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Abs hospital, in Hajjah governorate, northwestern Yemen, was hit by an airstrike in the afternoon of August 15 at 3.45pm local time, killing at least 14 people and injuring at least 19. The blast immediately killed nine people, including an MSF staff member. Two patients died while being transferred to Al Jamhouri hospital. Five patients remain hospitalised. Abs hospital, supported by MSF since July 2015, was partially destroyed. All remaining patients and staff have been evacuated. The location of the hospital was well known, and the hospital’s GPS coordinates were repeatedly shared with all parties to the conflict, including the Saudi-led coalition.
United Nations

MSF International President to UN Security Council: "This failure reflects a lack of political will"

Speech delivered 28 September 2016, in New York Speech - 28 Sep 2016
 
MSF teams provided food and medical care and are scaling up assistance.
Nigeria

Crisis Info on Borno Emergency - September 2016

MSF has been present in Maiduguri on a permanent basis since April 2014 working on paediatric and maternal health and nutrition and previously controlled cholera epidemics on several occasions. Crisis Update - 28 Sep 2016
 
People in the camp reported having less than half a litre of water per person per day.
Nigeria

Disastrous living conditions more deadly than violence

Conflict-affected populations in Borno state need emergency food aid now Press Release - 28 Sep 2016
 
The Shiara hospital, an MSF-supported facility in Razeh district (Northern Yemen), was hit by a projectile in northern Yemen on January 10thm resulting in five deaths, eight injured and the collapse of several buildings of the medical facility. One of the critical injured victim, passed away on Sunday 17th after being transferred to the ICU at the MSF hospital in Saada. More than 130 health centres and hospitals have been affected by the conflict ravaging the country in the last ten months.
Yemen

Crisis update - September 2016

Crisis Update - 27 Sep 2016
 
A hospital worker salvages the remains of undamaged medication and equipment left in the emergency room after the 15 August Saudi-led coalition airstrike which destroyed the hospital killing 19. 

In a country where access to healthcare is already extremely limited, the Abs hospital was the only facility catering to over 2,000 IDPs in the area and thousands more along the coast, from the northwestern border of Yemen to the outskirts of Hodeidah. With the destruction of Abs hospital, the closest hospital is now over 3 hours drive away.
Yemen

MSF releases detailed documentation of attacks on two medical facilities ahead of UNSC closed session on protection of medical mission

Member states must advance concrete measures to protect access to medical care in conflict zones. Report - 27 Sep 2016
 
IDP Boulama Mala 60 years old from Galingui village, Konduga local government area (LGA) Borno State - about 25 km to the southeast of Maiduguri.  
"Its Boko Haram who chase us from our village that’s why we are here in that camp. We are here because they attacked us."
 "I live with 10 people all together with my wife, my children and grandchildren. With the little that we can sell than we eat that day otherwise we can go to sleep empty stomach. It’s difficult at my age to gather wood to sell and feed 10 people."
Nigeria

Crisis in Borno State - "We fled to survive"

A humanitarian crisis is unfolding in northeast Nigeria's Borno State, where violence has displaced thousands and cut off enclaves outside the state capital of Maiduguri from humanitarian aid. Voices from the Field - 24 Sep 2016
 
Mother and child waiting for screening at MSF Clinic (ATFC). Mothers often do not know their child is malnourished but will come for other disease as the child gets weak and sick. Most children are IDP's living with host communities. MSF treats both IDP's and locals. Bencheikh Borno state
Nigeria

Treating malnourished children in Beni Shiekh, Nigeria

Child malnutrition is one of the main problems in Nigeria's Borno state, where MSF is running nutrition programmes. Thousands of people in the northeast of the country have been displaced by violence and conflict. In Beni Shiekh alone, around 30 to 40 per cent of the population (roughly 33,000 people) is displaced, but the figure could be much higher. Photo Story - 24 Sep 2016
 
Street scene in Aleppo, from April 2013.
Syria

Aleppo hospitals report sharp increase of wounded following days of heavy bombing

MSF denounces indiscriminate bombing of civilian areas and the resulting civilian deaths in the besieged city Project Update - 23 Sep 2016
 
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Sweden

MSF begins working with asylum seekers

Project Update - 22 Sep 2016
 
With the aim of improving medical care to help reduce the mortality rate among children under five years old, MSF launched a paediatric project in the region of Bafata in central Guinea- Bissau in November 2014. MSF is working in the paediatric department of the Bafata regional hospital, the referral centre for the entire region, where more than 180,000 people live, and in several health centres in the area.
Child health

"Transferring medicine from rich countries to poor countries without adapting it does not always work"

Interview with Daniel Martínez, paediatrics specialist. Voices from the Field - 22 Sep 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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