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A young patient sits on the terrace of the MSF's Baghdad Medical Rehabilitation Centre (BMRC). The BMRC is the only health facility in Baghdad governorate offering comprehensive rehabilitation care, including early physiotheraphy and psychological support, to the victims of war injured by bomb blasts and gunshots, as well as those injured in traffic accidents and more recently during the protests. There is a huge lack of such services in Iraq where healthcare facilities have been severely damaged after years of war and insecurity.
Iraq

Tuk-tuks, the ambulances of the nation

In Bagdad, Iraq, tuk-tuk driver Ali Salim spent days taking people wounded in protests to hospital before ending up in a hospital bed himself. Voices from the Field - 14 Jan 2020
 
Kadhim Dhaygham (16) is a patient at MSF's BMRC. Kadhim was injured on October 27 when a tear gas cannister slammed into his leg during protests in Baghdad
Iraq

Mending broken lives: treating wounded protesters in Baghdad

MSF staff have been providing lifesaving post-operative treatment - including physiotherapy and mental health support - to people wounded during the protests in Baghdad, Iraq. Project Update - 10 Jan 2020
 
Two adolescents are going back to their tent in an IDP camp located in the Jebel Harem area of Northwest Syria. They’ve been collecting wood in the mountain and around the camp, to use it as heating material during winter.
Syria

Afraid of the bombs: why people discuss the weather in northwestern Syria

A new military offensive in Idlib governorate, northwestern Syria, has forced hundreds of thousands of people to flee, joining more than 1.5 million displaced already living in dire conditions during a cold and wet winter. Project Update - 9 Jan 2020
 
Expats looking at the aftermath of the earthquake in Jacmel
Haiti

Ten years after Haiti earthquake, medical care is deteriorating

A new MSF report highlights dangerous new obstacles facing healthcare providers and patients in Haiti today, 10 years after the devastating earthquake rocked the country. Press Release - 9 Jan 2020
 
Lundi 9 décembre 2019, hôpital de Tabarre, spécialisé dans les urgences traumatologiques. Port-au-Prince, Haïti. Du personnel médical au chevet d’un patient aux soins intensifs. La capacité initiale de 25 lits a été dépassée deux semaines seulement après l'ouverture de l'hôpital, fin novembre 2019.
Haiti

Sunday morning in Tabarre emergency trauma hospital

In 2019, Haiti descended further into violence, with access to healthcare, especially for trauma injuries, becoming even more difficult for people. In response, MSF has reopened Tabarre hospital in the capital, Port-au-Prince. Project Update - 3 Jan 2020
 
Ahmed Mohama Mahat is coordinating the mass vaccination campaign in Yida camp. <br>
In a refugee setting, one single case of measles is considered an outbreak. The objective is to stem the outbreak and to increase the immunization coverage in the population to protect them from future outbreaks. So far we have had 93 measles cases in our hospital and new patients keep coming in so the outbreak is spreading. And these people arriving in Yida from the Nuba Mountains are in very bad conditions… they have not been vaccinated for a long time. That’s why we also have a mobile team vaccinating children at the entry point where all newly arrived refugees pass through.”
South Sudan

Medical activities are handed over in Yida

After actively responding to the medical needs of people in and around Yida for eight years, we have handed over our project in Yida to the Ministry of Health and its partners. Press Release - 31 Dec 2019
 
An IDP camp of Northwest Syria.
Over the past few months, MSF has been distributing drinkable water to newly displaced families, transferring waste, installing and ensuring the maintenance of toilets and latrines in both existing camps and newly formed settlements of Northwest Syria.
Syria

“There are no safe places for people in Idlib”

An escalation of attacks on previously 'safe' areas, including displaced people's camps, in Idlib province, on the Syria-Turkey border has killed and wounded dozens and forced thousands to flee again. Interview - 27 Dec 2019
 
Villages on the road from Mambasa to Biakato.
DRC Ebola outbreaks

Military presence leads MSF to stop activities in Ebola-affected Biakato

The presence of armed military personnel in health structures in Biakato, DRC, has led MSF to follow our principles and make the tough decision to stop activities, including providing Ebola treatment. Press Release - 24 Dec 2019
 
Last February, the Libyan coast guard caught up with the boat I was trying to leave Libya on. After the arrest, I was taken to the Souk al Khamis detention centre in Khoms city.
My name is Ahmed*, I am 21 years old and from Mogadishu, Somalia. UNHCR teams came to see us in Souk al Khamis and registered me, I was waiting to be transferred to Tripoli. A few days later, the prison managers told us to board two minibuses. Finally, we were going to be transferred. That's what I thought. But after several hours on the bus, we were going deeper and deeper into the desert. That's when I realized that we were not driving to Tripoli, but that we were in danger of being sold to traffickers. This risk was confirmed when I spotted armed men approaching in their pick-ups. In haste and fear, we all decided to try to escape by surprise, even if it meant losing our lives. At least two people died in the ensuing shooting.
I am part of the group that managed to escape to a small town at dawn whose name I do not know. There, an old Libyan man offered us something to drink and eat, and he went to warn the authorities of our presence. We were taken to the Sirte detention centre - we stayed there for five months. MSF teams who knew us in Souk al Khamis came to see us several times in Sirte to treat those who were sick. Then we were sent to another prison in Misrata. It was really the worst. I was not feeling well and MSF brought me to the hospital to treat my tuberculosis.
I learned that the Misrata detention centre has closed and that the group with which I survived this adventure had to go to Souk Al Khamis, where they tried to sell us... Back to square one.
Libya

Trading in suffering: detention, exploitation and abuse in Libya

Trapped - either from going home, from fleeing across the sea, or in a detention centre - refugees and migrants in Libya are exposed to violence, rape, exploitation and abuse. Photo Story - 23 Dec 2019
 
Joseph Drobho Giria holds his two-year-old daughter, Bhileru Drobho, who suffers from measles, in the measles unit run by MSF at Biringi Hospital, Ituri Province, northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo, on 06 November 2019. PHOTO: ALEXIS HUGUET/MSF
Democratic Republic of Congo

More effort needed to stop deadly measles epidemic

A massive measles outbreak is currently gripping all 26 provinces of Democratic Republic of Congo. MSF teams are treating cases and vaccinating people all over the country to try to halt the spread of the deadly disease. Project Update - 20 Dec 2019
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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