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Cameroonian Refugees in Cross Rive State
Nigeria

Cameroonian refugees in Nigeria

Tens of thousands of people flee the North-West and South-West regions of Cameroon to seek refuge in southern Nigeria’s Cross River State. Teams from MSF have launched an emergency response to provide aid to the refugees and the communities hosting them. Photo Story - 25 Jan 2019
 
Condemned to drown at sea or be locked up in Libya
Libya

Refugees returned to overcrowded Libyan detention centres

Over recent weeks, vulnerable refugees have been intercepted or rescued in the Mediterranean Sea and brought back to Libya - in violation of international law - and are now locked up in dire conditions in overcrowded detention facilities. Project Update - 23 Jan 2019
 
Nduta Refugee Camp, Tanzania
Mental health

Displaced and distressed: people’s mental health in East Africa

MSF teams in Ethiopia, South Sudan, Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda are seeing the numbers of patients seeking treatment for mental health issues is increasing – in some cases even doubling – because of violence and displacement. Project Update - 22 Jan 2019
 
Emergency intervention in Dessa, Tillabery
Niger

“These displaced people live in fear of being attacked at any time”

After increased insecurity in the Tillabéry region of Niger caused large numbers of people to flee their homes, MSF carried out an emergency response in early January 2019. Interview - 17 Jan 2019
 
Shatila Camp Illustrations
Lebanon

“To see one smile on a broken face is enough to know that this work is worthwhile”

MSF has been working with refugees in Shatila refugee camp, Lebanon, since 2013. Illustrator Ella Barron visited our clinic in late 2018 and took refugees' testimonies and illustrated their stories, while MSF psychologist Miriam Slikhanian shares her experience of working on mental health issues in the camp. Project Update - 15 Jan 2019
 
Surviving conflict in northeast Nigeria
Nigeria

Crisis update: Borno and Yobe states, January 2019

Despite a massive deployment of aid in Borno state since 2016, the humanitarian response remains insufficient, many urgent needs remain unmet and hundreds of thousands of people remain heavily dependent on aid for survival, both in the state capital Maiduguri and in isolated enclaves in the countryside controlled by the military. Crisis Update - 14 Jan 2019
 
Snapshots from Bama
Nigeria

“All I have in this world are the clothes on my back”

People continue to be displaced by violence in northeast Nigeria, where MSF has been providing lifesaving medical care since 2014. Many are dependent on aid to survive, and there is often not enough to go around. Project Update - 8 Jan 2019
 
General view outside Amana village, Cross River State
Nigeria

Tens of thousands of Cameroonians seek refuge in southern Nigeria

MSF has launched an emergency response to provide aid to people fleeing the English-speaking regions of Cameroon to seek refuge in southern Nigeria’s Cross River State, and to support the communities hosting them. Project Update - 21 Dec 2018
 
Responding to Ethiopia’s displacement crisis
Ethiopia

“People who fled their homes said there was no warning”

First-hand accounts from patients and staff in Gedeo and Guji, Ethiopia, during MSF’s emergency response. Ethnic violence escalated in May and hundreds of thousands of people fled their homes, leaving them without basic services and putting their health at risk. Voices from the Field - 21 Dec 2018
 
Responding to Ethiopia’s displacement crisis
Ethiopia

More aid needed for people caught in multiple displacement crises

MSF is ending one emergency response in the south of the country while preparing to respond wherever the next crisis arises. Project Update - 21 Dec 2018
Cholera intervention in South Kivu
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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