave Syria, and then to leave Turkey. " Voices from the Field - 18 Sep 2015
Cholera intervention in South Kivu
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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