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The MSF-supported hospital in Ma’arat Al Numan before it was attacked and destroyed on Monday 15th Feb. At least 25 people were killed, including nine staff members.
The 30-bed hospital  had 54 staff, two operating theatres, an outpatient department and an emergency room. The outpatient department treated around 1500 people a month, the ER carried out an average of 1,100 consultations a month, and around 140 operations a month, mainly orthopaedic and general surgery, were carried out in the operating theatres.

MSF has been supporting this hospital since September 2015 and covered all the needs of the facility including provision of medical supplies and running costs.
Attacks on medical care

Hospital bombings: Building evidence with images

Nearly 100 medical facilities belonging to, or supported by, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) have been bombed since 2015. Project Update - 15 Feb 2017
 
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Iraq

Assisting people displaced from Hawija

"The gratitude from our patients is humbling and, as heavy as the air is in pockets here, we are all exactly where we need to be." Voices from the Field - 9 Feb 2017
 
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Afghanistan

Médecins Sans Frontières condemns brutal killing of ICRC staff

"There is no possible justification for such a brutal assault on humanitarian workers," said Joanne Liu, MSF International President. "We condemn this attack and all attacks on humanitarian aid in the strongest possible terms." Statement - 9 Feb 2017
 
Footage of the market in Wau Shilluk after shelling on 28/01. Courtesy of Marta Cazorla.
South Sudan

Fleeing civilians cut off from emergency healthcare in Wau Shilluk

MSF is calling on all sides to ensure that the right of civilians to access emergency healthcare, clean water and food is guaranteed, and that medical facilities, staff and transport are not targeted. Press Release - 3 Feb 2017
 
"We were living a decent life in our home. now, we live in this unfinished building where we do not have even toilets," says woman who lives in Al-Hoban district in Taiz. 

She fled with her family eight months ago. Her home now in the part of the city that has been under siege since August 2015. 

A siege has been imposed on the city by Houthis since late August 2015. MSF was not able to enter medical aid into the enclave area for five months. Only on January 16th, MSF got the authorization and delivered medical aid to Al-Thawra hospital inside the enclave area.
Yemen

Crisis update - January 2017

After 22 months of conflict, Yemen is a full-blown humanitarian emergency. Crisis Update - 31 Jan 2017
 
Six internally displaced families sharing an abandoned building in Al-Batra area in Huban district in Taiz.

The situation in Taiz remains extremely critical, with some of the heaviest fighting in the country.
Yemen

“Word had spread that I was a doctor, and people came to me for help all the time”

"There was very little I could do for them. I was able to buy some antibiotics, but I couldn't get hold of things like insulin or asthma medication". Voices from the Field - 30 Jan 2017
 
A child patient and her mother with MSF nurse in MSF mother and child hospital in Al-Hoban area. 
The mother said that she could not hospitalize her child when she had a fever and spasm. She had to wait until the next morning as there the fighting was ongoing and it was dangerous for them to go out. The family was internally displaced because of the intensive fighting in Taiz. 

MSF hospital was opened in Al-Houban, Taiz in November 2015. 

The hospital has a capacity of 100 bed for obstetrics and gynecology and pediatrics. the hospital receives at least 300 women and children every day since then.
Yemen

“That evening we had around 30 casualties, both wounded and dead.”

"People in Taiz have immense needs for food, medical care, water and sanitation and shelter," says Christopher McAleer, a former MSF logistician in Yemen. Voices from the Field - 30 Jan 2017
 
MSF medical team at AL-Nasr hospital in Al-Dhale governorate south of Yemen providing medical assistance to patient in the ER, the patient was injured due to road traffic accident.
Yemen

Healthcare under siege

Twenty months since fighting started in Taiz, the city’s health services have largely collapsed – the result of physical damage to hospitals and of shortages of staff and medical supplies. Photo Story - 30 Jan 2017
 
The family of Fakhira carries over her body to a local cemetery, after her house was hit by shelling on July 24, 2015 in Taiz, Yemen.
The Family gave their consent.
Yemen

Healthcare under siege in Taiz

In its new report, MSF reiterates its calls on all warring parties to ensure the protection of civilians and health workers and allow the wounded and sick access to healthcare. Report - 30 Jan 2017
 
A MSF doctor is doing medical check up in the main ward of the MSF hospital in Mellut togehter with clinical officers and nurses.
South Sudan

MSF closes project in Melut after three years

"MSF's role as first responder was crucial at the start of the emergency. We were able to take care of the displaced population as they arrived at the beginning of 2014," says Marta Cazorla, MSF field coordinator for Melut. Project Update - 30 Jan 2017
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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