Médecins Sans Frontières

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Médecins Sans Frontières
Doctors Without Borders
Headquarters of Médecins Sans Frontières in Geneva
TypeInternational NGO
Founded1971
HeadquartersGeneva, Switzerland
Area servedWorldwide
FocusHumanitarian Aid

Médecins Sans Frontières (pronounced mɛtsɛ̃ sɑ̃ fʁɔ̃tjɛʁ), or Doctors Without Borders, is a secular humanitarian-aid non-governmental organization best known for its projects in war-torn regions and developing countries facing endemic disease.

Médecins Sans Frontières was created in 1971 by a small group of French doctors, in the aftermath of the Biafra secession, who believed that all people have the right to medical care regardless of race, religion, creed, or political affiliation, and that the needs of these people supersede respect for national borders.

The organization is known in most of the world by its French name or simply as MSF, but in the United States and Canada the name Doctors Without Borders is often used instead.

MSF is governed by an international board of directors located in Geneva, Switzerland, and organized into 20 sections. Annually, about 3,000 doctors, nurses, midwives and logisticians are recruited to run projects, but 1,000 permanently employed staff work to recruit volunteers and handle finances and media relations. Private donors provide about 80 percent of the organization's funding, while governmental and corporate donations provide the rest, giving MSF an annual budget of approximately USD 400 million.

The organization actively provides health care and medical training to populations in more than 70 countries, and frequently insists on political responsibility in conflict zones such as Chechnya and Kosovo. Only once in its history, during the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, has the organization called for a military intervention.

To be able to speak and act freely, MSF remains independent of any political, religious or economic powers. The majority of all MSF activities are paid for with private donations. MSF is an example of the strength of modern NGOs to harness human compassion and the desire to serve others.

Creation

The initiators of Médecins sans Frontières were:

  • Dr Marcel Delcourt
  • Dr Max Recamier
  • Dr Gérard Pigeon
  • Dr Bernard Kouchner
  • Dr Raymond Borel
  • Dr Jean Cabrol
  • Dr Vladan Radoman
  • Dr Jean-Michel Wild
  • Dr Pascal Greletty-Bosviel
  • Dr Jacques Bérés
  • Dr Gérard Illiouz
  • Philippe Bernier
  • Dr Xavier Emmanuelli

Biafra

A child with kwashiorkor during the Nigerian Civil War.

During the Nigerian Civil War of 1967 to 1970, the Nigerian military formed a blockade around the nation's newly independent southeastern region, Biafra. At this time, France was the only major country supportive of the Biafrans (the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union and the United States sided with the Nigerian government), and the conditions within the blockade were unknown to the world. A number of French doctors volunteered with the French Red Cross to work in hospitals and feeding centers in besieged Biafra. The Red Cross required volunteers to sign an agreement, which was seen by some as designed to maintain the organization's neutrality, whatever the circumstances.

After entering the country, the volunteers, in addition to Biafran health workers and hospitals, were subjected to attacks by the Nigerian army, and witnessed the murder and starvation of civilians by the blockading forces. The doctors publicly criticized the Nigerian government and the Red Cross for their seemingly complicit behavior. These doctors concluded that a new aid organization was needed that would ignore political/religious boundaries and prioritize the welfare of victims.[1]

1971 establishment

The Groupe d'Intervention Médicale et Chirurgicale en Urgence ("Emergency Medical and Surgical Intervention Group") was formed in 1970 by French doctors who had worked in Biafra, to provide aid and to emphasize the importance of victims' rights over neutrality. At the same time, Raymond Borel, the editor of the French medical journal TONUS, had started a group called Secours Médical Français ("French Medical Relief") in response to the 1970 Bhola cyclone, which killed at least 500,000 in East Pakistan (now Bangladesh). Borel had intended to recruit doctors to provide aid to victims of natural disasters. On 20 December 1971, the two groups of colleagues merged to form Médecins Sans Frontières.[1]

MSF’s first mission as an independent aid organization was to the Nicaraguan capital, Managua, where a 1972 earthquake had destroyed most of the city and killed between 10,000 and 30,000 people. Bortolotti puts the death toll at 10,000.[1] An estimate of 15,000 to 30,000, warning of an inevitable dysentery epidemic, comes from Vijil.[2] The organization, today known for its quick response in an emergency, arrived three days after the Red Cross had set up a relief mission. On September 18-19,1974, Hurricane Fifi caused major flooding in Honduras and killed thousands of people (estimates vary), and MSF set up its first long-term medical relief mission.

Between 1975 and 1979, after South Vietnam had fallen to North Vietnam, there was the emigration of millions of Cambodians to Thailand to avoid the Khmer Rouge. In response MSF set up its first refugee camp missions in Thailand.[1] When Vietnam withdrew from Cambodia in 1989, MSF started long-term relief missions to help survivors of the mass killings and reconstruct the country’s health care system. Although its missions to Thailand to help victims of war in Southeast Asia could arguably be seen as its first war-time mission, MSF saw its first mission to a true war zone, including exposure to hostile fire, in 1976. MSF spent nine years (1976–1984) assisting surgeries in the hospitals of various cities in Lebanon during the Lebanese Civil War, and established a reputation for its neutrality and its willingness to work under fire. Throughout the war, MSF helped both Christian and Muslim soldiers alike, assisting whichever group required the most medical aid at the time. In 1984, as the situation in Lebanon deteriorated further and security for aid groups was minimized, MSF withdrew its volunteers.

New leadership

Claude Malhuret was elected as the new president of MSF in 1977, and soon after, debates began over the future of the organization. In particular, Malhuret and his supporters downplayed the concept of témoignage ("witnessing"), or speaking out about the suffering that one sees as opposed to remaining silent.[3] Malhuret thought MSF should avoid criticism of the governments of countries in which they were working, while Kouchner believed that documenting and broadcasting the suffering in a country was the most effective way to solve a problem.

In 1979, after four years of refugee movement from South Vietnam and the surrounding countries by foot and by boat, French intellectuals made an appeal in Le Monde for "A Boat for Vietnam," a project intended to provide medical aid to the refugees. Although the project did not receive support from the majority of MSF, some nonetheless chartered a ship called L’Île de Lumière ("The Island of Light"), and, along with doctors, journalists, and photographers, sailed to the China Sea and provided some medical aid to the boat people.

MSF development

In 1982, Malhuret and Rony Brauman (who would become the organization's president in 1982), brought increased financial independence to MSF by introducing fundraising-by-mail to better collect donations. The 1980s also saw the establishment of the other operational sections from MSF-France (1971): MSF-Belgium (1980), MSF-Switzerland (1981), MSF-Holland (1984), and MSF-Spain (1986). MSF-Luxembourg was the first support section, created in 1986. The early 1990s saw the establishment of the majority of the support sections: MSF-Greece (1990), MSF-USA (1990), MSF-Canada (1991), MSF-Japan (1992), MSF-UK (1993), MSF-Italy (1993), MSF-Australia (1994), as well as Germany, Austria, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and Hong Kong (MSF-UAE was formed later).[1]

Malhuret and Brauman were instrumental in professionalizing MSF. In December 1979, after the Soviet army had invaded Afghanistan, field missions were immediately set up to provide medical aid to the mujahideen, and in February 1980, MSF publicly denounced the Khmer Rouge. During the 1984-1985 famine in Ethiopia, MSF set up nutrition programs in the country in 1984, but was expelled in 1985 after denouncing the abuse of international aid and the forced resettlements. The group also set up equipment to produce clean drinking water for the population of San Salvador, capital of El Salvador, after the October 10, 1986 earthquake that struck the city.[1]

Sudan

In 1979, MSF set up missions to help civilians in southern Sudan affected by starvation and the ongoing civil war. MSF volunteers alleged many horrific acts, including tortures, mass executions, cannibalism, and large-scale starvation and disease. In 1989, two volunteers were killed when their plane was shot down.[1] MSF has maintained relief efforts in Sudan for 25 years, despite arrests of their volunteers,[4] nearly constant fighting and civilian massacres,[5] famine, drought, poor sanitation, and outbreaks of tuberculosis, ebola, hepatitis E, polio, cholera, and malaria (among others, and all have the potential for epidemics). MSF has always appealed for help from the media, but the situation in Sudan has consistently been under-reported to the public in the United States and Europe.[6]

Early 1990s

The early 1990s saw MSF open a number of new national sections, and at the same time, set up field missions in some of the most dangerous and distressing situations it had ever encountered.

In 1990, MSF first entered Liberia to help civilians and refugees affected by the Liberian Civil War. Constant fighting throughout the 1990s and the Second Liberian Civil War have kept MSF volunteers actively providing nutrition, basic health care, and mass vaccinations, and speaking out against attacks on hospitals and feeding stations, especially in Monrovia.

Field missions were set up to provide relief to Kurdish refugees who had survived the al-Anfal Campaign, for which evidence of atrocities was being collected in 1991.[7] 1991 also saw the beginning of the Somali Civil War, and widespread famine and disease, for which MSF set up field missions in 1992. Failed United Nations (UN) interventions led to greater violence, and MSF denounced the organization's operation in 1993, but volunteers continued to provide health care and food. Since the United Nations left, violence in Somalia has been unhindered, and MSF is one of the few organizations helping affected civilians by running clinics and hospitals.[8]

MSF first began work in Srebrenica (in Bosnia and Herzegovina) as part of a UN convoy in 1993, one year after the Bosnian War had begun. The city had become surrounded by the Bosnian Serb Army and, containing about 60,000 Bosniaks, had become an enclave guarded by a United Nations Protection Force. MSF was the only organization providing medical care to the surrounded civilians, and as such, did not denounce the genocide for fear of being expelled from the country (it did, however, denounce the lack of access for other organizations). MSF was forced to leave the area in 1995, when the Bosnian Serb Army captured the town, deported the majority of the inhabitants, and killed approximately 8,000.[9]

Worldwide missions

Rwanda

When the genocide in Rwanda began in April 1994, some delegates of MSF working in the country were incorporated into the ICRC medical team for protection. Both groups succeeded in keeping all main hospitals in Rwanda's capital Kigali operational throughout the main period of the genocide. MSF, together with several other aid organizations, had to leave the country in 1995, although many MSF and ICRC volunteers worked together under the ICRC's rules of engagement, which held that neutrality was of the utmost importance. These events led to a debate within the organization about the concept of balancing neutrality of humanitarian aid workers against their witnessing role. As a result of its Rwanda mission, the position of MSF with respect to neutrality moved closer to that of the ICRC, a remarkable development in the light of the origin of the organization.[10]

Aerial photograph of a Mihanda, Zaire refugee camp in 1996. Pictured are 500+ tents set up in the Mitumba Mountains.

The ICRC lost 56 and MSF lost almost 100 of their respective local staff in Rwanda, and MSF-France, which had chosen to evacuate its team from the country (the local staff were forced to stay), denounced the murders and demanded that a French military intervention stop the genocide. MSF-France introduced the slogan "One cannot stop a genocide with doctors" to the media, and the controversial Opération Turquoise followed less than one month later.[1] This intervention directly or indirectly resulted in movements of hundreds of thousands of Rwandan refugees to Zaire and Tanzania in what become known as the Great Lakes refugee crisis, and subsequent cholera epidemics, starvation and more mass killings in the large groups of civilians. MSF-France returned to the area and provided medical aid to refugees in Goma.

At the time of the genocide, competition between the medical efforts of MSF, the ICRC, and other aid groups had reached an all time high,[11] but the conditions in Rwanda prompted a drastic change in the way humanitarian organizations approached aid missions. The Code of Conduct for the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement and NGOs in Disaster Relief Programs was created by the IFRC in 1994 to provide a framework for humanitarian missions,[12] and MSF is a signatory of this code.[13] The code advocates the provision of humanitarian aid only, and groups are urged not to serve any political or religious interest, or be used as a tool for foreign governments.[14] MSF has since still found it necessary to condemn the actions of governments, such as in Chechnya in 1999,[15] but has not demanded another military intervention since then.[1]

Sierra Leone

In the late 1990s, MSF missions were set up to treat tuberculosis and anaemia in residents of the Aral Sea area, and look after civilians affected by drug-resistant disease, famine, and epidemics of cholera and AIDS. They vaccinated 3 million Nigerians against meningitis during an epidemic in 1996 and denounced the Taliban’s neglect of health care for women in 1997.[16] Arguably, the most significant country in which MSF set up field missions in the late 1990s was Sierra Leone, which was involved in a civil war at the time. In 1998, volunteers began assisting in surgeries in Freetown to help with an increasing number of amputees, and collecting statistics on the number of civilians (men, women and children) attacked by large groups of men claiming to represent ECOMOG. The groups of men were traveling between villages and systematically chopping off one or both of each resident’s arms, raping women, gunning down families, razing houses, and forcing survivors to leave the area. Long-term projects following the end of the civil war included psychological support and phantom limb pain management.[17]

Kosovo

The Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines was created in late 1999, providing MSF with a new voice with which to bring awareness to the lack of effective treatments and vaccines available in developing countries. In 1999, the organization also spoke out about the lack of humanitarian support in Kosovo and Chechnya, having set up field missions to help civilians affected by the respective political situations. Although MSF had worked in the Kosovo region since 1993, the onset of the Kosovo War prompted the movement of tens of thousands of refugees, and a decline in suitable living conditions. MSF provided shelter, water and health care to civilians affected by NATO’s strategic bombing campaigns.

A serious crisis within MSF erupted in connection with the organization's work in Kosovo when the Greek section of MSF was expelled from the organization because its members extended aid to both Albanian and Serbian civilians in Pristina during NATO's bombing. [18]

Colombia

Colombia is another country in which war has directly affected civilians, and MSF first set up programs in that country in 1985. With almost constant fighting between government forces, guerrilla groups such as FARC and paramilitary groups such as AUC, millions of civilians were displaced from their homes, and domestic violence and abductions became common. In addition to such problems as a result of armed conflict, Colombia has also received a massive number of migrants from Venezuela in recent years, many of whom survive in precarious situations. MSF has largely been active in providing counsel for people troubled by the violence, as well as setting up health facilities for the large groups of displaced people and using mobile clinics to help isolated groups.[19]

MSF has been working in Haiti since 1991, but since President Jean-Bertrand Aristide was forced from power, the country has seen a large increase in civilian attacks and rape by armed groups. In addition to providing surgical and psychological support in existing hospitals—offering the only free surgery available in Port-au-Prince—field missions have been set up to rebuild water and waste management systems and treat survivors of major flooding caused by Hurricane Jeanne as well as survivors of the earthquake in August 2021; patients with HIV/AIDS and malaria, both of which are widespread in the country, also receive better treatment and monitoring.[20]

Sub-Saharan Africa

MSF front door at a refugee camp

MSF has been active in a large number of African countries for decades, sometimes serving as the sole provider of health care, food, and water. Although MSF has consistently attempted to increase media coverage of the situation in Africa to increase international support, long-term field missions are still necessary. Treating and educating the public about HIV/AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa, which sees the most deaths and cases of the disease in the world, is a major task for volunteers.[21]

Congo

Although active in the Congo region of Africa since 1985, the First and Second Congo War brought increased violence and instability to the area. MSF had to evacuate its teams from areas such as around Bunia, in the Ituri district due to extreme violence, but continues to work in other areas to provide food to tens of thousands of displaced civilians, as well as treat survivors of mass rapes and widespread fighting. The treatment and possible vaccination against diseases such as cholera, measles, polio, Marburg fever, sleeping sickness, HIV/AIDS, and Bubonic plague is also important to prevent or slow down epidemics. Armed conflict, especially in North and South Kivu, Kasai, Ituri, and Tanganyika, has forced millions to flee and their needs are immense. Three MSF staff were abducted in North Kivu in 2013.[22]

Uganda

MSF has been active in Uganda since 1980, and provided relief to civilians during the country’s guerrilla war during the Second Obote Period. However, the formation of the Lord's Resistance Army saw the beginning of a long campaign of violence in northern Uganda and southern Sudan. Civilians were subjected to mass killings and rapes, torture, and abductions of children, who would later serve as sex slaves or child soldiers. Faced more than 1.5 million people displaced from their homes, MSF set up relief programs in internally displaced person (IDP) camps to provide clean water, food and sanitation. Diseases such as tuberculosis, measles, polio, cholera, ebola, and HIV/AIDS occur in epidemics in the country, and volunteers provide vaccinations (in the cases of measles and polio) and/or treatment to the residents. Following the violence in South Sudan, large numbers of refugees fled to northern Uganda, making Uganda currently the host of the most refugees in Africa. Mental health is also an important aspect of medical treatment for MSF teams in Uganda, since most people refuse to leave the IDP camps for constant fear of attack.[23]

Côte d'Ivoire

MSF first set up a field mission in Côte d'Ivoire in 1990, but ongoing violence and the 2002 division of the country by rebel groups and the government led to several massacres, and the healthcare system suffered greatly. With only one medical doctor per 10,000 inhabitants, and a lack of medical infrastructure, healthcare is in crisis. Epilepsy and mental health are stigmatized and little-diagnosed in Côte d'Ivoire, and MSF teams provide essential support to those suffering from these conditions, as well as running vaccination clinics.[24]

Field mission structure

Before a field mission is established in a country, an MSF team visits the area to determine the nature of the humanitarian emergency, the level of safety in the area and what type of aid is needed. Medical aid is the main objective of most missions, although some missions help in such areas as water purification and nutrition.

Field mission team

A field mission team usually consists of a small number of coordinators to head each component of a field mission, and a "head of mission." The head of mission usually has the most experience in humanitarian situations of the members of the team, and it is his/her job to deal with the media, national governments and other humanitarian organizations.

Medical volunteers include physicians, surgeons, nurses, and various other specialists, all of whom usually have training in tropical medicine and epidemiology. In addition to operating the medical and nutrition components of the field mission, these volunteers are sometimes in charge of a group of local medical staff and provide training for them.

Although the medical volunteers almost always receive the most media attention when the world becomes aware of an MSF field mission, there are a number of non-medical volunteers who help keep the field mission functioning. Logisticians are often the most important members of a team. They are responsible for providing everything that the medical component of a mission needs, ranging from security and vehicle maintenance to food and electricity supplies. They may be engineers and/or foremen, but they usually also help with setting up treatment centers and supervising local staff. Other non-medical staff are water/sanitation specialists, who are usually experienced engineers in the fields of water treatment and management and financial/administration experts who are placed with field missions.

Medical component

Vaccination campaigns are a major part of the medical care provided during MSF missions. Diseases such as diphtheria, measles, meningitis, tetanus, pertussis, yellow fever, polio, and cholera, all of which are uncommon in developed countries, may be prevented with vaccination. Some of these diseases, such as cholera and measles, spread rapidly in large populations living in close proximity, such as in a refugee camp, and people must be immunized by the hundreds or thousands in a short period of time.[25]

An equally important part of the medical care provided during MSF missions is AIDS treatment (with antiretroviral drugs), AIDS testing, and education. MSF is the only source of treatment for many countries in Africa, whose citizens make up the majority of people with HIV and AIDS worldwide. Because antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) are not readily available, MSF usually provides treatment for opportunistic infections and educates the public on how to slow transmission of the disease.[26]

In most countries, MSF increases the capabilities of local hospitals by improving sanitation, providing equipment and drugs, and training local hospital staff. When the local staff is overwhelmed, MSF may open new specialized clinics for treatment of an endemic disease or surgery for victims of war. International staff start these clinics but MSF strives to increase the local staff's ability to run the clinics themselves through training and supervision. In some countries, MSF provides public education to increase awareness of reproductive health care and venereal disease.[27]

Since most of the areas that require field missions have been affected by a natural disaster, civil war, or endemic disease, the residents usually require psychological support as well. Although the presence of an MSF medical team may decrease stress somewhat among victims, often a team of psychologists or psychiatrists work with victims of depression, domestic violence and substance abuse. The doctors may also train local mental health staff.[28]

Nutrition

Often in situations where an MSF mission is set up, there is moderate or severe malnutrition as a result of war, drought, or government economic mismanagement. Intentional starvation is also sometimes used during a war as a weapon, and MSF, in addition to providing food, brings awareness to the situation and insists on foreign government intervention. Infectious diseases and diarrhea, both of which cause weight loss and weakening of a person's body (especially in children), must be treated with medication and proper nutrition to prevent further infections and weight loss. A combination of the above situations, as when a civil war is fought during times of drought and infectious disease outbreaks, can create famine.

In emergency situations where there is a lack of nutritious food, but not to the level of a true famine, protein-energy malnutrition is most common among young children. Marasmus, a form of calorie deficiency, is the most common form of childhood malnutrition and is characterized by severe wasting and often fatal weakening of the immune system. Kwashiorkor, a form of calorie and protein deficiency, is a more serious type of malnutrition in young children, and can negatively affect physical and mental development. Both types of malnutrition can make opportunistic infections fatal. In these situations, MSF sets up Therapeutic Feeding Centers for monitoring the children and any other malnourished individuals.

A Therapeutic Feeding Centre (or Therapeutic Feeding Programme) is designed to treat severe malnutrition through the gradual introduction of a special diet intended to promote weight gain after the individual has been treated for other health problems. The treatment program is split between two phases:[29]

  • Phase 1 lasts for 24 hours and involves basic health care and several small meals of low energy/protein food spaced over the day.
  • Phase 2 involves monitoring of the patient and several small meals of high energy/protein food spaced over each day until the individual’s weight approaches normal.

MSF uses foods designed specifically for treatment of severe malnutrition. During phase 1, a type of therapeutic milk called F 100 is fed to patients. During phase 2, other kind of meals such as porridge, biscuits, local meal, ready-to-use therapeutic food are added.[29]

Dehydration, sometimes due to diarrhea or cholera, may also be present in a population, and MSF set up rehydration centers to combat this.

Water and sanitation

Clean water is essential for hygiene, consumption and for feeding programs (for mixing with powdered therapeutic milk or porridge), as well as for preventing the spread of water-borne disease. As such, MSF water engineers and volunteers must create a source of clean water. This is usually achieved by modifying an existing water well, by digging a new well and/or starting a water treatment project to obtain clean water for a population. Water treatment in these situations may consist of storage sedimentation, filtration and/or chlorination depending on available resources.[30]

Sanitation is an essential part of field missions, and it may include education of local medical staff in proper sterilization techniques, wastewater treatment projects, proper waste disposal, and education of the population in personal hygiene. Proper wastewater treatment and water sanitation are the best way to prevent the spread of serious water-borne diseases, such as cholera. Simple wastewater treatment systems can be set up by volunteers to protect drinking water from contamination.[31] Garbage disposal could include pits for normal waste and incineration for medical waste. However, the most important subject in sanitation is the education of the local population, so that proper waste and water treatment can continue once MSF has left the area.

Statistics

In order to accurately report the conditions of a humanitarian emergency to the rest of the world and to governing bodies, data on a number of factors are collected during each field mission. The rate of malnutrition in children is used to determine the malnutrition rate in the population, and then to determine the need for feeding centers. Various types of mortality rates are used to report the seriousness of a humanitarian emergency, and a common method used to measure mortality in a population is to have staff constantly monitoring the number of burials at cemeteries. By compiling data on the frequency of diseases in hospitals, MSF can track the occurrence and location of epidemic increases (or "seasons") and stockpile vaccines and other drugs. For example, the "Meningitis Belt" (sub-Saharan Africa, which sees the most cases of meningitis in the world) has been "mapped" and the meningitis season occurs between December and June. Shifts in the location of the Belt and the timing of the season can be predicted using cumulative data over many years.[32]

In addition to epidemiology surveys, MSF also uses surveys of populations to determine the rates of violence in various regions. By estimating the scopes of massacres, and determining the rate of kidnappings, rapes, and killings, psychosocial programs can be implemented to lower the suicide rate and increase the sense of security in a population. Large-scale forced migrations, excessive civilian casualties and massacres can be quantified using surveys, and MSF can use the results to put pressure on governments to provide help, or even expose genocide.

Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines

The Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines was initiated in 1999 to increase access to essential medicines in developing countries.[33] "Essential medicines" are those drugs that are needed in sufficient supply to treat a disease common to a population. However, most diseases common to populations in developing countries are no longer common to populations in developed countries; therefore, pharmaceutical companies find that producing these drugs is no longer profitable and may raise the price per treatment, decrease development of the drug (and new treatments) or even stop production of the drug. MSF often lacks effective drugs during field missions, and started the campaign to put pressure on governments and pharmaceutical companies to increase funding for essential medicines.

Dangers faced by volunteers

Aside from injuries and death associated with stray bullets, mines and epidemic disease, MSF volunteers are sometimes attacked or kidnapped for political reasons. In some countries afflicted by civil war, humanitarian aid organizations may be viewed as helping the enemy, if an aid mission has been set up exclusively for victims on one side of the conflict, and be attacked for that reason. However, the War on Terrorism has generated attitudes among some groups in United States-occupied countries that non-governmental aid organizations such as MSF are allied with or even work for the Coalition forces. Since the United States has labeled its operations "humanitarian actions" independent aid organizations have been forced to defend their positions, or even evacuate their teams.[34]

Arrests and abductions in politically unstable regions can occur for volunteers, and in some cases, MSF field missions can be expelled entirely from a country. Arjan Erkel, Head of Mission in Dagestan in the North Caucasus, was kidnapped and held hostage in an unknown location by unknown abductors from August 12, 2002 until April 11, 2004. Paul Foreman, head of MSF-Holland, was arrested in Sudan in May 2005 for refusing to divulge documents used in compiling a report on rapes carried out by the pro-government Janjaweed militias. Foreman cited the privacy of the women involved, and MSF alleged that the Sudanese government had arrested him because it disliked the bad publicity generated by the report.[35]

Namesakes

Legacy

MSF received the 1999 Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of its members' continuous effort to provide medical care in acute crises, as well as raising international awareness of potential humanitarian disasters. Dr. James Orbinski, who was the president of the organization at the time, accepted the prize on behalf of MSF. Prior to this, MSF also received the 1996 Seoul Peace Prize. The current president of MSF is Dr. Christophe Fournier.

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 Dan Bortolotti, Hope in Hell: Inside the World of Doctors Without Borders (Firefly Books, 2004, ISBN 9781552978658).
  2. Camilo Vijil, "The Earthquake in Managua," The Lancet (Correspondence) 303(7845) 1973: 25–26
  3. Témoignage Case Binder/ Speaking Out Case Studies MSF. Retrieved June 17, 2023.
  4. High Commissioner for Human Rights concerned over arrest of MSF head in Sudan United Nations (May 31, 2005). Retrieved June 17, 2023.
  5. V. Brown, P. Caron, N. Ford, J.C. Cabrol, J.P. Tremblay, R. and Lepec, "Violence in southern Sudan," The Lancet 359(9301) (2002): 161.
  6. MSF Top-Ten under-reported humanitarian stories for 2002 MSF (December 31, 2002). Retrieved June 17, 2023.
  7. V. Choo, "Forensic evidence of Iraqi atrocities against Kurds," The Lancet 341(8840) (1993): 299–300.
  8. Bare bone facts about Somalia - an MSF briefing document MSF (December 9, 2002). Retrieved June 17, 2023.
  9. Srebrenica five years on MSF (September 4, 2000). Retrieved June 17, 2023.
  10. D.P. Forsythe, "International humanitarianism in the contemporary world: forms and issues," Human Rights and Human Welfare Working Papers (2005).
  11. D.P. Forsythe, "The International Committee of the Red Cross and humanitarian assistance - A policy analysis," International Review of the Red Cross (314) (1996): 512–531.
  12. M. Buchanan-Smith, "Interrelationships between humanitarian organisations," IFRC FORUM: War and Accountability (2002): 40–45.
  13. Code of Conduct for the IFRC Movement and NGOs in Disaster Relief: Signatories IFRC. Retrieved June 17, 2023.
  14. Code of Conduct for the Movement and NGOs in Disaster Relief IFRC. Retrieved June 17, 2023.
  15. James Orbinski, Doctors Without Borders – Nobel Lecture The Nobel Prize.org. Retrieved June 17, 2023.
  16. MSF and other aid organisations evicted from Kabul MSF (July 21, 1998). Retrieved June 17, 2023.
  17. Controlling phantom limb pain in Sierra Leone MSF (April 21, 2001). Retrieved June 17, 2023.
  18. MSF provided relief assistance in Kosovo from 1992 until 2000 MSF. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  19. Colombia MSF. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  20. Haiti MSF. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  21. Thomas Goliber, The Status of the HIV/AIDS Epidemic in Sub-Saharan Africa Population Reference Bureau (July 2, 2002). Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  22. Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) MSF. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  23. Uganda MSF. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  24. Côte d'Ivoire MSF. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  25. David Leonhardt, The Vaccine Gap The New York Times (May 24, 2021). Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  26. World AIDS Day 2020: Critical HIV situation in Central African Republic MSF (May 2, 2023). Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  27. Medical Activities MSF. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  28. Mental health MSF. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  29. 29.0 29.1 MSF Therapeutic Feeding Programmes MSF. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  30. Simple water treatment MSF-UAE. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  31. Removal and treatment of wastewater MSF-UAE. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  32. Meningococcal meningitis WHO. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  33. Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines MSF. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  34. Fabrice Weissman, Military humanitarianism: A deadly confusion MSF International Activity Report 2003-2004. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  35. MSF shocked by arrest of Head of Mission in Sudan - charged with crimes against the state MSF (May 30, 2005). Retrieved June 29, 2023.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bortolotti, Dan. Hope in Hell: Inside the World of Doctors Without Borders. Firefly Books, 2004. ISBN 9781552978658
  • Fox, Renée C. Doctors Without Borders: Humanitarian Quests, Impossible Dreams of Médecins Sans Frontières. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2014. ISBN 978-1421413549
  • Redfield, Peter. Life in Crisis: The Ethical Journey of Doctors Without Borders. University of California Press, 2013. ISBN 978-0520274853

External links

All links retrieved June 15, 2023.



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