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Situation in Borno state, November 2016
Nigeria

After two years of crisis, what does the future hold for the displaced in Borno?

Interview with Isabelle Mouniaman-Nara, MSF programme manager in Nigeria Voices from the Field - 3 Feb 2016
 
Yemen.Shiara hospital bleeding after attack.
Yemen

“I’d never before seen the level of casualties I saw in Saada. The scale of wounded was extreme.”

“I’d never before seen the level of casualties I saw in Saada. The scale of wounded was extreme,” says Michael Seawright, former MSF Project Coordinator in Yemen. Voices from the Field - 27 Jan 2016
 
OccupiedMinds_ANNAS AL ATRASH
Palestine

“You shot an innocent person and destroyed a whole family’s life.”

This month, Occupied Minds looks at how checkpoints, restriction of movements, are affecting the life of the Palestinian population. Annas was 23 years old and the fourth in a family of eight siblings living in Hebron city in the West Bank. He was the manager of the family's shoe business and responsible for looking after their income. On 7 November 2013 he was killed by an Israeli soldier while crossing a checkpoint by car. Voices from the Field - 26 Jan 2016
 
Yemen.Shiara hospital bleeding after attack.
Yemen

"They didn’t realise that the missile had hit the hospital itself."

"The border with Saudi Arabia is only half an hour away so everyone here is used to the sound of bombs and rockets," says Teresa Sancristoval, Head of MSF’s emergency desk, about the 10 January attack on Shiara hospital. "Knowing it had hit somewhere nearby, they set about preparing for mass casualties. What they didn’t realise was that the missile had hit the hospital itself, and soon they would be treating their own colleagues and patients.” Voices from the Field - 25 Jan 2016
 
Besieged Taiz - Yemen
Yemen

At least 10 children killed and three wounded while walking back home from school in Taiz

Michele Trainiti, MSF project coordinator in Taiz, Yemen, reports on an incident that took place on 19 January. At least 10 children killed and three wounded while walking back home from school. Voices from the Field - 21 Jan 2016
 
Yemen.Shiara hospital bleeding after attack.
Yemen

Our patients and staff need to feel safe

Interview with Juan Prieto, general coordinator of MSF projects in Yemen Voices from the Field - 18 Jan 2016
 
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Yemen

“We can’t just stop our lives because of the war”

Interview with Céline Langlois, Medical Coordinator in Yemen. Céline explains how Yemenis cope with their daily struggle in this indiscriminate war. During five months in Yemen, Celine was astonished by people’s ability to get on with their lives amidst airstrikes and a desperate fuel and water crisis. Voices from the Field - 22 Dec 2015
 
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Syria

“Life in Raqqa was terrifying. During the day we lived with the government’s airstrikes; at night there were coalition airstrikes”

“I was a paediatric doctor in Syria, married with two children. We lived in Raqqa, now known as the stronghold of ISIS. I ran a private clinic in a poor area of the city, as well as providing free healthcare to displaced people who had fled there from Homs and Aleppo.” Voices from the Field - 15 Dec 2015
 
Chad: Deadly attack in Koulfoua Island, Lake Chad
Chad

I had never before seen these types of injuries”

Dr Silas Adamou Moussa is Deputy Head of Mission for MSF in Chad. He is part of the team who was deployed to Mani to assist wounded following the suicide attacks that took place on Koulfoua Island on the morning of 5 December. Voices from the Field - 8 Dec 2015
 
Occupied Minds_ Mustafa Suliman
Palestine

'What they see during the day, they dream at night.”

Occupied Minds looks at the mental health support offered to the Bedouin children of the Negev desert through the story of Mustafa. The boy is only 11 and he has already been detained for interrogation. He lives in a makeshift shed with 21 other people from his extended family. Voices from the Field - 27 Nov 2015
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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