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Since early 2013, violent clashes have erupted between several tribes in Darfur, leading to the displacement of thousands of people. About 70 000 persons, mainly women and children, have crossed the border to seek refuge into neighboring Chad, in Tissi, a village located accross Chadian, Sudanese and Central African borders. Deprived from any assistance for several weeks, families live under makeshift shelters or trees, without food and drinkable water. An MSF team came to assess their medical needs, conduct consultations et transfer the most serious cases to Goz Beida hospital. <br/> Depuis le début de l'année 2013, de violents combats opposent plusieurs tribus du Darfour et provoquent le déplacement de dizaines de milliers de personnes. Près de 70 000 personnes, dont une majorité de femmes et d'enfants, ont traversé la frontière pour se réfugier au Tchad voisin, dans la région de Tissi, village situé à la croisée des frontières soudanaise, tchadienne et centrafricaine. Privées d'assistance pendant plusieurs semaines, les familles vivent dans des abris de fortune ou sous des arbres, sans nourriture ni eau potable. Une équipe de Médecins Sans Frontières s'est rendue auprès d'elles pour évaluer leurs besoins médicaux, mener des consultations et transférer les cas les plus graves vers l'hôpital de Goz Beida.
Chad

More than 10 000 refugees arrived in Tissi

Project Update - 11 Apr 2013
 
 *** Local Caption *** Bangui avril 2013, Intervention d'urgence de MSF dans l'Hopital Communautaire de Bangui, après le coup le coup d'Etat survenu le 24 mars en RCA<br> MSF emergency operation in the Hopital Communautaire in Bangui, after the March 24 coup.
Central African Republic

Lootings and armed theft against humanitarian response

MSF, targeted by armed groups, calls on the new government to take responsibility and restore order in the Central African Republic. Many people remain without medical care due to the evacuation of humanitarian teams. Press Release - 10 Apr 2013
 
Syrian Kurdish refugee children stand with their mother on a road in the Domeez camp in northwest Iraqi Kurdistan, January 25, 2013.  Approximately 32,000 people who have fled conflict and economic insecurity in Syria live in the camp. Housing in the camp ranges from tents for newly-arrived refugees to concrete structures for those who have been living longer in the camp.
Iraq

Growing number of Syrian refugees in Domeez

The registered number of refugees gathering at the Domeez camp, near the city of Dohuk in the Kurdish region of Iraq, is increasing daily. While 700 to 1,000 newcomers are registering every day the services provided in the camp remain insufficient to cope with mounting needs. Project Update - 10 Apr 2013
 
Activists from across Europe stage flashmob in front of the European Parliament calling on Europe to drop harmful provisions.
As European Commission (EC) pressure mounts on India to rush into signing a free trade agreement (FTA) by mid-April, activists from across Europe mobilised in Brussels today to demand the EC withdraw provisions that will harm people’s access to medicines in India and across the developing world. Civil society organisations have learnt through leaked texts that the EC, in closed-door negotiations, is aggressively pushing for stronger industry control at the expense of public health, threatening millions of lives.
Project Update

EU-India free trade deal puts millions of lives at risk

Activists from across Europe stage flashmob in front of the European Parliament calling on Europe to drop harmful provisions. Press Release - 9 Apr 2013
 
As the opposition group Seleka took power in CAR in March 2013, MSF teams support surgery activities at the community hospital in Bangui where victims of violence receive medical treatment. OCP, OCA and OCBA and present in the country.
Central African Republic

The situation stabilises but remains tense

Ten days after the takeover of Bangui by the opposition group Seleka, life in the capital is gradually returning to normal. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) continues its medical activities and strengthens its teams across the country. Project Update - 4 Apr 2013
 
A girl and her mother sweep the area around their tent at the Mbera camp for Malian refugees in Mauritania on 3 March 2013.

As of January 2012, the Malian crisis has resulted in population movements. Nearly 150,000 refugees now live in refugee camps in Burkina Faso, Mauritania and Niger, where MSF teams are providing maternal, primary and secondary health care. Since the beginning of 2013, MSF has recorded nearly 12,000 consultations and 5,000 vaccinations in these three countries. Mauritania is the country with the largest number of refugees.  Mbera camp nearly 70,000 refugees who have fled for fear of reprisals or lack of access to food since the beginning of the conflict. In February 2013, the border post of Fassala (Mauritania) recorded an average of 300 arrivals per day. They are mostly women and children from Timbuktu, Lere, Goundam Larnab and Nianfuke. These Malian refugees continue to live in precarious conditions with no future prospects.
Mali

Deadly clashes in Timbuktu

Project Update - 4 Apr 2013
 
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Project Update

MSF condemns abduction of staff

Statement - 3 Apr 2013
 
Novartis has been pursuing a legal case aimed at gutting India’s patent law of important public health safeguards since 2006. The law allows companies in India to produce affordable generic medicines on which MSF and other care providers in developing countries heavily rely to do our work.
A protest was organised by Indian civil society on World AIDS Day, 1 December 2011, in front of Novartis' Mumbai Office.
India

Indian supreme court delivers verdict in Novartis case

The landmark decision by the Indian Supreme Court in Delhi to uphold India's Patents Act in the face of the seven-year challenge by Swiss pharmaceutical company Novartis is a major victory for patients' access to affordable medicines in developing countries. Press Release - 1 Apr 2013
 
As the opposition group Seleka took power in CAR in March 2013, MSF teams support surgery activities at the community hospital in Bangui where victims of violence receive medical treatment. OCP, OCA and OCBA and present in the country.
Central African Republic

We urgently need to help the sick and wounded

Interview with Serge Saint Louis, MSF head of mission in Bangui. Project Update - 28 Mar 2013
 
As the opposition group Seleka took power in CAR in March 2013, MSF teams support surgery activities at the community hospital in Bangui where victims of violence receive medical treatment. OCP, OCA and OCBA and present in the country.
Central African Republic

Insecurity, lootings and lack of water and electricity are the main concerns

Sylvain Groulx, MSF coordinator in Central African Republican, talks about the situation in Bangui, almost a week after the Séleka opposition group took the capital, and the consequences that the fighting and looting might have on the population of the country, -many of them still hiding in the bush- with the rainy season looming. Project Update - 28 Mar 2013
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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