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Mohammed, Medco is evacuating wounded people after the bombing of one IDP camp in Rann.

“There are no health facilities in Rann. Nothing. The first health facilities are 2 hours away from Rann. Most of the victims that we saw where children”.
Mohammed Musoke, medical coordinator for OCP based in Maiduguri.
Nigeria

"Most of the dead and injured were women and children"

My colleague and I personally evacuated a number of severely injured patients, taking them to various hospitals in Maiduguri. Voices from the Field - 20 Jan 2017
 
Rann IDP camp after the bombing.
Nigeria

Death toll rising in Rann attack

“The people of Borno should be entitled to guarantees of protection and assistance. All parties to the conflict must ensure the safety of civilians, and we urge the Government of Nigeria to ensure the protection of its people,” says Bruno Jochum, MSF General Director. Statement - 19 Jan 2017
 
A hospital worker salvages the remains of undamaged medication and equipment left in the emergency room after the 15 August Saudi-led coalition airstrike which destroyed the hospital killing 19. 

In a country where access to healthcare is already extremely limited, the Abs hospital was the only facility catering to over 2,000 IDPs in the area and thousands more along the coast, from the northwestern border of Yemen to the outskirts of Hodeidah. With the destruction of Abs hospital, the closest hospital is now over 3 hours drive away.
Yemen

Crisis update - December 2016

There is an urgent need for the warring parties to reduce the disproportionate impact this war is having on civilians, and for humanitarian actors to scale up assistance for the population. Crisis Update - 31 Dec 2016
 
 A room on the second floor of the hospital. Since 2013, MSF has been providing drugs, supplies and medical equipment to health facilities in east Aleppo.
Syria

MSF sends medical supplies to the wounded evacuated from east Aleppo

MSF teams are supporting the humanitarian evacuation of east Aleppo. Yesterday our medical and logistic teams conducted first needs assessments in the area. Project Update - 16 Dec 2016
 
An MSF staff helps a young boy cross the swamps at dusk with his family to Kok Island after receiving for the first time in many month food distribution in the troubled Unity State in South Sudan. 

Kok Island is the home to over two thousand IDP's who have fled the fighting in their home areas. In April 2015 after a rise in fighting in Unity State, thousands of civilians were forced to flee into the bush, swamps or into the UN Protection of Civilian site in Bentiu.
Global

A year in pictures 2016

Throughout the year, our photographers have been alongside MSF's doctors, nurses, midwives, logisticians and other staff, on the frontline of our projects around the world. Photo Story - 15 Dec 2016
 
Natasha Lewer/MSF (sketches)
Syria

I don’t know how, but I’ll try to leave the house

On his way to meet friends for coffee, 27-year-old computer repairman Abu Ahmed was injured by a cluster bomb. Four weeks later, his bone fracture has failed to heal. His only hope is specialist orthopaedic surgery in Turkey – but he is trapped in east Aleppo. Bedridden, he now watches in despair as his neighbourhood falls into rubbles after the new wave of airstrikes. Voices from the Field - 2 Dec 2016
 
A hospital in east Aleppo is patched up with sandbags after it was hit by airstrikes in April 2016, killing one doctor and injuring several nurses.
Syria

Crisis update — 28 November 2016

After five and a half years of intense conflict, the situation in Syria keeps deteriorating, with ever-increasing unmet needs and suffering. Crisis Update - 29 Nov 2016
 
ketch of Umm Leen to support the first person piece about giving birth in east Aleppo. Copyright Natasha Lewer/MSF
Umm Leen is a mother of seven and has lived in east Aleppo all her life. She has a three month old baby boy who was born under the siege and recent heavy bombardments. ¨When a baby is born, some people believe they are making up for the children they have lost. But for me, in these conditions, I think it’s a huge mistake. After I gave birth to him, I felt so sad. Did I give birth to him to see a life like this? I don’t even know if we’ll survive this. The children get so frightened whenever they hear a plane – they run towards me. It breaks my heart. ¨
Syria

Pregnancy and childbirth in besieged east Aleppo

Voices from the Field - 29 Nov 2016
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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