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In the early hours of 4 December, an airstrike damaged the MSF-supported Al Gamhouri hospital in Hajjah city. The emergency room, operating theatre and intensive care unit were damaged and 12 ER patients were evacuated. Despite the damage, Al Gamhouri hospital received 22 casualties from the airstrikes in Hajjah shortly after. Al Gamhouri also received a total of 38 war-wounded patients between 2 and 3 December. 
“Health services have been repeatedly attacked over the course of this conflict. Yet again warring parties are not taking measures to spare medical facilities, endangering the lives of patients and medical staff,” says Steve Purbrick, MSF Field Coordinator in Hajjah. “Civilians must be able to flee or seek medical care, ambulances must be allowed to reach the injured and hospitals must be protected”.
Yemen

Intense fighting and blockade further reduce access to healthcare

A week of heavy violence, coupled with a crippling blockade preventing vital supplies entering into Yemen, shows new levels of disregard by warring parties for the civilian population, medical facilities and patients, says Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).
Press Release - 6 Dec 2017
 
MSF teams assessing the medical and humanitarian needs in Al Mishlab. east of Raqqa. 2 November. “When we first visited Mishlab, east of Raqqa, it was a ghost town, but on our latest visit, some people had returned to check on their houses, Some found their homes in ruins; others found dead bodies and explosive devices in their houses, gardens and in the streets.” says Craig Kenzie, leader of MSF’s Raqqa response team
Syria

Booby-traps and landmines in Raqqa

Six weeks after fighting subsided in Raqqa city in Syria and surrounding villages, former residents are returning home to find their houses in ruins and their streets and fields littered with unexploded remnants of war, including booby-traps, landmines, ammunition and rockets.
Voices from the Field - 30 Nov 2017
 
Men detained in Abu Salim detention centre. Detainees spend days and months in Libyan detention centres, without knowing when they will be released.
Libya

When France becomes accomplice to the very crimes it condemns

All these people who find themselves trapped in the Libyan snare, which was partly set by France and the European Union, must be afforded all possible means of escape. Opinion - 30 Nov 2017
 
A burnt skeleton of wood and metal is all that remains of the pediatric ward at Al Khansaa hospital in Mosul, northern Iraq. The hospital suffered severe damage when Mosul was retaken from Islamic State group in 2016 and 2017. Sixty percent of the hospital remains destroyed.  
 
The healthcare system in Mosul is still in tatters following months of conflict. Hospitals and clinics were bombed and now only a handful are left to service a large city.     
  
MSF has been working at Al Khansaa hospital to rebuild the emergency room, paediatric in-patient facilities, a nutrition unit and the intensive care unit (ICU).
Iraq

Crisis update – November 2017

More than 2.2 million people have now returned home but years of conflict have severely impacted the health sector and the needs are great. Crisis Update - 30 Nov 2017
 
The last two functional ambulances in Al-Marj neighbourhood (in the East Ghouta besieged area near Damascus) were destroyed beyond repair in an aerial bomb attack on Monday 05 December 2016. They were parked in the hospital’s warehouse/garage, very near to the makeshift hospital’s location. Two hospital cars, used to transporting supplies and medical personnel, were also destroyed in the blast. The lack of ambulances will have an impact on the ability to quickly treat wounded when there is bombing or shelling in the area, but above all it will affect the capacity to refer the most sick patients to larger secondary referral hospitals. The makeshift hospital in Al-Marj is not equipped for complex or long-term in-patient hospital care, and this could have a big impact on the ability to refer patients for appropriate secondary care.
Syria

Medical services stretched beyond limit after shelling in East Ghouta

MSF calls for due precautions to be taken by all belligerents, in accordance with International Humanitarian Law, to avoid hitting civilians and civilian infrastructure including hospitals and residential areas. Statement - 27 Nov 2017
 
Old hospital beds lay abandoned in the grounds of Al Khansaa hospital in East Mosul, northern Iraq. The hospital suffered severe damage when Mosul was retaken from the Islamic State group in 2016 and 2017. Sixty percent of the hospital remains destroyed.  
 
The healthcare system in Mosul is still in tatters following months of conflict. Hospitals and clinics were bombed and now only a handful are left to service a large city.     
  
MSF has been working at Al Khansaa hospital to rebuild the emergency room, paediatric in-patient facilities, a nutrition unit and the intensive care unit (ICU).
Iraq

From chaos to the provision of care

It is crucially important for this work to continue. The rebuilding of essential medical services is of life-saving significance during this phase of Mosul's post-war recovery. Voices from the Field - 23 Nov 2017
 
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Syria

MSF teams respond to car explosion in Al-Hasakah, north-east Syria

MSF teams responded over the weekend to a mass casualty incident after a car exploded late on Friday near Al-Hasakah, in north-east Syria, killing and injuring people fleeing the fighting in Deir ez-Zor. Statement - 20 Nov 2017
 
¨David Noguera, President of MSF Spain, meets with people who live in a camp for internally displaced people near Abs, Yemen. Most were driven from their homes by the war, and have lived in the camp for more than two years without sufficient shelter, access to water, or proper healthcare.¨
Yemen

Misery deepens as borders close

"Coalition leaders must immediately grant unhindered access to and within Yemen, so that humanitarian assistance can reach those most in need." Op-Ed - 20 Nov 2017
 
Mohammad Ahmed, Doctor, Rural Hospital in Abs
Yemen

MSF statement on Saudi-led coalition blockage

"Yemenis are already struggling with massive increases in food, water and fuel costs, as well as access to medical care" Statement - 17 Nov 2017
 
Tabqa, Syria, September 2017. Taqba Hospital.
The city was taken control end of April by the Syrian Democratic Army, an Kuridish-Arabo alliance support by the international coalition. During the fight, the ISIS fighters were taking refuge inside.

Tabqa, Syrie, septembre 2017. Hôpital de Tabqa. La ville a été prise fin avril par les Forces Démocratiques Syriennes (FDS), une alliance de combattants kurdes et arabes soutenue par la coalition internationale. Lors des combats, les soldats du groupe Etat islamique se sont retranchés à l'intérieur de l'hôpital.
Syria

“During the battle for Raqqa, nobody cared about the civilians”

"People described how many inhabitants who were forced to go out into the street to find water ended up wounded or dead." Voices from the Field - 15 Nov 2017
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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