Skip to main content
Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
Learn more
8003 Results
 
msf-placeholder
Sudan

MSF supports the Ministry of Health to respond to measles outbreak in Sudan

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is supporting the Sudanese Ministry of Health (MoH) to respond to a measles outbreak in parts of Sudan. In North Darfur, a mass vaccination was launched at the end of March, 2015 to stem the outbreak and increase the immunisation coverage in the population. Project Update - 21 Apr 2015
 
msf-placeholder
Ukraine

MSF expands its medical activities in Debaltseve

Natalie Roberts, MSF emergency coordinator, describes the situation in Debaltseve. Voices from the Field - 21 Apr 2015
 
msf-placeholder

More about MSF's work with refugees and migrants

More than 41 million people are currently fleeing conflict or persecution around the world. Project Update - 20 Apr 2015
 
On the morning of 26 August,  the MY Phoenix, jointly operated by MSF and MOAS was asked to standby as the Swedish coast guard ship, Poseidon, rescued an estimated 450 people from a wooden boat. The MOAS crew handed out life jackets and the MSF medics were asked to assist directly on board as there were many critical cases. Dr Simon Bryant and nurse Mary-Jo Frawley went into the hull of the boat, where they were literally lifting people’s heads out of the water to check if they were alive. A critical patient suffering from suspected fuel inhalation was stabilized in the MSF clinic onboard the Phoenix and medevac'ed via helicopter for further treatment on land.
At that point a second wooden boat carrying 550 people appeared and the MOAS search and rescue team immediately commenced rescued operations. More than 415 people were brought on the MY Phoenix, bringing the boat to capacity the remained 125 people were taken on board the Poseidon. Whilst this rescue was still underway, a rubber dinghy with an estimated 100 people on board arrived on the scene. The MOAS crew transferred the men, women and children on board to an Italian naval vessel, which was also on the scene.
“ The deaths of these 52 people today show that search and rescue is just a bandaid. It is merely a temporary solution to Europe’s failures, and not even a truly effective one.  Despite the increase in SAR efforts since late April, the death count still keeps mounting.  The only way to actually put an end to these avoidable tragedies is to create safe and legal ways for people to migrate or seek asylum in Europe. People's desperation to flee and survive forces them into taking these dangerous boats, into the hands of people who profit from their willingness to risk it all in the search of safety of Europe. Today, just like yesterday, Europe’s policy makers have blood on their hands. It is time for a change, a radical rethink and we need it now” -  Will Turner – MSF Emergency Coordinator on the MY Phoenix
Mediterranean migration

MSF calls for large scale search and rescue operation in the Mediterranean

Figures from a warzone in the Mediterranean: a mass grave created by European policies Press Release - 20 Apr 2015
 
msf-placeholder
Central African Republic

In the Carnot enclave “All I dream of is getting out of here and starting all over again”

Three stories from the 500 Muslims trapped in a church compound for over a year. Voices from the Field - 17 Apr 2015
 
Ansongo hospital, Gao region, in northern Mali. MSF started working in Ansongo in September 2012, nine months after the conflict broke out in the north of the country between the security forces and Tuareg and Islamist groups. Currently, MSF is working at the Ansongo referral hospital, a 31-bed facility, where the organisation carries out OPD, IPD, ANC consultations and assist deliveries.
Mali

MSF assists five children injured in suicide attack near Ansongo

MSF team deployed to area after suicide bomber attacked UN camp on the outskirts of Ansongo town, killing three civilians and wounding 16 people. Project Update - 17 Apr 2015
 
msf-placeholder
Yemen

MSF receives 30 wounded after airstrikes on Huth

Calls on all parties to respect civilians and civilian structures Press Release - 16 Apr 2015
 
An aerial view of Dagahaley refugee camp, Dadaab, Kenya.
Kenya

Somali refugees must not be forcibly returned, says MSF

Calls by Kenyan officials to close Dadaab refugee camp, in northeastern Kenya, within three months and forcibly return its residents to Somalia would have dramatic and life-threatening consequences for hundreds of thousands of people, warns the international medical organisation Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) today. Press Release - 16 Apr 2015
 
Driving with the equipment from the Liberian shore to Foya where MSF is running a Ebola care center.
Ebola and haemorrhagic fevers

Tackling the epidemic across country borders

MSF is working along the porous border between Guinea and Sierra Leone to improve the cross-border cooperation in the region. Project Update - 16 Apr 2015
 
msf-placeholder
Colombia

MSF provides mental health support to those affected by the attack in the Timba district, in the Cauca region

A mobile team from Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is in the Timba district, in the municipality of Buenos Aires in the Cauca region of southwest Colombia, assisting the local population after a confrontation in which 10 soldiers died early on Wednesday morning. Press Release - 16 Apr 2015
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.

Learn more