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Ongoing insecurity in South Sudan has forced tens of thousands of people to flee their homes. This picture was taken by emergency coordinator, Jean-Pierre Amigo, who was forced to evacuate Bentiu, amid insecurity, along with the MSF team and thousands of displaced South Sudanese people. For ten days MSF returned to the road between Bentiu and Leer to distribute high energy food to the 10,000-15,000 people who walking along it.
South Sudan

Insecurity in Leer has devastating consequences for those hiding in the bush

Worsening security in Leer, South Sudan, makes MSF's job almost too difficult to continue Project Update - 11 Feb 2014
 
MSF medical staff are treating a man in Mpoko airport camp who was hit by an arrow. The fighters are often using homemade weapons like clubs with spikes, axes, and machetes. Due to lack of protection, the displaced people at the airport camp are too scared to return home, fearful of getting attacked.
Central African Republic

"We saw the ugly consequences of the fighting every day"

Lindis Hurum, MSF coordinator, speaks about her experiences in the camp in Bangui airport. Voices from the Field - 10 Feb 2014
 
Ongoing insecurity in South Sudan has forced tens of thousands of people to flee their homes. This picture was taken by emergency coordinator, Jean-Pierre Amigo, who was forced to evacuate Bentiu, amid insecurity, along with the MSF team and thousands of displaced South Sudanese people. For ten days MSF returned to the road between Bentiu and Leer to distribute high energy food to the 10,000-15,000 people who walking along it.
South Sudan

The day MSF left Bentiu

MSF emergency coordinator Jean- Pierre Amigo describes what happened when MSF was forced to evacuate Bentiu. Voices from the Field - 7 Feb 2014
 
Dorassio’s older sister, Cynthia, comes every day to provide support, help him wash and eat, and keep him company. 
<br/>Dorassio L. is 23. He is among the many victims of the inter-communal violence taking place in the Central African Republic today. On January 18, he was shot in the arm in Bouar, in the country’s Northwest region. His arm had to be amputated. He was treated by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in Bouar, and then transferred by plane to the Bangui Community Hospital, where our surgical teams continue to monitor his condition. <br/>
In a poor country, where there is no treatment for people with disabilities, what kind of future will Dorassio have?   
 *** Local Caption *** MSF has been managing surgical emergencies at the hospital since early December, treating an average of 140 patients every week. One-third of them are hospitalized so that they can be operated on.  Our surgical activities focus on victims of violence (including injuries from gunshots, knife attacks, grenade explosions and arrows). The patients’ prognosis for survival is often uncertain. In many cases, patients will, unfortunately, suffer permanent consequences from open fractures and complex wounds.
Central African Republic

MSF condemns continued attacks against civilians

The extreme violence in CAR has reached intolerable and unprecedented levels, says MSF. Press Release - 7 Feb 2014
 
And yet another wave of displacement in the town of Bouca, (Ouham region) northeastern Central African Republic (CAR), after clashes between reported anti-balaka elements and ex-Séléka forces took place last week. For the second time in over two months, people had to flee to the bush running away from the fighting. Bouca was the center of attacks in September in which the civilian population, both Christians and Muslims, were targeted by the armed groups. Around 80 people were killed. The video shows, through interviews with direct an indirect victims of violence, the consequences of the fighting, forcing thousands of people to hide in the bush or to look for protection in churches, schools or airstrips.
Central African Republic

Rain does not wash the blood away (Part II)

José Mas Campos, MSF Emergency Coordinator in Bangui, describes what he saw in CAR. Voices from the Field - 6 Feb 2014
 
And yet another wave of displacement in the town of Bouca, (Ouham region) northeastern Central African Republic (CAR), after clashes between reported anti-balaka elements and ex-Séléka forces took place last week. For the second time in over two months, people had to flee to the bush running away from the fighting. Bouca was the center of attacks in September in which the civilian population, both Christians and Muslims, were targeted by the armed groups. Around 80 people were killed. The video shows, through interviews with direct an indirect victims of violence, the consequences of the fighting, forcing thousands of people to hide in the bush or to look for protection in churches, schools or airstrips.
Central African Republic

Rain does not wash the blood away (Part I)

José Mas Campos, MSF Emergency Coordinator in Bangui, describes what he saw in CAR. Voices from the Field - 6 Feb 2014
 
Recovery room of the Community Hospital.
Central African Republic

"This was my most difficult mission”

Jessie Gaffric, MSF project coordinator at Bangui Community Hospital describes the situation there. Voices from the Field - 5 Feb 2014
 
View of a Médecins sans frontières (MSF) clinic set up at the Tomping camp for  displaced people in the grounds of the United Nations Mission to South Sudan (UNMISS) base in Juba, South Sudan. MSF is currently carrying out around 230 consultations per day in the camp since three weeks.  Between 13,000 and 17,000 people are residing at the camp. The main diseases include respiratory diseases, acute diarrhea and malaria.
South Sudan

"Living in impossible conditions"

MSF’s emergency coordinator, Forbes Sharp, gives an update on the dire conditions for people in Tomping camp. Voices from the Field - 5 Feb 2014
 
Muslim community leaving Bossangoa
Central African Republic

Fleeing Bossangoa

After numerous incidents of violence, people are now leaving the town of Bossangoa in fear. Project Update - 3 Feb 2014
 
A girl carries water past 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

MSF staff and patients forced to flee Leer Hospital amidst ongoing insecurity

Ongoing insecurity has forced thousands of people to flee into the bush, including 240 MSF staff based in Leer. Statement - 31 Jan 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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