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OCA Emergency Manager - Liberia
Speaks Dutch and English
Dutch Nationality
Yemen

"The children have a game called airstrike in which they fall to the ground"

The situation in Taiz city is devastating. It’s a large city of 600,000 people. There is active fighting and daily airstrikes. The sense of fear is big. People are terrified that their children will get wounded or killed. And they have a good reason to be frightened. Voices from the Field - 11 Nov 2015
 
A view of part of the MSF Trauma Centre in Kunduz, 14 October 2015, damaged and burnt-out following the 03 October 2015 airstrike on the facility. Photo: Victor J Blue.
Attacks on medical care

Kunduz, Afghanistan, 36°43’4.91’’N, 68°51’43.96’’

"We say: if there's no room for humanity in times of war, human civilisation as a whole will lose out in the long run. So, it's up to all of us to mobilise and urge politicians, governments and non-state armed groups to respect medical facilities. Together we shout loudly and clearly:“Stop bombing hospitals!” Opinion - 10 Nov 2015
 
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Yemen

Crisis update – 10 November 2015

The human cost of the conflict keeps on increasing since the beginning of the conflict. Since March 19, MSF active in 8 governorates treated 15,587 war wounded. Bombing and shelling disproportionately target civilians. Crisis Update - 10 Nov 2015
 
A tarp stating no guns, knives, grenades, bombs, or rifles are allowed inside, hangs from one of MSF supported hospital gates on July 21, 2015 in Qataba, Yemen.
Global

Primer: Protection of medical services under International Humanitarian Law

An introduction to the main principles guiding the protection of medical services under international humanitarian law. Journal article - 3 Nov 2015
 
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Syria

At least 550 wounded in horrific market-bombing in Damascus besieged area

At least 70 people have been killed and 550 injured in an airstrike on a marketplace in the Douma neighbourhood near Damascus, Syria. "This was an extremely violent bombing," says the director of a nearby MSF-supported hospital who assisted in the first wave of mass-casualty response. "The wounds were worse than anything we've seen before, and there were large numbers of dead." Press Release - 31 Oct 2015
 
Overview of what is left of Haydan hospital after october 26th airstrike.
Yemen

Denial of hospital bombing by Saudi-led coalition contradicts all facts

Despite denials by the Saudi-led coalition, it is beyond doubt that it struck and destroyed a hospital supported by MSF in Haydan on 26 October.
Press Release - 29 Oct 2015
 
Mahmoud is 30 years old and worked as an emergency doctor in the city of Aleppo. He fled from Syria with a group of 13 people, 6 of them medical personnel.
Syria

The tough decision to leave your country

Testimonies from MSF staff who made the tough decision to leave Syria. Voices from the Field - 29 Oct 2015
 
Since the beginning of the year, MSF is working in Sana’a, the capital of Yemen, to help reduce the stigma faced by people living with HIV and improve their access to quality healthcare.
Medical consultation at the HIV/AIDS treatment clinic at Al-Gumhuri hospital, the only place in Sana’a providing antiretroviral (ARV) treatment.
Yemen

Antiretroviral treatment beneath the bombs

More than 1,300 people living with HIV/AIDS are receiving antiretroviral treatment in Yemen, around half of them in Sana’a, the capital. Dr Abdulfattah Al-Alimi, Field coordinator and medical team leader of MSF's HIV/AIDS project in Yemen, discuss how the current war is affecting the patients' treatment. "In the end, this is our job and responsibility: to find a way so no one has to interrupt their treatment because of the war," says Dr Abdulfattah Al-Alimi. " These are difficult times for my country, but we are trying to prevent them from being even more so for people living with the virus." Voices from the Field - 29 Oct 2015
 
Massive displacement
Syria

Massive displacement in Northern Syria as violence escalates and intensifies

At least 35 Syrian patients and medical staff have been killed, and 72 wounded, in a significant increase of air strikes on hospitals in Northern Syria, according to health staff supported by MSF inside Syria. As a result of the wider attacks in the region, tens of thousands of people have been forced to flee their homes. Crisis Update - 29 Oct 2015
 
On october 26th, the Haydan hospital we support in northern Yemen has been hit by several air strikes. The first bombing took place at 22:30 local time and last midnight.
Miriam, project coordinator in Saada, went this morning Haydan, but could not enter the building because there were still bombs that had not exploded.
The hospital is completely destroyed: the emergency room, OPD, IPD, the laboratory, motherhood and the block. But the bombing did not cause any casualties. Only one person was slightly injured. Staff and two hospitalized patients could leave the building after the first strike.
This hospital was still functional only for the whole Haydan region which has a population of about 200,000 inhabitants. On average 150 patients had received emergency a week by personnel from the Department of Health that is supported with incentives.
The Haydan region bordering Saudi Arabia is in Sa'ada governorate, which is controlled by the Houthis. It is bombarded every day by the coalition led by Saudi Arabia.
Yemen

MSF hospital destroyed by airstrikes

Airstrikes carried out late last night by the Saudi-led coalition in northern Yemen destroyed a small MSF supported hospital. Hospital staff and patients managed to escape before subsequent airstrikes occurred over a two hour period. With the hospital destroyed, at least 200,000 people now have no access to lifesaving medical care. Press Release - 27 Oct 2015
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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