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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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MSF supports a network of health centres (Mpati, Bibwe, Kalembe, Kashuga and Bukama) and has significantly expanded its programme to provide assistance to people affected by the conflict, especially victims of sexual violence at MSF Tumaini clinics in Mweso and Kitchanga.
Democratic Republic of Congo

MSF strongly condemns violent robbery of compound in North Kivu

During the early morning of 4 December, several armed men broke into the Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) compound in Mweso, in Masisi territory, North Kivu Province, Democratic Republic of Congo.
Project Update - 4 Dec 2017
 
MSF teams assessing the medical and humanitarian needs in Al Mishlab. east of Raqqa. 2 November. “When we first visited Mishlab, east of Raqqa, it was a ghost town, but on our latest visit, some people had returned to check on their houses, Some found their homes in ruins; others found dead bodies and explosive devices in their houses, gardens and in the streets.” says Craig Kenzie, leader of MSF’s Raqqa response team
Syria

Booby-traps and landmines in Raqqa

Six weeks after fighting subsided in Raqqa city in Syria and surrounding villages, former residents are returning home to find their houses in ruins and their streets and fields littered with unexploded remnants of war, including booby-traps, landmines, ammunition and rockets.
Voices from the Field - 30 Nov 2017
 
A general view of the hospital compound.
Due to the ongoing insecurity, most of the eastern countryside of Borno state where these large displacements are happening remains difficult to reach for humanitarian organisations, with the exception of a few towns. Most of the aid agencies working in the state are present in the capital, Maiduguri, but only a few are able to operate continually in the hard-to-reach areas where assistance is most needed.
Nigeria

Borno State crisis update – November 2017

The conflict between the Nigerian military and armed opposition groups has been ongoing for more than eight years, with serious humanitarian consequences. Crisis Update - 30 Nov 2017
 
Men detained in Abu Salim detention centre. Detainees spend days and months in Libyan detention centres, without knowing when they will be released.
Libya

When France becomes accomplice to the very crimes it condemns

All these people who find themselves trapped in the Libyan snare, which was partly set by France and the European Union, must be afforded all possible means of escape. Opinion - 30 Nov 2017
 
A burnt skeleton of wood and metal is all that remains of the pediatric ward at Al Khansaa hospital in Mosul, northern Iraq. The hospital suffered severe damage when Mosul was retaken from Islamic State group in 2016 and 2017. Sixty percent of the hospital remains destroyed.  
 
The healthcare system in Mosul is still in tatters following months of conflict. Hospitals and clinics were bombed and now only a handful are left to service a large city.     
  
MSF has been working at Al Khansaa hospital to rebuild the emergency room, paediatric in-patient facilities, a nutrition unit and the intensive care unit (ICU).
Iraq

Crisis update – November 2017

More than 2.2 million people have now returned home but years of conflict have severely impacted the health sector and the needs are great. Crisis Update - 30 Nov 2017
 
CAG meeting
South Sudan

Delivering HIV treatment to conflict areas

For people in rural South Sudan, HIV testing and antiretroviral therapy (ART) can be nearly impossible to obtain. Moving between villages is extremely difficult and the war has forced many to flee to isolated locations. But in Yambio County (southwest of the country), things are different. Mobile and same day testing and treatment, provided by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), is improving the lives of people coping with HIV. Project Update - 29 Nov 2017
 
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France

MSF opens day centre for unaccompanied minors in Paris

“We’re calling not only for unconditional protection for these young people as children at risk but also for the upholding of the presumption of minority" Press Release - 28 Nov 2017
 
The last two functional ambulances in Al-Marj neighbourhood (in the East Ghouta besieged area near Damascus) were destroyed beyond repair in an aerial bomb attack on Monday 05 December 2016. They were parked in the hospital’s warehouse/garage, very near to the makeshift hospital’s location. Two hospital cars, used to transporting supplies and medical personnel, were also destroyed in the blast. The lack of ambulances will have an impact on the ability to quickly treat wounded when there is bombing or shelling in the area, but above all it will affect the capacity to refer the most sick patients to larger secondary referral hospitals. The makeshift hospital in Al-Marj is not equipped for complex or long-term in-patient hospital care, and this could have a big impact on the ability to refer patients for appropriate secondary care.
Syria

Medical services stretched beyond limit after shelling in East Ghouta

MSF calls for due precautions to be taken by all belligerents, in accordance with International Humanitarian Law, to avoid hitting civilians and civilian infrastructure including hospitals and residential areas. Statement - 27 Nov 2017
 
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Papua New Guinea

MSF urges access to asylum seekers and refugees in Manus Island Transit Centres

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) urges Papua New Guinea (PNG) authorities to give its team access to the asylum seekers and refugees in Manus Island transit centres, to assess refugees’ conditions and provide essential medical care. Statement - 25 Nov 2017
 
Camp for internally displaced people (IDPs) in the Nigerian town of Pulka, in the northeastern Borno state, close to the border with Cameroon.
Nigeria

What’s happening in the northeast?

More than two million people have fled their homes, with little chance of returning in the near future. An unknown number of people are out of reach of any humanitarian assistance. Project Update - 23 Nov 2017
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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