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Niger

Niger Crisis: A food chain that leads to malnutrition

"Among the children who are admitted in the nutritional centre, it's often hard to tell if they fell sick because they were malnourished and weak or if the malnutrition is the consequence of their sickness."
Inside the MSF tents the patients include two-year-old children who scarcely weigh three kilos - less than the weight of a child at birth in Europe.
Project Update - 25 Jul 2005
 
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Democratic People's Republic of Korea

Aid workers warn of North Korea's forgotten health crisis

Severe floods and a subsequent famine killed up to three million North Koreans during 1995-1999. This crisis has left much of the country's remaining population engaged in a constant battle to survive. And aid agencies are unable to deliver help to those most in need. Justin McCurry reports. Project Update - 21 Jul 2005
 
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Sudan

Malnutrition: A critical situation in Akuem

In addition to this chronic food insecurity, there are additional factors that increase the risk of malnutrition: insufficient access to water and healthcare, inadequate hygiene conditions and ill adapted weaning practices. Project Update - 20 Jul 2005
 
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Democratic Republic of Congo

Waking up to Congo's sleeping sickness

MSF is campaigning for more research and development into a cure for sleeping sickness that would be quick to administer.

Project Update - 19 Jul 2005
 
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Angola

MSF ends Marburg operations in Angola

After over three months working at the Marburg fever outbreak in Uige province, Angola, MSF has ended its intervention. A few new Marburg cases have been recorded in the last weeks and it is likely that some sporadic cases will appear in the town and in the province of Uige for some months. However, the Marburg center is running well and the local staff are capable of handling these sporadic cases. Project Update - 15 Jul 2005
 
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Haiti

Violence intensifies in Port au Prince

One injured man, transported to St. Joseph's by a local taxi, was arrested right in front of two stretcher-bearers before they could take him out of the vehicle, and driven by the police to Port-au-Prince's general hospital, where he died an hour later, under police guard and without care. Project Update - 13 Jul 2005
 
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Angola

Marburg outbreak: When saving lives seems cruel

In late March, when MSF teams first arrived at the Marburg outbreak site in Angola, they were forced to take drastic - seemingly uncaring - measures to contain one of the most deadly and contagious viruses known to man. Project Update - 11 Jul 2005
 
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Colombia

Colombia mission establishes three permanent clinics

These permanent clinics enable MSF to provide more consistent care to vulnerable populations and give the teams a better opportunity to be present during medical emergencies. Project Update - 11 Jul 2005
 
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Ukraine

Number of MSF activities in Ukraine being handed over to local authorities and NGOs

MSF has almost completed the hand-over of its HIV/AIDS programme in the Ukraine to the AIDS centres in Mikolaev, Odessa and Simferopol. The mission there started five years ago, focusing on the three cities and their surroundings. Project Update - 11 Jul 2005
 
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Niger

Niger food crisis: ineffective response by humanitarian aid system, unable to respond to the emergency

Institutional donors and the government refuse to change strategies yet acknowledge that the measures taken are not effective. The food crisis has been officially acknowledged, yet effectively denied. Project Update - 6 Jul 2005
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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