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Algoni  and his wife Khadija, live in Muna Camp, having fled their homes in Dikwa, Borno state. They have been receiving treatment in MSF’s cholera treatment unit for three days.
Nigeria

MSF scales up activities as cholera spreads in Borno state

“We remain alert and through our community health workers continue to monitor the spread of the outbreak, and respond to it across Borno state.” Project Update - 19 Sep 2017
 
Rohingya who crossed into Bangladesh, fleeing violence in Rakhine state, Myanmar that started on 25 August. This massive influx, coming on top of 75,000 people who have arrived since violence began in October 2016, represents one of the largest influxes ever of Rohingyas into Bangladesh.
Rohingya refugee crisis

International humanitarian access to Rakhine State must urgently be permitted

“To ensure access to medical care and to be able to provide assistance to conflict-affected people, MSF... must be allowed immediate and unhindered access to all areas of Rakhine State." Press Release - 18 Sep 2017
 
The first patient has successfully finished their TB treatment at MSF’s project in the Republic of Belarus in Eastern Europe. 

38 year old Yury had a form of TB that was resistant to both 1st and 2nd line TB drugs. After two years of treatment that wasn’t working, he was left with no other options, until MSF started a new program in the country in 2015. ‘My doctors told me – this is the only chance,’ he says.

‘It was getting worse and worse. I had drug resistance.They told me existing drugs won’t help,’ Yury recalls.

Yury was admitted to MSF’s program  which is part of the endTB partnership, aiming to find shorter, less toxic and more effective treatments for drug-resistant TB. Yury was put on a new regimen that contained Bedaquiline, a drug that he was previously unable to access. 

Bedaquiline and Delamanid are the first two new TB drugs developed in nearly 50 years and offer new hope for patients with drug resistant forms of the disease. 

‘Then it was immediate – in two days they inserted a port (an implanted system for continuous intravenous infusions) and the treatment started. Imipenem, Bedaquiline and several other medicines, that’s it. And I started to improve immediately. I didn’t feel better, I had no appetite. But the tests, the X-rays – everybody was surprised! They said: “That’s something! It’s fantastic! You have such a good dynamic!” Excellent dynamic. And already in October I had clear tests. Everything was clear. Everybody was surprised – nurses, doctors. And of course they were telling me don’t even think of skipping the treatment, you need to continue it,’ he says.

Over a year later, Yury is now cured of the disease.
Belarus

“My doctors told me it was my only chance”

Yury, 38, is celebrating a moment he thought would never arrive: he has been cured of a complicated form of tuberculosis. Voices from the Field - 15 Sep 2017
 
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Chad

In eastern Chad, cholera continues to spread

MSF is working with the Chadian Ministry of Public Health to cope with an outbreak of cholera in the east of the country. Project Update - 15 Sep 2017
 
A young boy chaperons his mother and sister to the clinic.
Pakistan

MSF asked to close medical activities in Kurram Agency, north-west Pakistan

“We will continue to provide obstetric and neonatal services as much as possible to the women of FATA through the MSF Women’s hospital in Peshawar.” Statement - 14 Sep 2017
 
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Libya

Returned migrants are being robbed, raped and murdered in Libya

Last week, in Paris, seven European and African heads of state or government agreed a plan of action on migration and asylum, linked to movements from sub-Saharan Africa via Libya to Europe. The final text acknowledged a shared responsibility to address the root causes of irregular migration and the human rights abuses faced by migrants, the need to protect those who need protecting and support for the contribution of regular and well-managed migration. UNHCHR - 8 Sep 2017
 
"When an airstrike hit my house in the middle of the night I suffered shrapnel wounds and my legs were so badly damaged that one had to be amputated. I only found out about the amputation when I regained consciousness in a field hospital in Dara’a, Syria. Just two hours after waking up, I was discharged from hospital. As my home had been destroyed, I was taken to my relative’s house, where my children were staying. They had been there during the night of the bombing too, so they were safe.

Seeing my children again was the hardest part. I felt weak, disabled. The kids were frightened of me without my leg. My little boy was afraid of me. He’s just one and a half years old – I used to hug him and feed him, but the last time I saw him, he was scared and went to his aunt instead.

After the amputation in Syria, I was taken across the border, to Ramtha, where I’ve had more surgery. I’m also currently undergoing physiotherapy for a prosthesis.

I have three children, aged nine, eight and one and a half. Their father died, and now I’m in Ramtha, Jordan being treated, while my children are still in Syria. I can’t stop thinking about getting back to them, I don’t know how they are doing or if anything will happen to them. 

I am improving with physiotherapy and getting stronger everyday, but I will only return home when I am strong enough to walk and take care of my children. People ask me where I find my strength, but my body is more than just my leg. I must be strong for my children. I must not give in to despair – this injury will not destroy me.

I promised my children I’d come home, and I will."

(This patient’s name has been changed)
Syria

Syrian war wounded look forward to returning home

Here are three testimonies highlighting the resilience and ongoing needs of patients. Voices from the Field - 7 Sep 2017
 
Men detaineed in Abu Salim detention centre. Detainees spend days and months in Libyan detention centres, without knowing when they will be released.
Libya

5 Reasons not to block migrants & refugees in Libya

5 Reasons not to block migrants & refugees in Libya Project Update - 7 Sep 2017
 
At least 164,000 people have now crossed into Bangladesh, fleeing violence in Rakhine state, Myanmar that started on 25 August. This massive influx, coming on top of 75,000 people who have arrived since violence began in October 2016, represents one of the largest influxes ever of Rohingyas into Bangladesh.
Rohingya refugee crisis

Rohingya in Myanmar and Bangladesh urgently require medical and humanitarian assistance

By 6 September, over 146,000 people had crossed into Bangladesh, fleeing violence in Rakhine state, Myanmar. Press Release - 6 Sep 2017
 
Men detaineed in Abu Salim detention centre. Detainees spend days and months in Libyan detention centres, without knowing when they will be released.
Libya

European governments are feeding the business of suffering

"The detention of migrants and refugees in Libya is rotten to the core. It must be named for what it is: a thriving enterprise of kidnapping, torture and extortion." Open Letter - 6 Sep 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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