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Peru

MSF increases assistance in post-earthquake region of Peru

MSF first started working at the Peru earthquake on August 17, with staff and a shipment of relief supplies to the region. To date, over 2,200 people have benefited from the MSF mental health programme and, so far, 2,500 families (around 12,500 people) have benefited from MSF distributions of relief goods.
Read more about Peru earthquake:
- Almost two weeks after the quake, the situation in Guadalupe, Peru, remains unacceptable
- Overview of MSF activities
- ''At first it felt like I was looking at a bomb site.''
Project Update - 6 Sep 2007
 
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Ethiopia

MSF denied access to Somali region of Ethiopia

"Our teams have treated people who have been forced to flee their homes and are now struggling to survive with little or no assistance. People are living in fear because they find themselves targeted by and caught between armed groups. We are urgently calling for immediate access to the region in order to help civilians in need."
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Press Release - 4 Sep 2007
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

MSF sends a surgical team and medical material to the Masisi hospital in North Kivu

Currently, an MSF team is en route to join the two staff already working in the Masisi hospital. The new team consists of a surgeon, an anesthetist and two nurses. A logistician also traveled to Goma to take delivery of 1.5 tones of medical material dispatched on Thursday from Kinshasa. Project Update - 31 Aug 2007
 
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Iraq

MSF surgeons treat wounded Iraqis

MSF has begun providing essential medicines and medical supplies to a number of hospitals inside Iraq; yet, the Amman-based surgical programme staffed largely by Iraqi surgeons is the organization's most direct attempt at aiding Iraqis since the organization was forced to withdraw its staff from Iraq in November 2004 in the wake of the deteriorating security situation there. Project Update - 31 Aug 2007
 
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Bangladesh

Burmese refugees

"I was born in Myanmar, but the Burmese government says I don't belong there. I grew up in Bangladesh, but the Bangladeshi government says I cannot stay there. As a Rohingya, I feel I am caught between a crocodile and a snake". Told a 19-year-old refugee in Bangladesh. Project Update - 30 Aug 2007
 
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Peru

Almost two weeks after the quake, the situation remains unacceptable

Almost two weeks after the earthquake in Peru, the situation for victims is no longer mentioned in the international media and on the ground, several aid organisations have started to leave the area. However, MSF teams continue to see forgotten populations in desperate need of assistance. One example is Guadalupe, a town of 12,000 inhabitants located 100 km southeast of Pisco in the suburbs of Ica city. Project Update - 28 Aug 2007
 
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Peru

Peru earthquake: Overview of MSF activities

The first MSF team arrived in Pisco the day after the earthquake, to carry out an assessment. Today, 25 MSF staff, both Peruvian and international, are working together to provide assistance to the affected people. Project Update - 27 Aug 2007
 
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Guinea

Cholera strikes again in Guinea

Endemic in West Africa, Cholera has once again struck in Guinea. The arrival of the rains at the end of May, notably in the particularly insalubrious capital city, Conakry, has created an ideal breeding ground in which the disease can spread. Faced with an increasing number of cases, MSF has boosted its direct support of the health services. Project Update - 27 Aug 2007
 
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Peru

'At first it felt like I was looking at a bomb site.'

On August 18, MSF chartered a flight from Bogota loaded with 12 tons of relief goods and organized an emergency response team. Project Update - 23 Aug 2007
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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