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Ransacked medical supplies lie strewn on the floor at the MSF hospital in Leer, South Sudan, February 23, 2014.  The hospital was thoroughly looted, burned, ransacked, and effectively destroyed, along with most of Leer, sometime between the final days of January and early February, 2014, leaving hundreds of thousands of people cut off from critical, lifesaving medical care. The hospital, opened by MSF 25 years ago, was the only secondary health care facility in Unity State.
South Sudan

Violence 'jeopardising MSF work'

Violence in South Sudan is jeopardising MSF's work, says BBC In the Media - 26 Feb 2014
 
N'Djamena.  Chagoua: transit center hosting more than 1470 people who have fled CAR. *** Local Caption *** Plusieurs dizaines de milliers de personnes ont fui les violences ciblant les populations Peules et musulmanes en République Centrafricaine pour se réfugier au Tchad. MSF intervient en urgence à Sido et Bitoye pour  dispenser des soins medicaux aux réfugiés, dont la grande majorité sont des femmes.<br/>

Dozens of thousands of people have fled violence targeting Fulani and Muslims communities in Central African Republic and sought refuge into southern Chad. MSF has set up two programs in Sido and Bitoye to provide medical care.
Chad

Thousands of CAR refugees flee to N'Djamena

Refugees from CAR face an uncertain future in Chad Project Update - 26 Feb 2014
 
Abdul Ghani from Garsmir holds his 8 year old daughter Fatima waiting in line for an OPD appointment at Boost Hospital in Lashkar Gah, Helmand province, Southern Afghanistan.
Afghanistan

The ongoing struggle to access healthcare in Afghanistan

Medical care in Afghanistan remains ill-adapted to meet growing needs created by ongoing conflict. Press Release - 25 Feb 2014
 
“Armed groups in the town looted our belongings and threatened to kill us,” says Mamadou, 33, owner of a grocery store in Bouar’s Haoussa district. “We had to leave to save our lives. We’d rather suffer in Cameroon than stay here.”
Central African Republic

"The people who leave take enormous risks"

Florent Uzzeni, deputy emergency programme manager, describes what he is seeing unfold on the ground. Voices from the Field - 24 Feb 2014
 
A lady waits for a consultation at the Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) clinic set up at the camp for  displaced people in the grounds of the United Nations Mission to South Sudan (UNMISS) base in Juba, South Sudan, on January 12, 2014.
South Sudan

Dozens wounded treated amid new wave of violence in Malakal

More than 150 wounded people have been treated by MSF after a new wave of violence hit Malakal. Press Release - 20 Feb 2014
 
MSF staff at Mpoko camp are attending to the wounded man, who is about to be referred for emergency surgery at the Hopital Communautaire in another part of town, where another MSF team is working.
Central African Republic

International efforts to protect civilians in Central African Republic failing to stop slaughter

The extreme levels of violence against civilians illustrates the failure of international efforts.
Press Release - 18 Feb 2014
 
 *** Local Caption *** Plusieurs dizaines de milliers de personnes ont fui les violences ciblant les populations Peules et musulmanes dans le nord de la République Centrafricaine pour se réfugier dans le sud du Tchad. MSF intervient en urgence à Sido et Bitoye pour apporter aux réfugiés - dont la grande majorité sont des femmes - des soins médicaux d'urgence et des biens de première nécessité.<br>

Dozens of thousands of people have fled violence targeting Fulani and Muslims communities in northern Central African Republic and sought refuge into southern Chad. MSF has set up two programs in Sido and Bitoye to provide emergency medical care and basic non-food items.
Refugees, IDPs and people on the move

Refugee crisis hits Central African Republic’s neighbours as more flee violence

Around 100,000 refugees have now fled from CAR to neighbouring Cameroon, Chad, Congo Brazzaville and DRC. Project Update - 15 Feb 2014
 
In Hebron and East Jerusalem, MSF is running a medical and psychosocial programme for people suffering from trauma because of the conflict. MSF teams focus on people with psychological distress (acute stress, anxiety disorders, post traumatic syndromes, depression) caused by violent incidents involving Israeli settlers and Israeli Army, but also due to the intra-Palestinian conflict. In Hebron, MSF staff carried out 1726 individual mental health consultations and 945 medical consultations in 2011.
In the beginning of 2011, MSF conducted a needs assessment in East Jerusalem and decided to start providing in this part of the city mental health care to the population who suffers trauma or psychological distress due to the consequences of violence caused by the conflict and who has no access to mental health services. MSF therapies started in July in the Shufat refugee camp and Silwan area and since then MSF staff carried out 223 individual mental health consultations.
Palestine

House arrest is a 'tradition'

An MSF psychologist helps a young Palestinian under house arrest Project Update - 14 Feb 2014
 
 Eglise occupée par les déplacés.<br> Church occupied by the displaced.*** Local Caption *** Since February 1st, date of the anti-Balakas takeover of the city, a thousand people (mostly Peuls/Fulani in transit on their way to Cameroon) are trapped in the city ,victims of attacks and violences. Between February 1st and February 8, 35 wounded have been taken in charge by hospital and MSF teams.
Central African Republic

Extreme violence and tensions in Carnot

Nearly 1,000 people, mostly Muslim, have been trapped in Carnot, surrounded and threatened by the self-defense militias known as anti-Balakas. Project Update - 14 Feb 2014
 
A view of the Durrani Camp, mountains in the backdrop and a cemetery in the foreground.
Pakistan

Crossing mountains to reach a hospital

Harsh winter conditions mean that many vulnerable people cannot access the healthcare they need Project Update - 11 Feb 2014
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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