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3170 Results
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

Civilians bearing brunt of increased violence and insecurity in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo says MSF

For years civilians in eastern DRC have suffered sexual violence related to the conflict. But MSF has not provided medical treatment for rape on this scale in South Kivu since 2004. In an already volatile context, MSF is confronted with what appears to be a further deterioration in the situation which directly impacts on the civilian population. Project Update - 28 Jan 2011
 
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HIV/AIDS

Johnson & Johnson / Tibotec AIDS drug licenses leave out too many patients

Licenses just agreed between three generic manufacturers and pharmaceutical company Tibotec, owned by Johnson & Johnson, will keep a promising new AIDS medicine out of the hands of many patients across the developing world, Project Update - 28 Jan 2011
 
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Greece

Immediate action needed to improve unbearable living conditions in detention facilities in Evros, Greece

There are so many people detained that they don’t have the space to even lie down in the cells, while the heating often does not work, leaving migrants freezing in sub-zero temperatures. In one of the detention centres, the toilet often does not work and excrements flood sections of the cell where migrants live and sleep. Press Release - 26 Jan 2011
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

Nomadic herders forced to flee in northern DRC

“They said that the women, children and elderly had come to Niangara to avoid being raped or kidnapped in the bush,” said Azaad Alocco, MSF project coordinator..“Even for nomads used to a hard life, the conditions in their makeshift camp were bad, with no water, no hygiene facilities and even the few bits of plastic sheeting they had for making shelters were stolen.” Project Update - 24 Jan 2011
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

MSF responds to incident of mass sexual violence in DRC

Frontline: MSF responds to incident of mass sexual violence in DRC Project Update - 11 Jan 2011
 
Haiti

Despite massive aid response, significant needs remain one year after earthquake

MSF has issued a review of its own emergency response following the earthquake and an assessment of the existing gaps in secondary health care services that it will attempt to address in the year ahead. MSF’s response in Haiti since the earthquake and the cholera epidemic constitutes the largest disaster operation in the organization’s history. Press Release - 10 Jan 2011
 
Democratic Republic of Congo

MSF treats victims of mass rape on New Year's Day in DRC

“Women had been restrained with ropes or beaten unconscious with the butt of a gun before being attacked, some in front of their children,” said Annemarie Loof, MSF Head of Mission in South Kivu. “Up to four armed men were involved at a time and homes and shops were looted.” Project Update - 6 Jan 2011
 
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Vaccination

After vaccination campaign, hopes of a substantial reduction in meningitis A epidemics in Niger

In December 2010, MSF supported the roll-out of a new vaccine against meningitis as an alternative to solely emergency response. The first phase has been completed with optimistic results. Project Update - 6 Jan 2011
 
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Haiti

Civil unrest brings spike in cholera cases in Haiti?s capital, Port-au-Prince

Recent demonstrations and sporadic violence coincided with a spike in cholera cases in the capital, Port-au-Prince, as people were unable to access treatment. Project Update - 4 Jan 2011
 
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Haiti

Where aid failed

The road to controlling a cholera epidemic has been paved by hundreds of previous outbreaks worldwide. Yet, in Haiti, there are vast gaps in the deployment of well-established control measures. Now the epidemic is nationwide, making more than 120,000 people sick and killing at least 2,500. In the face of this ferocious outbreak, investigations into its origin have not been released publicly, even though this information is fundamental to understanding the epidemic's behaviour. Project Update - 28 Dec 2010
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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