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35-year old Dehab* has come to MSF’s clinic at the Primary School IDP site  to seek help for her mental health issues. She is a single mother of four children and says she feels constantly stressed. She is from Shire and says she has not received any medical care for three months. “I just used holy water from the church to cure my problems.”
(12.2.2021)
Ethiopia Tigray crisis

Tigray violence scatters people across two countries

The conflict which broke out in Tigray, northern Ethiopia, in November 2020, has scattered people across both the Tigray region, and into neighbouring Sudan, where access to healthcare and basic needs are difficult across both sides of the border. Crisis Update - 22 Jun 2021
 
A little girl getting her hair done by her aunt in Dagahaley camp
Kenya

Return is not a solution, say refugees in Dadaab after camp closure announcement

Following the decision to close the camps in Dadaab, Kenya, refugees say being forced back to Somalia could lead to a far worse humanitarian crisis. Project Update - 18 Jun 2021
 
“I have two kids and in this cold weather we’ve got no heating,” says Nasr Al Jaddouh, a resident of Fan Al-Shemali camp in Idlib governorate, “it rains for a few days and then it stops. We cannot sit anywhere, the water flows into our tent.”
Syria

Millions of lives at stake if cross-border aid channels close in Syria

Millions of people's lives in northwest Syria could be in jeopardy if UN Security Council members are unable to renew a resolution that enables humanitarian aid to pass into the region. Press Release - 18 Jun 2021
 
ROTATION 1, RESCUE 6, 12/06/21 - MSF teams operate the first rescue of the day from a boat in distress with 93 people on board
Mediterranean migration

Witnessing harrowing crossings onboard the Geo Barents

MSF teams carried out several rescues of people where they safely brought onboard men, women and children on the search and rescue vessel, Geo Barrents, in the Mediterranean Sea. Voices from the Field - 18 Jun 2021
 
Displaced people stand outside a mosque in Bambari town, Central African Republic, where several thousand people sought refuge after Elevage camp was destroyed in early June. 14 June 2021.
Central African Republic

People in Bambari living in deplorable conditions following camp destruction

Following renewed fighting between government forces and non-state armed groups in Bambari, thousands of sought refuge as the Elevage camp for displaced people was destroyed. Project Update - 17 Jun 2021
 
To support Iraqi Ministry of Health on facing COVID-19, MSF is providing MOH hospital staff with technical support on infection prevention and control and patient triage.
Iraq

MSF Iraq annual report 2020

The 2020 MSF Iraq annual report provides an overview on all MSF activities in Iraq during the year. Report - 14 Jun 2021
 
Portal of MSF Emergency Center of Martissant, in Port-au-Prince. On the night of June 23, 2019, a patient was shot dead just in front of this portal while leaving the structure. Ironically, paintings on the portal remind us of the prohibition of carrying weapons in the emergency center.

For months, Haitians have seen a steady decline in their purchasing power as the national currency devalued and fuel prices increased, against a backdrop of seemingly endless political stalemates and scandals. 

Since 9 June, tensions have escalated and there have been almost daily demonstrations and outbursts of violence in cities including Port-au-Prince, Les Cayes and Gonaïves.
Haiti

Haiti: Violence puts patients, medical activities, and staff at risk

A spike in violence in Haiti's capital is putting MSF's medical activities in jeopardy. Press Release - 12 Jun 2021
 
“We don't know where to go to escape this new danger. We too, in Goma, need assistance and medical care. ”- Dieudonné Bizimungu
On the Saturday 22 May, the day of the eruption of the Nyiragongo volcano, I was at home, in the Kihisi area of Goma. I was resting with my family after a week of work at Kibumba primary school where I teach. In the evening, it started to get very hot. The lava was heading straight to us. 
We fled, without thinking, without bringing anything with us. In Birere, a neighborhood in Goma where we gathered with other families, I heard that lava was starting to reach my house. I decided to go see what was going on: the lava flow was about a hundred meters from our home. I returned there, very early in the morning: to my surprise, it had stopped a few meters from my house. My roof has remained intact. 
When the government decided that we had to evacuate, we left for the second time, this time to the Kibumba area, north of Goma. Two days later, we decided to come back, having no clean water to drink. The 20-liter can cost 1,000 Congolese Francs (0.46 euros) against the usual 250 (0.10 euros). We only ate potatoes and cabbage. 
Today, the situation remains critical for my family and those around us. Night and day, we continue to feel the heat of the lava. Carbon dioxide continues to exit the cooled lava flow. Scientists and authorities tell us it is dangerous for health, but we remain exposed. We don't know where to go to escape this new danger. Sake (25 km west of Goma) or Minova (in South Kivu) are not the only places where disaster victims find themselves. We in Goma, too, need medical assistance and care. “
Democratic Republic of Congo

Helping each other after the eruption of Nyiragongo

Residents and displaced people share their stories of trying to survive in the wake of the eruption of Mount Nyiragongo, DRC. Exposure - 11 Jun 2021
 
Inpatient care at the Barsalogho Medical Centre.
Burkina Faso

Conflict in Burkina Faso: “Many people are afraid to sleep at night”

Dr Youssouf Dembélé describes the impact of the continuous violence on people caught up in one of the world’s fastest growing humanitarian crises in recent years, in Burkina Faso. Interview - 11 Jun 2021
 
Naïa and her mother Martha are consulted by Simon Kudju. Most of the children come with respiratory tract infections, malaria and acute watery diarrhea.
South Sudan

MSF addresses health needs of people in remote Maruwa, South Sudan

MSF has opened a new project in the east of South Sudan, where people live scattered over long distances and where there are few health facilities Project Update - 11 Jun 2021
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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