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An interior view of the MSF Trauma Centre, 14 October 2015, shows a missile hole in the wall and the burnt-out remians of the the building aftera sustained attack on the facility in Kunduz, northern Afghanistan..
Afghanistan

The attack on Kunduz trauma centre

First published in the International Activity Report 2015 Voices from the Field - 1 Jul 2016
 
Since French authorities demolished the southern half of the Jungle camp in March this year, living conditions in the northern half have become very cramped. People are fighting for space, with 1,000 new arrivals in the past month alone, local NGOs have counted, including 142 minors which makes a total of 700 minors in the Jungle now.
France

No respite from violence for refugees in Calais

Project Update - 1 Jul 2016
 
A Syrian refugee woman holds on to her headscarf against the wind while she and her daughter stand outside their tent at an informal tented settlement near the Syrian border on the outskirts of Mafraq, Jordan.
Syria

Voices from the Berm

Voices from the Field - 30 Jun 2016
 
On Sunday and Monday MSF teams ran mobile clinics around the UN base, treating 160 and 174 people respectively. People were much sicker than we would have expected, the impact of months of ongoing insecurity. Main morbidities are malaria (due to the rainy season and limited access to bed nets), malnutrition (it is the traditional hunger gap period, but due to the conflict people have not been able to cultivate), diarrhea and upper respiratory tract infections. We also treated gunshot wounds and women who had been raped. 
 
Yesterday we shipped in two plane loads of supplies including therapeutic food, rape kits and dressings. Today our teams have handed over our activities in the UN base so that we can move further south to find those people who have been pushed further away by the fighting. We will continue to respond to the situation as it evolves.
South Sudan

Heavy fighting in Wau causing new displacement crisis

Dr David Kahindi, Deputy Medical Coordinator for MSF, has been working in South Sudan for more than three years. He recently arrived in Wau where he has been overseeing MSF’s emergency response. Voices from the Field - 29 Jun 2016
 
Many diseases spread with malnutrition. MSF was engaged in vaccination programmes alongside its other regular activities.
Ethiopia

Two years of drought followed by floods challenge the pastoral way of life

The eastern Ethiopian regions of Afar and Sitti are dry and inhospitable places for much of the year. Yet this is where many pastoralists live, moving from place to place, searching for water and pasture to feed their precious livestock. Project Update - 27 Jun 2016
 
Mahmud,  25, from Rawa in Syria leans on his crutches in the corridor of the Al-Mowasah Hospital in Amman. He admits that he is a militant from the Free Syrian Army and was wounded 02 April 2013 when a bullet shattered his right leg. He says that before joining the opposition group he was detained and tortured by the government.
Greece

Helping Victims of Violence' move on with their lives

Voices from the Field - 24 Jun 2016
 
A surgery at MSF´s Al Salamah hospital in Azaz district in northern Syria. The 52 bed hospital includes an ER, an operating theatre,outpatient and inpatient services, including maternity care. It is the largest directly run MSF facility still inside Syria, managed by nearly 150 Syrian staff. Azaz district has seen new waves of displaced people arrive in recent months, and now an estimated 100,000 people are trapped in the area between shifting frontlines and the closed Turkish border. MSF teams travel out to displaced persons camps and surrounding areas to bring back patients, and MSF also provides distributions of emergency relief items. In May the hospital was forced to close when frontlines came too close, since June it has reopened only for emergency cases and surgeries.
Syria

MSF staff on working at Al Salamah hospital, Azaz

“I had the opportunity to work in Germany but I refused,” says Thurayia Zein Al Abideen, a paediatrician at MSF’s Al Salamah hospital in Azaz district, northern Syria. “I want to work in Syria, because people need us and we are facing a huge shortage of doctors.” Voices from the Field - 23 Jun 2016
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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