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Uganda

Reconstructive surgery helps restore vital functions for mutilation victims

NPR feature, Dec 17 NPR Audio: Doctors seek to help Uganda mutilation victims
Sunday Times Uganda mutilation victims: On a hiding to nothing
"There is no greater offence to our sense of humanity than to see people who have been so deliberately and barbarically disfigured," said Christine Schmitz, Head of Mission for MSF in Uganda.
Press Release - 12 Dec 2005
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

Attack on camp for displaced people in Katanga

Civil and military authorities are obstructing efforts by humanitarian organisations to assess the situation and the needs of the populations to the north of Mitwaba and Dubie. Press Release - 2 Dec 2005
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

Fighting leads to renewed displacement in Katanga province, DRC

Hundreds more families are suspected to have been displaced in the region. Exact figures are not known since MSF has no access to areas close to the frontline because of heavy fighting. Project Update - 25 Nov 2005
 
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Uganda

Increased insecurity for both civilians and aid workers threatens humanitarian assistance

MSF has halted emergency transfers of patients in MSF vehicles and suspended water and sanitation activities in several camps, including the drilling of bore holes to provide much-needed water for displaced people in some camps in Kitgum. Press Release - 23 Nov 2005
 
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South Africa

MSF worried about the security situation in Equatoria

Medical relief teams evacuated from the Yambio region, after a UN
compound had been burnt and looted during violent clashes.
Press Release - 18 Nov 2005
 
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Uganda

Security concerns in northern Uganda

MSF in Uganda has reduced the movement of international and national staff due to a series of security incidents in the north of the country. Contrary to some media reports, in the 20 camps offering basic health care services to the displaced, all clinics are functioning as usual. Project Update - 27 Oct 2005
 
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Somalia

The Lancet: 'Catastrophic' violence continues unchecked in Somalia

This article first appeared in the Sept 3, 2005 edition of The Lancet. Project Update - 3 Sep 2005
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

Ituri: The other victims of violence - humanitarian workers

MSF has been wrestling with the inability to continue providing the minimal amount of aid tolerated in times of intense crisis. Meanwhile, the civilian population has been trying to survive in entrenched camps while remaining dependent on completely inadequate outside assistance. Civilians have been abandoned without any real possibility of surviving on their own. Project Update - 2 Aug 2005
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

Ituri: From minimal to nearly non-existent aid

Access to populations is limited by constant insecurity. The people of Ituri are caught in a stranglehold between different armed groups whose only objectives have been gaining control over the area. Following the logic of war, civilians have been nothing more than "tools" for meeting the groups' needs despite all existing international laws and conventions. That said, any attempt to assist the invisible populations living outside Bunia and the perimeter secured by MONUC has posed a potential danger to humanitarian workers. Project Update - 2 Aug 2005
 
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Sudan

Lives dangle by a thread in Darfur

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) appreciates having this opportunity to address the United Nations Security Council about the ongoing humanitarian situation in Darfur and the uncertain future the people continue to face Speech - 27 Jul 2005
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