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Nearly 700 people have been living for ten months in a church, the last refuge for the Muslims of Carnot - third largest city of the country. They came to shelter reprisals targeting Muslims (following the atrocities committed by the rebels Seleka, a predominantly Muslim coalition). Men, women and children are condemned to live within four walls until the situation resolves. Almost all have lost family members and / or been victim of violence. The entrance to the church is guarded by armed soldiers.
Every Sunday, the Muslim refugees who live in the nave of the church move their luggage into the yard to allow Christians to pray. The inter-communal conflict that continues to tear the country apart is not a religious war but a struggle for power.
There are over 50 enclaves like this one in the country.
Central African Republic

“There’s not one single Muslim left in Bocaranga”

MSF logistician Djamilou speaks of the violence and the plight of his family scattered among three different countries after fleeing from Central Africa. His testimony illustrates only too well the suffering endured by our Central African teams. Voices from the Field - 11 Feb 2015
 
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Central African Republic

Jailed in the enclave of Berbérati

The Muslim population was almost completely expelled from the West of CAR. In Berbérati, the second city of the country, they are 350 living within the walls of the diocese, without being able to walk more than 200 meters from the portal without risking an attack. Project Update - 11 Feb 2015
 
CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC, MATCHIKA, 29 SEPTEMBER 2014  People line up to have an MSF-nurse examine them, at a mobile clinic in the village of Matchika, a village almost 30 kilometres from Bambari, Ouaka province.
Central African Republic

‘The suffering of the people is fuelling the armed conflict in CAR’

Interview on the evolution of conflict in the Central African Republic Voices from the Field - 5 Feb 2015
 
Abok Mawein arrived in Calek from Abyei in November. She told MSF that:  “When militia attacked the area I fled from my village. They attacked in the night and I lost my children and husband in the chaos, until now I don’t know if they are alive or not. Life here is very difficult. There is no food so I collect wild fruit and leaves that I boil and eat.
South Sudan

Thousands of newly displaced in Northern Bahr el Ghazal in desperate need of humanitarian support

People fleeing violence in the contested area between Sudan and South Sudan are in desperate need of food, water and medical care. Project Update - 4 Feb 2015
 
The South Sudanese key strategic town of Malakal came under attack on February 18. The clashes between government and opposition forces forced thousands of people to flee to other locations or to the UN compound in the town. The Malakal Teaching hospital was attacked by armed men. Upon their return to the hospital, MSF teams found eleven bodies. Some patients had been shot in their beds.
South Sudan

Healthcare on the frontline

Midwife Siobhan O’Malley on providing neutral and impartial care in Malakal and Bentiu, key towns hardest hit by the fighting. Voices from the Field - 4 Feb 2015
 
In the last two weeks of January 2014, fighting in eastern Ukraine has escalated. On 30 January, an MSF team returned to Marinka hospital, 35 kilometres west of Donetsk city, where they had delivered medical supplies five days earlier. The day after the delivery was made, 26 January, the hospital was hit by shelling and all staff were relocated to a nearby town. MSF has supported the hospital in nearby Kurakhovo and will distribute relief items to people in Marinka and surrounding communities.
Ukraine

Thousands trapped in eastern Ukraine: MSF calls for safety of civilians and respect for medical facilities

In just the last two weeks, five medical facilities supported by MSF have either been damaged or destroyed by shelling or rockets. Project Update - 3 Feb 2015
 
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Central African Republic

Local healthcare worker killed in attack

MSF extends its deep and heartfelt sympathy and condolences to his family and colleagues. Statement - 2 Feb 2015
 
Galina, 86, looks at the hole where a shell hit her apartment in Kievsky district in Donetsk, Ukraine.
Ukraine

Gallery: MSF's support in Donetsk

Photo Story - 2 Feb 2015
 
On  20 January  2015,  the  hospital  managed  by MSF in Frandala village, South Kordofan  region in the Nuba Mountains, has been directly targeted during a bombing lead by Sudanese Air Force (SAF). This is one of the indiscriminate bombing  occurring  regularly in South Kordofan in the war between Khartoum Authorities  and  the  rebels  groups  in  the Nuba Mountains. 

The Frandala hospital  was  previously  bombed  on 16 June,  2014.  That attack took place despite Sudanese government’s knowledge of the MSF presence.
Sudan

Brussels-based operational centre of MSF stops emergency medical aid following government’s systematic denial of access

Can no longer reach communities in the greatest need, and therefore has been forced to close its activities in the country. Press Release - 29 Jan 2015
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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