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Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
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On February 5 2024, 134 people have been rescued by our team from of an overcrowded double deck wooden boat, following a distress alert from @alarm_phone.

Many of the survivors now on board #GeoBarents are women and children, including two babies aged less than 3 years old.
Refugees, IDPs and people on the move

EU policies promote violence by denying safety and protection to refugees and migrants

MSF reports the harrowing consequences of Europe's policy-made crisis at its borders and beyond which fosters violence by denying safety and protection to refugees and migrants. Press Release - 21 Feb 2024
 
Follow up consultation at Rafah Indonesian Field Hospital.

My name is Hala Ismael Al Talla. I'm 
21-year-old. 
We are seven family members.
On the sixth day of the war, the front of our house got shelled.
We (family) got displaced so we went to one of our relatives’ houses.
Just a few minutes after we arrived, 
we started to count the shells we could hear. A first, then a second, then a third.
We could hear them leave the tank, fly through the air and then explode.
The fourth shell hit our room and suddenly everything turned white.
My mother was standing still by the wardrobe.
She told me to stand up. I stood up and suddenly I fell. 
I did not know what had happened to my leg.
I started shouting: “My leg, my leg!”
They (family) came from outside after they heard the screaming in the room and they got me out.
Then at 8pm, my father decided to leave to Al-Aqsa hospital.


The injuries are on my right leg. Two broken bones.
I lost my second toe.
At Al-Aqsa hospital they did everything they could and said my leg needed a skin graft.

Later the hospital came under threat.  
When we fled Al-Aqsa hospital, I was on a cart.
I felt the pain as my leg moved with every hole in the road that we went over. It was so hard.
The atmosphere was tough and intense.
With the sound of gunshots, warplanes and drones.
There was shelling everywhere.

Then we came to change my dressing at MSF.
When they checked my injury and saw how severe my condition was, they admitted me.
Right after my admission, they (the doctors) said I needed to have an operation 
to remove my big toe and my third toe because they were dead.
All my pain and suffering was caused by those toes. 
So, they were removed. My wound was cleaned and closed during the second operation.
I am waiting for a third operation, which is a skin graft for my leg and foot.
Gaza-Israel war

Evacuation orders and forced displacement jeopardise people's health in Gaza

The war in Gaza has displaced 1.5 million people to Rafah, disrupting care for the wounded amidst multiple displacements over four months. Project Update - 21 Feb 2024
 
MSF clinic and people waiting in the shade of trees in Goz Aschiye.
Chad

In eastern Chad, people fleeing Sudan continue to face unmet needs amid limited response

In eastern Chad, people escaping the relentless violence in Sudan persistently encounter unmet needs amidst a constrained response. Press Release - 20 Feb 2024
 
Detail of the concertina wire.
Refugees, IDPs and people on the move

Death, despair and destitution: The human costs of the EU’s migration policies

Our latest report on the migration crisis unfolding across Europe illustrates a shocking embrace of violent tactics, sanctioned by EU policies and EU member states. Report - 20 Feb 2024
 
Nasser hospital
Gaza-Israel war

Displaced people forced to evacuate Nasser hospital have nowhere to go in Gaza

Israeli Forces have issued an evacuation order to thousands of displaced people sheltering inside Nasser hospital, Gaza, Palestine, leaving them with nowhere to go. Press Release - 14 Feb 2024
 
Palestinians in Rafah on the Egyptian border – once a town of 300,000, but now hosting 1.5 million displaced people from all over Gaza – struggle to find clean water for drinking, cooking or washing. Living conditions for people in this part of the enclave are desperate – a result of the overcrowding and of the lack of clean water, toilets, showers and sewerage systems, aggravated by the cold winter weather.
Gaza-Israel war

Ground offensive on Rafah would be catastrophic and must not proceed

Meinie Nicolai, MSF Director General, warns of the potentially catastrophic consequences of a ground offensive on Rafah in Gaza. Statement - 12 Feb 2024
 
Commune of Ranobe, Amboasary District.

People in the south-east of Madagascar are facing the most acute nutritional and food crisis the region has seen in recent years. MSF began setting up mobile clinics in Amboasary district in late March to screen and treat acute malnutrition in remote villages like those of Ranobe commune, providing ready-to-use therapeutic food and medical care.
Burkina Faso

MSF marks one year since the killing of two colleagues in Tougan

MSF pays tribute to our colleagues who were brutally killed while delivering humanitarian aid in Burkina Faso one year ago. Project Update - 9 Feb 2024
 
Youssef Al-Khishawi, an MSF water and sanitation agent, oversees a water distribution for displaced people in the southern Gaza town of Rafah’s Saudi neighborhood.
 He says: “In a normal situation, one person needs two to three liters of drinking water per day. Now, with the current shortage, the average for one family of six is one gallon of water (3.8 litres).” 

“The main challenge we face in distributing water is the lack of fuel to pump and transport it,” says Al-Khishawi. “The second is the lack of proper roads for our trucks to drive on, because there are tents even on the asphalt. The third is that there are no water distribution points – even they have been bombed. Water pipes, streets and infrastructures are destroyed.”
Gaza-Israel war

Lack of clean water brings disease and suffering in Gaza

Palestinians in southern Gaza are struggling to find clean water. The flow of humanitarian aid into Gaza must be restored to ensure people have access to essential items such as food, water and healthcare. Project Update - 8 Feb 2024
 
View of the intensive care unit building at the general referral hospital of Mweso, North-Kivu, supported by MSF teams since 2005 in partnership with the Ministry of Health. Between January and June 2023, about 1,400 admissions were recorded in the intensive care unit.
Democratic Republic of Congo

People and medical facilities caught in crossfire as violence escalates in North Kivu

A new wave of armed clashes in North Kivu, DRC, over the past couple of weeks has caused thousands of people to flee and MSF medical teams receiving huge influxes of war-wounded patients. Press Release - 7 Feb 2024
 
Contextual images of the impact of the earthquake taken on 7 February 2023. Idlib province, Northwestern Syria. 
MSF does not necessarily operate in the locations depicted here.
Türkiye and Syria earthquake response

One year after earthquake, mental scars are still raw in Syria

People in northwest Syria continue to struggle with the mental health impacts of more than a decade of war, compounded by the devastating earthquakes that struck the region on 6 February 2023. Project Update - 6 Feb 2024
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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