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Sudan

Mornay camp, West Darfur: No relief in sight

After a killing spree from September 2003 until February 2004, there is continued violence and severe aid shortages in Darfur, Sudan. Current relief operations fall dramatically short of the massive needs and will not prevent an entirely man-made famine. Project Update - 21 Jun 2004
 
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Sudan

MSF's activities in Darfur-June 2004

MSF has been working in Darfur since December 2003. Today, 90 international volunteers and nearly 2,000 Sudanese staff provide medical and nutritional care in areas with more than 400,000 displaced people. Project Update - 21 Jun 2004
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

Renewed tension in Bukavu affects MSF teams and patients

Teams have had to seek shelter from fighting. Local AIDS projects remain active currently but ongoing fighting may make it impossible to deliver AIDS drugs. Project Update - 1 Jun 2004
 
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Nigeria

MSF assists people displaced by violence in Nigeria

Project Update - 28 May 2004
 
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Sudan

The humanitarian situation in Darfur, Sudan

This presentation was made by Ton Koene, Emergency Coordinator for Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) at the United Nations Security Council "Arria Formula" Meeting, 24 May 2004. Speech - 24 May 2004
 
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Indonesia

An MSF office was burnt down

The MSF office was burnt down and stocks and material lost. Project Update - 1 May 2004
 
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Sudan

Confidence in the peace process is disappearing

Confidence in the peace process is disappearing. Project Update - 29 Apr 2004
 
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Refugees, IDPs and people on the move

Increased numbers of Canary Island refugees follows improving weather

MSF has set up a field hospital in the Gran Tarajal harbour as this is the site where most immigrants are brought after being intercepted on high seas by the Civil Guard. Project Update - 6 Apr 2004
 
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War and conflict

In the shadow of just wars

Challenges to humanitarian action: the impact of political and military responses to international crises.
This is a transcript of the speech presented by Jean-Hervé Bradol, President of the France office of MSF to the Royal Institute of International Affairs, London, England, on March 31, 2004.
Speech - 2 Apr 2004
 
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Humanitarian principles

The gap between aid to Iraq and central Africa is driven by politics

The gap between aid to Iraq and central Africa is driven by politics. In the Media - 2 Apr 2004
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.

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