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In the ER section of a makeshift hospital in Syria that MSF has converted from a farm.
Syria

Casualties arrive en masse at MSF hospital following an airstrike in Idlib

Following an airstrike in Idlib governorate, northwest Syria, a number of people, including young children, have been severely injured. MSF medical teams are responding. Press Release - 13 Dec 2021
 
MSF teams have treated 163 patients with shrapnel, blast and other conflict-related injures at its trauma hospital in Mocha, Yemen between November 8th and November 28th as conflict heavily intensified, raising urgent concerns for the health and safety of the population as well as the capacity of the health system to cope with influxes of conflict-related injuries.  

Since the middle of November, MSF began to receive large influxes of war wounded patients. On November 12-13, teams received 34 wounded in two days and surgical teams worked around the clock to perform 20 surgeries in a single day. The following week, a second mass influx of 45 patients arrived to the hospital, including seven in critical condition. Of the 163 patients received by MSF since November 8th, 96 have arrived in with serious or critical condition.
Yemen

Hundreds of people with shrapnel injures treated at trauma hospital in Mocha

MSF teams have treated 163 patients with shrapnel, blast and other conflict-related injures at our Mocha trauma hospital in Yemen over a period of just 20 days.

Project Update - 6 Dec 2021
 
Humanitarian aid needs courageous people who act decisively and humanely despite adverse circumstances in the crisis areas of this world.
Iraq

Mosul: A city recovering from war

It's been four years since the battle to retake Mosul, Iraq. Although the devastating effects of the conflict are still visible, there is also hope in Mosul’s people. Voices from the Field - 19 Nov 2021
 
Psychologist Rasmia Ali Mohammed conducing a counselling session with Alima* at the mental health clinic supported by MSF at Al-Gamhouri Hospital in Hajjah, Yemen.
Yemen

The rise of severe mental health conditions in Yemen

The crisis in Yemen is in its seventh year and conflict continues to have a devastating impact on people’s wellbeing - especially their mental health. Interview - 10 Nov 2021
 
Makkia holding her sister Fatima’s baby in the post-operative ward of the Al-Qanawis mother and child hospital supported by MSF in Hodeidah, Yemen. Fatima was admitted to the ward after a C-section.
Yemen

Newborn babies struggle to survive in war-torn Yemen

In war-torn Yemen, while our teams are working to keep newborn babies healthy, those who cannot reach us are dying unnecessarily due to a lack of access to healthcare. Voices from the Field - 22 Oct 2021
 
MSF clinic Hermel
Lebanon

Breaking barriers to mental health care in Lebanon

The economic crisis in Lebanon is affecting the health sector, leading to the deterioration of mental health services which are hugely underfunded and understaffed. MSF is supporting the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health to include mental health services under primary healthcare services. Project Update - 14 Oct 2021
 
A patient receives care in the COVID-19 ward of Raqqa National Hospital, in northeast Syria.

MSF has now moved it's COVID-19 response from Raqqa National Hospital to Raqqa Covid-19 centre.
Syria

Worst wave yet of COVID-19 in northern Syria overwhelms health system

The already-struggling health system in northern Syria has been hit hard by the most severe wave of COVID-19 yet. Healthcare facilities and humanitarian organisations are struggling to cope with the extent of this new wave. Press Release - 13 Oct 2021
 
Muawia fled from the war in Darfur, Sudan to Libya 10 years ago. He left his family behind. He now survives with the help of some friends and some daily jobs in Tripoli. He says that the living conditions for migrants and refugees are very dangerous, as they are continuously subjected to robbery and violence in the streets and are often kidnapped for extortion. He says he was kidnapped twice by criminal groups and during this time endured torture, including by the use of hot objects to burn his flesh.
Libya

Thousands beaten up, detained following days of mass arrests in Tripoli

Thousands of refugees and migrants have been rounded up in mass arrests - often violent - in Libya's capital Tripoli, where they are being held in crammed and awful conditions in detention centres. Press Release - 6 Oct 2021
 
Al Noor camp for internally displaced Yemenis, which is one of the largest camps in Marib. MSF provides primary healthcare in this camp through a mobile clinic twice a week?

مخيم النور للنازحين والذي يعد من أكبر المخيمات في مأرب. تقدم أطباء بلا حدود الرعاية الصحية الأولية في هذا المخيم عبر العيادة المتنقلة.
Yemen

People treated following missile attacks on residential area in Marib governorate

MSF has provided care to people, and urged once again for warring parties to respect International Humanitarian Law, following missiles fired on a residential area in Marib governorate, Yemen. Project Update - 5 Oct 2021
 
Men detained in Janzour detention centre, in the outskirts of Tripoli, Libya. Detainees spend days and months in Libyan detention centres, without knowing when they will be released.
Libya

Medical care resumes in Tripoli detention centres

Three months after we suspended our work in detention centres in Tripoli, Libya, over safety fears, our teams have returned to providing medical care to detained people after an agreement from Libyan authorities. Project Update - 29 Sep 2021
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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