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On  20 January  2015,  the  hospital  managed  by MSF in Frandala village, South Kordofan  region in the Nuba Mountains, has been directly targeted during a bombing lead by Sudanese Air Force (SAF). This is one of the indiscriminate bombing  occurring  regularly in South Kordofan in the war between Khartoum Authorities  and  the  rebels  groups  in  the Nuba Mountains. 

The Frandala hospital  was  previously  bombed  on 16 June,  2014.  That attack took place despite Sudanese government’s knowledge of the MSF presence.
Sudan

MSF hospital bombed in Sudan

Amidst Bombing of South Kordofan Village, MSF Facility Attacked Press Release - 17 Jun 2014
 
Many people displaced by the conflict have found refuge in Mboko airport, Bangui, CAR.
Central African Republic

Systematic violence affecting civilians and exposing them to more displacement and disease in Ouaka Region of CAR

Systematic violence affecting civilians and exposing them to more displacement and disease Press Release - 16 Jun 2014
 
MSF intensive Therapeutic feeding center. Children under 5 account for around 90% of impatients.
Ethiopia

South Sudanese Refugees in Ethiopia: Emergency situation requires special mobilization

Interview with Antoine Foucher, MSF’s head of mission in Ethiopia Voices from the Field - 11 Jun 2014
 
Kawargosk camp.
Kurdistan/Iraq - MSF is running a primary health centre in Kawargosk camp hosting Syrian refugees and mobile clinics in another refugees camp in Erbil area.
 *** Local Caption *** With the insecurity and the violence affecting the entire population in Syria, many Syrians have chosen to flee to Iraq. The internal Iraqi political dynamics have created the space for the Kurdish Region Government (KRG) to host the Kurdish population fleeing Syria. In Erbil governorate (Kurdish region of Iraq), MSF is running a primary health centre in Kawargosk refugees camp and mobile clinics in another other camp.
Iraq

“The smiles of patients” – Syrian refugees in Iraq

Clinical psychologist Charlotte Yence tells us about some of her mission in Iraqi Kurdistan Voices from the Field - 5 Jun 2014
 
National TB Centre, Abovian, Armenia ¿ February 2010. Dr Shahidul Islam, an MSF TB doctor, examines a patient on the DR TB ward in the national TB centre. Many patients are unable to complete the grueling course of drugs.
Armenia

MSF: 25 years in Armenia

A video illustrating the 25-years presence of MSF in Armenia, from 1988 earthquake to today's DR-TB programme Project Update - 5 Jun 2014
 
Children playing in Harmanli camp. The biggest of Bulgaria’s emergency centres for refugees is in the town of Harmanli, about 30 kilometres away from the Turkish and Greek borders.

Over the past seven months, teams from Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) have provided medical and psychological healthcare, distributed essential aid and made improvements to buildings and facilities in three reception centres for asylum seekers in Bulgaria. 

The centres were MSF worked, in Harmanli and in the Bulgarian capital Sofia, are currently home to more than 1,500 refugees, many of whom have fled war-torn Syria, making a long, often dangerous journey to Europe in search of safety and protection. 

MSF started working in Bulgaria last November, after finding appalling conditions that included lack of food, shelter, medical or psychological care. Despite the winter, people were sleeping in unheated tents, and up to fifty people were sharing one toilet. 

Now that the authorities have had the chance to expand their capacity and conditions have improved, MSF is handing over the provision of medical and psychological healthcare services to the Bulgarian government and to other humanitarian organisations.
Bulgaria

MSF projects for refugees in Bulgaria coming to a close

Over the past seven months, teams from Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) have provided medical and mental healthcare, distributed essential aid and made improvements to buildings and facilities in three reception centres for asylum seekers in Bulgaria. Project Update - 5 Jun 2014
 
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Central African Republic

Fresh attack on MSF in Ndélé

Following fresh attacks in Ndélé (CAR), MSF evacuated a number of staff members Press Release - 3 Jun 2014
 
Miriam Kastzura, nurse, attends to a patient in the emergency room in Berberati.
Central African Republic

Berbérati, Central African Republic: “I had never seen anything like it before”

Interview with Miriam Kasztura, a nurse just returned from Berbérati, OCG's project in the southwest of CAR. Voices from the Field - 3 Jun 2014
 
In New York, on Word Pneumonia Day 2015 (Nov 12), MSF volunteers attempted to deliver more than $17 million of fake cash - the equivalent of one day of profits from the pneumonia vaccines for Pfizer globally -  to Pfizer's CEO Ian Read. The same day, MSF launched a global petition to ask Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) to reduce the price of the pneumococcal vaccine to $5 dollars per child (for all three doses) in developing countries. Credit: Edwin Torres.
Website

A Fair Shot

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has been campaigning for lower vaccine prices since 2014. In 2016 after years of efforts and public campaigning Pfizer and GSK finally announced that they were reducing the price of the vaccine to slightly more than 9 US dollars per child for humanitarian organisations like MSF. While this is definitely a step in the right direction, it means that millions of children are still left unvaccinated in countries where their parents or governments can’t afford the vaccine. afairshot.org
 
PK5 is an area where traditionally Muslims and Christians live together. At the beginning of January, 30% of our patients were Muslim, but this has now decreased to only a few as they have fled or fear to go outside. Beginning of February, MSF start a mobile clinic to the large central mosque in Bangui (PK5 neighborhood), where about 2,000 displaced Muslims are living in fear and not daring to get to our clinic. MSF provides daily water supply on this site (20m3 per day) + PK 12 camps : MSF is carrying out mobile clinics in the PK12 camp, where there are approximately 1,500 displaced people.
Central African Republic

New Violence in Bangui - A Day in the General Hospital

A Day in the General Hospital Project Update - 29 May 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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