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MSF first worked in Azerbaijan in 1989 and today we run a mental health care support project for people in the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

We also provided emergency relief and food distributions, and medical care to people fleeing the region’s war during the 1990s, and later, treated people with tuberculosis.

During the 1990s, our teams rehabilitated public health structures in the country. We also provided an immunisation programme and worked on preventing sexually-transmitted diseases in clinics in the Imishli, Saatli and Fizuli regions, in the country’s southwest, until January 2001. We provided free basic healthcare in clinics just outside Sumgayit, on the Caspian Sea coast, in the early 2000s, before regional health programmes were handed over to other organisations.

Our activities in 2023 in Azerbaijan

Data and information from the International Activity Report 2023.

MSF in Azerbaijan in 2023 In 2023, Médecins Sans Frontières teams in Armenia provided mental health care to people fleeing the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, and opened a hepatitis C project near the capital, Yerevan.
Armenia IAR map 2023

From December 2022 to September 2023, Azerbaijan closed the main road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia, known as the Lachin Corridor, restricting humanitarian access and the transport of medical supplies, food and fuel. We continued our efforts to provide both face-to-face and remote mental health services to people blocked in Nagorno-Karabakh during this period.

On 19 September, Azerbaijan launched an attack on various areas in Nagorno-Karabakh. Although the region is internationally recognised as belonging to Azerbaijan, it has traditionally been home to many ethnic Armenians. After a ceasefire was reached 24 hours later, the Lachin Corridor was reopened, and over 100,000 people crossed into the Armenian border region of Goris. Our emergency medical team immediately began providing psychological first aid and mental health care to people arriving at the main registration point in Goris.

As displaced people were gradually transported to various regions of Armenia for resettlement, we adapted our activities, sending a mobile unit that visited several sites each day to follow up on patients in need of psychological care. In Kotayk and Ararat regions, we offered mental health services via mobile clinics and provided displaced families with essential items, including walking sticks and wheelchairs, in 48 locations.

In May, we opened a project to support testing and treatment for hepatitis C at Archakuniat polyclinic, near Yerevan, in close collaboration with the Ministry of Health and local municipalities. The project focuses especially on people in prisons who are particularly vulnerable to hepatitis C infection, with the aim to reduce infections and improve health outcomes for patients diagnosed with the disease.

 

in 2023
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