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Yemen, Hodeidah, 1 May 2019 - on the road to Sanaa.
Yemen

A population on the frontline, indiscriminate attacks on civilians, and still no sign of change

Three years after Abs hospital bombing, MSF’s head of mission in Sana’a calls on combatants to finally respect international humanitarian law and protect civilians. Voices from the Field - 27 Aug 2019
 
In the West Bank, MSF provides psychotherapy in Nablus and Qalqiliya. While three of our psychologists in the project are local Palestinians, two are foreigners who do not speak Arabic. This means our interpreters play a vital role in our work there.
Palestine

Mental healthcare in translation

MSF is providing psychotherapy services in Nablus and Qalqiliya. While three of our psychologists in the project are local Palestinians, two are foreigners who do not speak Arabic. This means interpreters play a vital role in our work there. Project Update - 25 Aug 2019
 
A message from the Ocean Viking as it remains stranded in the Mediterranean Sea for the 12th day since the first rescue. There are 356 men women and children onboard.
Mediterranean migration

Ocean Viking rescue survivors finally offered place of safety

After 14 days at sea with 356 vulnerable men, women and children aboard, MSF is relieved Ocean Viking has been offered a place of safety to disembark in Malta Press Release - 23 Aug 2019
 
Over a week since Ocean Viking's first rescue, there are 356 people on board. MSF are still expecting to be assigned a place of safety for the disembarkation.
Mediterranean migration

“He just kept running, despite the wound and the bleeding”

MSF doctor tells the story of a 20-year-old Libyan man who had shrapnel removed from his torso on the search and rescue ship Ocean Viking in the Mediterranean Voices from the Field - 22 Aug 2019
 
On board of the Ocean Viking, rescued people in line for the registration.

The MSF medical team triage all those coming on board, treating the most immediate medical cases first. 

Everyone receives a rescue kit which includes water, high energy food, clothes and a blanket.
Mediterranean migration

On board the Ocean Viking: “We feel humbled by their courage”

Medical team leader Stefanie describes the physical – and above all psychological – wounds MSF is treating among the 356 people on board the Ocean Viking Voices from the Field - 19 Aug 2019
 
On board of the Ocean Viking,  two rescued children are drawing together.

The MSF medical team triage all those coming on board, treating the most immediate medical cases first.
Mediterranean migration

Place of safety needed for 356 people rescued in Central Mediterranean

With 356 vulnerable men, women and children on board the Ocean Viking, MSF and SOS MEDITERRANEE are calling for a place of safety that meets the requirements of international law. Press Release - 13 Aug 2019
 
A doctor tends to a patient in Aden, Yemen, 1 August 2019.
Yemen

Hospital in Aden overwhelmed by wounded in intense fighting

In less than 24 hours, Médecins Sans Frontières has treated 119 people in its hospital in Aden, Yemen, and the wounded continue to pour in. Press Release - 10 Aug 2019
 
The Aquarius and its 58 survivors spent five days waiting in international waters off the coast of Malta under poor weather conditions. On Sunday morning, 30 September 2018, the strong winds and choppy water finally abated and allowed for the safe and secure transfer of all 58 people – and a dog – to Maltese authorities. The survivors were then disembarked in Malta and will be distributed to four European countries in the coming days: France, Germany, Portugal and Spain.

Following the transfer, the Aquarius set course for Marseille, France in order to address its flag registration after the news a week prior that Italy had pressured Panama into removing the Aquarius from its register. Without the Aquarius, there are no search & rescue vessels in the area to conduct rescue operations and witness to the grave humanitarian needs on the Central Mediterranean. Meanwhile, people continue to flee Libya and die attempting to cross the world’s deadliest maritime route.
Mediterranean migration

Europe must act now to end preventable deaths in Libya and at sea

MSF International President Dr Joanne Liu implores European leaders to find better solutions to prevent people dying, trapped in Libyan detention centres, or from drowning at sea. Op-Ed - 6 Aug 2019
 
In northern rural Idlib, MSF is running a mobile clinic in a camp in Deir Hassan where the number of IDPs has increased by 10 500 people in two months, following the bombing and shelling on the southern Idlib and northern Hama countryside.
Syria

Escalating conflict in Idlib leaves increasing numbers dead, wounded or displaced

The level of conflict in Idlib and Hama governorates has increased exponentially over the last three months, resulting in hundreds of deaths, thousands of people injured, and forced nearly half a million from their homes and into camps in appalling conditions. Project Update - 31 Jul 2019
 
Thousands of life jackets left behind by arriving migrants are gathered at a dump on Lesbos Island, Greece. 
Thousands of people seeking safety after fleeing countries such as Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, Sudan, and Congo continue to risk their lives to reach Europe. Those who try to arrive via Turkey and the Aegean Sea have been trapped for an indefinite period of time on islands in Greece as part of the EU/Turkey deal and its deterrence and containment approach. 
In Moria refugee camp, on Lesbos island, there are currently more than 7,500 people in a camp made for a maximum of 2,500. With the camp so full, refugees are now staying in an informal extension of the camp known as Olive Grove. The awful conditions at Moria camp/Olive Grove and arbitrary administrative situations have had a dramatic impact on their health and in particular their mental health. 
Médecins Sans Frontières teams provide medical and mental health support outside Moria camp and run a clinic for severe mental health cases in Mytilene, the capital of the island.
Mediterranean migration

Libya shipwreck: “There are no words to describe their suffering”

Anne-Cecilia Kjaer, MSF nurse activity manager describes the scene on assisting people who had survived a horrific shipwreck off the Libyan coast. Voices from the Field - 26 Jul 2019
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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