Skip to main content
759 Results
 
msf-placeholder
Lebanon

Hakim, 'Living conditions are very difficult; I don't think there's anyone who finds them tolerable'

Houses are overcrowded and built close together; zinc roofs cause temperatures to rise in the summer and drop sharply in the winter; the infrastructure is nearly non-existent; and there is very little privacy in people’s personal lives. Voices from the Field - 24 Feb 2011
 
msf-placeholder
Lebanon

Yassin, 67, 'Life... which life do you mean?'

I can’t help remembering the mutilated bodies of my friends, the blood, the smell – it’s still all there, in my head. I got pieces of shrapnel in my knee, my ankle, my hip. Today I don’t work; I survive thanks to support because I am disabled. Voices from the Field - 24 Feb 2011
 
msf-placeholder
Libya

MSF team in Libya trying to reach areas affected by violence

An MSF team of six has crossed the border from Egypt into eastern Libya with a truckload of medicines and medical materials. The team is now travelling to areas where medical facilities have reported many wounded people as a result of violent confrontations. Project Update - 24 Feb 2011
 
msf-placeholder
Lebanon

Precarious living conditions make daily life a struggle

The Burj el-Barajneh camp, set up by the League of Red Cross Societies, took in refugees mainly from Galilee. Since then, the camp’s population has expanded year on year, with the arrival of migrants from elsewhere in Lebanon, as well as refugees from Syria, Egypt and Iraq. Project Update - 24 Feb 2011
 
msf-placeholder
Palestine

One year after the war

On December 27, 2008 the Israeli military launched Operation Cast Lead in the Gaza Strip. The operation involved raids, intensive aerial bombing and a land offensive that began on January 3, 2009. The war ended 22 days later, on January 18, 2009, and took a heavy toll. Nearly 1,300 Palestinians were killed (including 900 civilians, 300 of whom were children) and approximately 5,300 were wounded. What are the humanitarian, medical and economic impacts of that war? How are they felt today? Project Update - 5 Jan 2010
 
msf-placeholder
Palestine

Gaza: 'War wounds test a poorly-equipped health system'

After last January's war, heightened medical and health needs prompted MSF to expand its activities to address shortfalls in specific areas, including post-operative care, physical therapy, mental health care and surgery. Project Update - 5 Jan 2010
 
msf-placeholder
Yemen

Razeh hospital hit by rocket fire, MSF calls for respect of health care facilities

While the war has been ongoing for the past two months in northern Yemen, one of the last hospitals still operating in the Saada governorate was directly hit by the fighting and forced to stop its work. It is urgent to set up a hospital in a safe area, allowing patients to access healthcare. MSF is ready to restart medical activities in the governorate as soon as possible. Press Release - 21 Oct 2009
 
msf-placeholder
Yemen

A daily challenge for MSF to adapt its activities

War in the north of Yemen has been ongoing for the past eight weeks. Andrés Romero, MSF head of mission in Sana'a, describes the evolution of MSF activities in the current context. Project Update - 9 Oct 2009
 
msf-placeholder
Iraq

The fight of the wounded is far from over in Iraq

This is a considerable undertaking for a private organization like Médecins Sans Frontières, but it probably addresses only a marginal share of the needs in a country like Iraq, gripped by a violence that produces victims whose number and type of wounds far outstrip the capacity of a private medical organization. Project Update - 28 Sep 2009
 
msf-placeholder
Yemen

MSF assists victims of new wave of warfare in Yemen

Following clashes over recent weeks, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams have evaluated the needs in the villages of Baqim and Yesnem, in the north of Saada, and are now organising medical aid for the roughly 30,000 people who have sought refuge there. Project Update - 19 Aug 2009
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.

Learn more