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War in Gaza:: find out how we're responding
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NUEVO LAREDO, NOT A SAFE PLACE
Central American migration

Northern Mexican city too dangerous to send back people seeking asylum

MSF has denounced the extension of a US and Mexican policy that sees refugees and asylum seekers from Central America, hoping to find a new life in the US, sent back to Nuevo Laredo, a dangerous border city in Mexico. Press Release - 3 Jul 2019
 
Emergency response in Ituri
Democratic Republic of Congo

Urgent humanitarian response needed on unprecedented crises in northeast DRC

We are urging international organisations to come the aid of people in Ituri province, Democratic Republic of Congo, as hundreds of thousands are people are in need of assistance following four concurrent humanitarian crises. Press Release - 27 Jun 2019
 
PERALTA INTERVENTION
El Salvador

La Peralta: a community organised by health

La Peralta, a community in the capital of El Salvador, has been affected by violence, which has hindered access to health services. MSF teams began making regular visits to the neighbourhood and the community has organised a health committee, which has managed to get healthcare activities starting again. Project Update - 27 Jun 2019
 
WOMEN FROM GUERRERO
Mexico

Life amidst the violence: the strong women of Guerrero

Guerrero is one of Mexico’s most violent states, fought over by myriad criminal gangs, police and military authorities. Many rural communities have been isolated by the violence. But the women in this state are strong. MSF teams discovered this while running a mobile clinic in the region, providing medical and mental healthcare. Voices from the Field - 27 Jun 2019
 
Nsanje: Treating advanced HIV
Access to medicines

Gilead fails to keep promise on access to lifesaving drug for people living with HIV

Inaction by US pharmaceutical corporation Gilead to follow through on its so-called ‘access initiative’ leaves people unable to access a vital drug to treat a deadly co-infection for HIV. Press Release - 27 Jun 2019
 
Cholera Treatment Center - Dhi Sufal district
Yemen

The indirect consequences of war for people in Yemen

More than four years since the start of the war in Yemen, the indirect consequences of the conflict on ordinary Yemenis are high. Among them, people struggle to reach medical care and hospitals in time, which can have serious repercussions on their health. Project Update - 25 Jun 2019
 
Condemned to drown at sea or be locked up in Libya
Libya

“Healthwise, it was a disaster” in Libya’s Zintan and Gharyan detention centres

MSF staff who were recently granted access to two detention centres in Libya found a catastrophic medical situation among the people detained there. Project Update - 21 Jun 2019
 
MSF emergency response activities
Mali

Violence in central Mali has reached unprecedented levels

Interview with Patrick Irenge, MSF’s medical coordinator in Bamako, Mali, since September 2017 on the current situation, the impact of violence on the population and how MSF is responding. Interview - 20 Jun 2019
 
Daily life in Saada city
Yemen

Aerial bombardments in Sa'ada

Video report on life in Sa'ada, the most bombed governorate of Yemen. With almost a quarter of all recorded coalition air raids since March 2015, the MSF hospital that was bombed in 2015 and reopened in April 2018 had admitted more than 1,500 patients by the end of the year. Project Update - 20 Jun 2019
 
Emin Ozmen, MSF in Bentiu, Thaker & Dhorjak
South Sudan

Life inside or outside a displacement camp

MSF patients and staff describe life in South Sudan’s Protection of Civilians sites, where relative safety comes at the expense of exposure to life-threatening diseases and undignified living conditions. Project Update - 20 Jun 2019
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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