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General view of detention centre

On September 2nd, 276 people were brought by the Libyan coast guard to Khoms (120 km east of Tripoli). They were then transferred to detention center where MSF works. Reportedly, they were in two rubber coats, one stopped due to engine failure, while the other boat continued to navigate for several hours before deflating and sinking. Survivors told MSF teams that over a hundred people died in the shipwreck.
Libya

Time running out for evacuations of trapped refugees in Tripoli amid shooting

On 23 April, reports surfaced of a violent incident in a Tripoli detention centre, where trapped migrants are being held. MSF has found evidence that multiple people were shot, and urges for all migrants' immediate evacuation. Press Release - 26 Apr 2019
 
Two premature twins closely monitored at the neonates department of the MSF run “Mother and Child”. Public hospitals in the area is not fully functioning and the few private health facilities that are still running are inaccessible or unaffordable to many people. Taiz Houban. Yemen
Yemen

Complicated delivery: The Yemeni mothers and children dying without medical care

After four years of war in Yemen, MSF finds that access to medical care in the country is limited and the lack of timely access can be deadly, particularly for pregnant women and children. Report - 24 Apr 2019
 
Caretaker with a patient coming from Taiz city to the mother and child hospital in Taiz houban.
Yemen

Mothers and children left to die in Yemen without access to medical care

A new MSF report describes how pregnant women and children are particularly vulnerable to high rates of mortality due to a lack of easy access to hospitals in Yemen's war-torn healthcare system. Press Release - 24 Apr 2019
 
المهاجرون محتجزون في طرابلس
Libya

Detained refugees trapped, Libyan families flee, as fighting worsens in Tripoli

The worsening fighting in Tripoli continues, forcing thousands of Libyans to flee and trapping refugees and migrants in detention centres. MSF teams are on the ground, providing healthcare and emergency food and water. Project Update - 17 Apr 2019
 
At the village of Biaro. The Zairian Red Cross are present (brought here by the rebels of Kabila, who want to make sure the bodies are burried as fast as possible, fearing typhus epidemic) and make a count of all the orphans: above 1000 children. They are lined up along the railway tracks.Tens of thousands of Rwandan Hutu refugees, (they all come from the refugee camps of Goma and Bukavu), fleeing the Zairian rebels of Laurent- Desire Kabila, for the last 5 months, hiding in the bush, exhausted, famished, and all waiting to return home, to Rwanda, are today in the midst of a new nightmare. They had taken residence in camps in 1994, when they fled their country in fear of retribution for the massacres of hundreds of thousands of Rwandan Tutsi by Hutu extremists. The presence of Hutu nettled Zairian Tutsi, who joined forces with Kabila, a longtime Mobutu foe, and  launched the insurgency. The fighting forced most of the Rwandan refugees to go home in Autumn 96, but about 350.000 of them have been marooned in tough eastern Zaire, fighting terrain. They are dying at an alarming rate. They need food, water ans safe passage home. But no one has made the refugees a priority. The Zairian rebels of Kabila who seized Kisangani, Zaire'sthird city, had ordered the Rwandan Hutu Refugees, who were in this region's camps, to move back south.
Rwanda

Rwandan genocide 25 years on: MSF caught in spiral of extreme violence from Rwanda to Zaire

Twenty-five years after the Rwandan genocide, MSF takes a look back at the events before, during, and after one of the most horrific events in human history, outlining what our teams witnessed on the ground in Rwanda and Zaire (now DRC). Voices from the Field - 5 Apr 2019
 
Gaza le 16 mai 2018, centre post opératoire de MSF. Chaque jour des blessés par balle de la grande marche du retour, viennent se faire changer les pansements.  Plus de 3600 blessés par balles sont à déplorer depuis le début de la grande marche du retour. Salle d'attente.

Gaza on May 16th, 2018, post-operating centers of MSF. Every day the wounded persons by bullet of the big walking of return, come to be made change bandages. More than 3600 wounded persons by bullets are to be regretted since the beginning of the big walking of return. Waiting room.
Palestine

Gaza’s numbing routine of injury and death

MSF’s field communications manager in Jerusalem, Jacob Burns, reflects on what it means when such a devastating toll of injuries comes to be considered a “good” day in Gaza. Voices from the Field - 4 Apr 2019
 
Eyewitnesses and local authorities from Nguigmi reported that two people carrying improvised explosive devices blew themselves up in two different locations of the town on in the evening of 26 March. At the same time, several gunmen allegedly set fire to makeshift shelters and tents in camps for internally displaced and refugees, who saw their homes and personal effects reduced to ashes. This was just the latest of a series of violent episodes in the region, as escalating volatility is intensifying people’s suffering and forcing many to flee. 

Following the attack, MSF stepped in to support the treatment of the wounded at Nguigmi hospital, evacuating the most severely injured to the regional hospital in the town of Diffa in three ambulances and another MSF vehicle. MSF teams have distributed essential relief items including mosquito nets, jerry cans, kitchen utensils, blankets and hygiene items to 380 families. Our psychologists offered immediate mental health support for children and adults, organising individual and group psychosocial sessions for nearly 400 people. They found that many were struggling with depression, insomnia and other symptoms linked to the traumatic experiences they had undergone.
Niger

Violence, humanitarian needs and fear mount in Diffa

In just four days, attacks across Diffa region in southeastern Niger has left at least 30 dead, dozens injured and more than 380 shelters burned or destroyed. The worsening conflict around Lake Chad is taking a heavy toll on people in the region. Project Update - 4 Apr 2019
 
Displaced people at a health centre.  Mugunga 1 camp, Goma, North Kivu.
Democratic Republic of Congo

The daily struggle for survival in DRC

As the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) faces the largest Ebola outbreak ever recorded in the country, MSF operations manager Annemarie Loof highlights the recurring emergency health needs that go well beyond Ebola. Op-Ed - 4 Apr 2019
 
Yemen, Aden, 16 December 2018 – Entrance of OT and ICU of MSF trauma hospital in Aden. The hospital opened in 2012.
Yemen

Medical admissions in Aden suspended after patient kidnapped and killed

MSF has suspended admissions to our hospital in Aden, Yemen, following deteriorating security in the city, including the kidnapping and killing of a patient. Press Release - 4 Apr 2019
 
Our teams work with other health providers in Gaza to treat thousands of people shot by the Israeli army during protests at the fence that separates Israel from the blockaded enclave.

The injuries are complex and severe, with half resulting in open fractures. They require long periods of care and different types of treatment, to get better.

The Ministry of Health provides emergency care in their hospitals before patients come to MSF’s clinics and hospitals.

Today, however, there is still insufficient capacity to do reconstructive surgery and treat the infections, with hundreds of patients in need.
Palestine

March of Return protestors abandoned after year of suffering

A year after the start of the series of March of Return protests in which Israeli forces shot at people in Gaza, resulting in horrific injuries, the needs to provide injured people with care mount as the local healthcare system is unable to cope. Project Update - 28 Mar 2019
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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