4-24 | Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) announced on 24 April that it has resumed search, rescue and medical aid operations in the central Mediterranean Sea, between Africa and Europe and conducted its first operation of 2016.
4-10 | Events are latest consequences of absurd humanitarian crisis created by Europe On 10th April, after the violent events at the border between Greece and Former Yugoslavia Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) medical teams treated hundreds including around 40 people injured by rubber bullets.
3-1 | A new report from Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) uncovers the gaps in services and systems trapping women and children in cycles of severe family and sexual violence in Papua New Guinea. “Return to Abuser” details how a dire lack of protection mechanisms, a weak justice system and a culture of impunity endanger the health and lives of patients even if they manage to reach medical care. The report includes comprehensive data from more than 3,000 survivors of family and sexual violence that MSF treated in 201
1-5 | After eight months at sea, 20,129 people rescued, and over 120 separate search and rescue operations, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)’s remaining search and rescue ship the Bourbon Argos returned to port for the last time in 2015 on 30 December.