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Somalia

MSF forced to withdraw from Somalia - indepth interview

An indepth interview on MSF's decision to withdraw completely from Somalia. An MSF General Director, Arjan Hehenkamp, speaks to Somali journalist Hamza Mohamed. Project Update - 14 Aug 2013
 
Press conference in Nairobi on 14 August 2013, in which MSF International President Dr. Unni Krishnan Karunakara, announced the closure of all MSF activities in Somalia because of attacks on patients and staff and non-respect for humanitarian action.
Somalia

Closing of MSF medical programmes in Somalia

Transcript of MSF's teleconference on the closing of MSF medical programmes in Somalia Project Update - 14 Aug 2013
 
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South Sudan

MSF condemns the killing and wounding of its team members near Juba, South Sudan

On Monday, 5 August, a group of armed men attacked a car belonging to Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) on a main road outside Juba, South Sudan. Press Release - 9 Aug 2013
 
In and around Pinga, an MSF team has been reaching out to populations trapped by the conflict by running mobile clinics via motorbike and providing medical services to people who have no other hope of getting medical care. Conditions are extremely difficult; the only way to access mobile clinics is with motorcycle convoys because cars can¿t pass through the narrow jungle paths. Teams travel in a convoy of 5 or 6 bikes, each bike with two people and loaded with drugs and medical material.
Democratic Republic of Congo

MSF suspends medical activities in Pinga after threats to staff

MSF has been forced to suspend medical activities in the town of Pinga and its immediate surroundings in the east of the DRC after a targeted threat to the safety of its humanitarian staff. Statement - 9 Aug 2013
 
Al-Salam Hospital in Khamer, Amran governorate where MSF manages operates. The town of Khamer is a very humble one where people depend on agriculture, handicrafts and trade in earning their living. It is a mountainous area that the hospital is the only one in the area. There is only another one public hospital in the entire governorate of Amran consisting of 20 districts. <br/>In Khamer, Amran governorate, MSF manages the maternity, paedatric, surgical and emergency departments of Al-Salam hospital, where it employs 140 Yemeni staff and treats an average of 1500 patients per month, free of charge.
Yemen

Medical aid under threat

Al-Salam Hospital in Khamer, Amran governorate, where MSF operates. Project Update - 5 Aug 2013
 
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Attacks on medical care

Medical Care Under Fire - Interview with Francoise Duroch

Watch Francoise Duroch of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) describe how conflict and violence disrupt healthcare and how medical workers find themselves the direct targets of violence. Interview - 30 Jul 2013
 
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Attacks on medical care

MSF aid workers freed from Somalia arrive in Spain today

Families ask for privacy at this sensitive time Press Release - 19 Jul 2013
 
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Attacks on medical care

Medical care under fire

Medical care benefits everyone - combatant and non-combatant - and anyone in need should be able to access it. Statement - 21 May 2013
 
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Project Update

MSF condemns abduction of staff

Statement - 3 Apr 2013
 
Newborn babies at the MSF maternity hospital in eastern Khost province, Afghanistan. Since March 2012, this 56 bed facility provides pregnant women in the region with much needed access to quality maternal healthcare, in one of the most volatile provinces in Afghanistan.
Afghanistan

MSF reopens Khost maternity hospital

Project Update - 2 Jan 2013
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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