Skip to main content
Ebola disease in DRC: find out how we're responding
Learn more
8009 Results
 
People living in camps, like Nzulo camp, are fleeing to Goma as fightings take place some kilometers away.
Democratic Republic of Congo

Three questions on the intensification of the armed conflict in North and South Kivu

Emmanuel Lampaert, MSF's representative in the Democratic Republic of Congo, provides an update on the situation and MSF's response. Interview - 25 Jan 2025
 
black background
Gaza-Israel war

MSF mourns the killing of our ninth colleague in Gaza

Bilal Okal was killed by an Israeli airstrike, along with members of his family, in December 2024. Statement - 24 Jan 2025
 
The executive orders on migration from the new U.S. administration leave hundreds of thousands of people along the Latin American migration corridor in great uncertainty, exposed to even greater dangers on a route already marked by extreme violence. MSF teams in Mexico are already witnessing the direct impact of these political measures on the well-being and mental health of some of their patients.
Mexico

MSF highlights increased risks for migrants following closure of the US asylum process

Governments in the region of the Latin American migration corridor must adopt humane migration policies. Press Release - 23 Jan 2025
 
A volunteer with Humane Borders inspects an area east of Sasabe, Arizona, where the border wall ends and smaller barriers are set up to prevent people from crossing into the US. Since people seeking asylum are not permitted to present themselves to Border Patrol at official points of entry without an appointment, they often must enter through areas like this which are much more dangerous and have no access to basic services like food, water, and shelter.
United States of America

US President’s new orders on migration are an alarming step backward

Among a flurry of executive actions taken yesterday by US President Donald Trump, MSF is particularly alarmed by the expected humanitarian impacts of measures intended to shut out asylum seekers and refugees. Statement - 21 Jan 2025
 
Doctor Azhar, gynaecologist talks with Altaf al Wahidi and Noria al Wahidi, midwives and sisters, about the patients they have cared for today.
Yemen

A lifeline for mothers-to-be on Yemen’s west coast

Around 250 women give birth every month at our maternity ward in Mocha General hospital. Project Update - 21 Jan 2025
 
In the Shujaeyya neighborhood on Baghdad Street in Gaza City, a woman is carrying her child back home through the rubble.
Gaza-Israel war

North Gaza’s destruction is a “sight that cannot be described”

While a ceasefire in Gaza has been announced, north Gaza remains devastated and destroyed by Israeli forces' relentless bombardments. Project Update - 20 Jan 2025
 
View of a part of the displacement site in Katale in the Masisi health zone, that registers today about 5,000 displaced people. The camp president tours the site with the MSF health promotion team to discuss the current living conditions of the displaced persons. Access to water, latrines and showers is extremely limited, leading to potential risks of water-borne diseases such as cholera. To find food, most of the displaced persons look for work in the fields, and when they are luck enough find some, they are paid 2,500 francs a day - the equivalent of a bowl of beans.
Democratic Republic of Congo

Masisi General Referral hospital hit again by gunfire leaving two MSF staff slightly injured

Two MSF staff were slightly injured as Masisi General Referral hospital, in North Kivu province, and the surrounding area were hit during attacks on 19 January. Press Release - 20 Jan 2025
 
On a rainy day in Gaza City, the surroundings of the MSF Clinic.
Gaza-Israel war

Relief after temporary ceasefire: Immense scale-up of life-saving aid must flow into Gaza now

The temporary ceasefire agreement in Gaza is a relief, but it arrives more than 465 days and 46,000 lives too late. Statement - 18 Jan 2025
 
As a global financial hub, Hong Kong projects an image of prosperity and resource abundance. In its shadows however, consistently marginalised groups fall outside of the well-developed healthcare system’s reach. Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has provided free primary healthcare to the homeless communities in Hong Kong’s Yau Tsim Mong and Shum Shui Po districts, the majority of whom are aged 50 or above, since August 2023. People experiencing homelessness in Hong Kong do not receive adequate medical care most often due to their lack of health literacy and inability to prioritise their own health and well-being. 
 
Responding to these unmet needs, MSF initiated a model of social-medical partnerships with local NGOs to deliver holistic patient-centred care, which MSF teams provided by offering regular basic health screenings, health promotion sessions and psychosocial support for people experiencing homelessness, while collaboration partners offered ongoing case follow-up. These local partners also received support in capacity-building to ensure continuity of care for people in the programme as MSF’s project came to an end in December 2024.
Hong Kong

MSF completes healthcare project for people experiencing homelessness in Hong Kong

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) provided free basic healthcare to communities of people who are experiencing homelessness in Hong Kong’s Yau Tsim Mong and Shum Shui Po districts between August 2023 and December 2024. Project Update - 17 Jan 2025
 
MSF in Agok, South Sudan.

South Sudan faces many challenges, including ongoing conflict, displacement, food shortages/malnutrition, lack of social services including health care, and insecurity.  MSF hospitals have been under attack from different armed groups, putting the medical staff and patients at risk.
South Sudan

MSF strongly condemns armed attack on our healthcare workers in Nasir county

On 15 January, unidentified armed men fired at two of our boats sailing to Ulang, South Sudan, after a delivery of supplies. Press Release - 16 Jan 2025
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