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MSF has worked in Serbia since 1991, when the country was part of Yugoslavia. Since 2014, our teams have provided medical and psychological assistance for asylum seekers, refugees and migrants.

Today, Serbia remains a country of transit. Some migrants and asylum seekers reside temporarily in urban settings across the country while others are staying in informal settlements, sleeping in tents in abandoned factories or fields close to the border with Hungary, Romania and Croatia.

Our teams provide medical assistance and health promotion activities as well as distribution of non-food items to asylum seekers and migrants in northern Serbia, at the border with Hungary and Romania. 
 
As people attempt to cross the borders, many sustain injuries from falling off the fence or because they are beaten with batons or sticks by the border forces, as well as irritations from tear gas and pepper spray. We assist people stranded in appalling conditions and carry out medical consultations for violence-related trauma to document violence and to bear witness of such concerning practices. 

Our activities in 2023 in Serbia

Data and information from the International Activity Report 2023.

MSF in Serbia in 2023 In 2023, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) continued to provide essential medical and humanitarian assistance to asylum seekers, migrants and refugees living in precarious conditions in Serbia.
Serbia IAR map 2023

Many of our patients in Serbia, who were attempting to cross the Balkans in search of safety in other European countries, reported that they had been subjected to violence and pushbacks by state authorities at the borders.

Throughout the year, our teams assisted people living outside official accommodation, particularly along the northern borders with Hungary and Romania. In the southern region bordering Bulgaria, we provided assistance to people residing in official settlements. We ran mobile clinics in these areas, offering general healthcare and distributing essential relief items, such as blankets, warm clothing, footwear and hygiene kits, and collaborated with local civil society organisations by providing donations, including medications, to support people in vulnerable circumstances.

As well as caring for victims of physical and psychological violence, including various forms of inhumane and degrading treatment, MSF teams treated people whose health had been affected by freezing winter temperatures and poor living conditions, including lack of food, clean clothes, medical care and hygiene facilities.

 

In 2023
 
Asylum seeker in Serbia, JAN 2015
Serbia

Asylum seekers and migrants left in cold

Project Update 19 Feb 2015
 
Serbia

Parliamentary inquiry of Srebrenica - Investigation or diversion?

Press Release 11 Nov 2000
 
Serbia

Srebrenica five years on

Project Update 4 Sep 2000