International Activity Report 2005
The Year in Review


Uganda Photo © Bruno Stevens/COSMOS |
|
On 26 December 2004 shortly after a tsunami ravaged
the coasts of South Asia, leaving more than 300,000
people dead and thousands more injured and homeless,
more than 200 MSF international volunteers and hundreds
of national staff rushed to the hardest-hit areas,
especially Indonesia and Sri Lanka. Within 72 hours, our
first teams began working in conjunction with national
efforts to provide emergency relief to thousands of
people affected by the disaster.
MSF's response included providing medical staff and materials to
existing health facilities, running mobile clinics where no health
care was available, setting up emergency water and sanitation systems
where displaced people were gathering, distributing essential
relief items, and once initial medical needs had been met, giving
psychosocial assistance to those traumatized by the event and its
consequences.
In sharp contrast to virtually every other catastrophe that humanitarian
organizations addressed in the past year, the tsunami generated
an exceptional outpouring of goodwill, solidarity and generosity
on an international level. Less than a week after the tsunami,
MSF estimated that it had received more than sufficient funds for
its foreseen emergency medical activities in the region and asked
donors to contribute to our work in other emergencies instead. On
page 52 of this report, we explain why MSF took this – at the time –
radical stance and how it reinforces our ideas about financial transparency
and our own particular role in this type of crisis.
In addition, MSF approached its donors worldwide to request their
permission to use their donations in other crisis situations such as
Niger, Uganda, Somalia, Colombia or the Democratic Republic of
the Congo (DRC), where huge numbers of people continue to suffer
year after year in deafening silence. Our supporters were overwhelmingly
positive and their donations are now being used in
places like southwest Niger, where, by the end of 2005, MSF teams expect to treat as many as 50,000 severely malnourished children
and where an adequate international response to the nutritional
and medical crisis has failed to materialize.
It is the ongoing support of thousands of individuals that makes it
possible for MSF to assess needs and provide medical relief within
hours of a disaster or a crisis. MSF can start working without
having to wait for the international community to wake up to the
crisis or for institutional donors to release funds. Thanks to its
supporters, MSF can retain its independence and intervene when
and where our assistance is most needed. This impartiality and
independence of analysis and action are crucial elements of MSF's
identity that must be upheld despite the changing landscape of
humanitarian aid. As described in an essay included in this report,
MSF's identity and principles are what enables the organization to
work in complicated contexts in which the effects of man-made
crises are devastating for individuals.
Working in conflict zones
One conflict in which MSF's neutrality has been crucial is in the
DRC, where, for the majority of the people, the so-called transition
from war to peace remained little more than a mirage in 2004 and
2005. Thousands continued to die from treatable diseases such as
malaria and measles. Violence continued to f lare, trapping those
living in the provinces of Ituri, North and South Kivu and Katanga.
In June 2005, the abduction of two MSF staff members by armed militiamen forced MSF to withdraw its teams from the outskirts of
the town of Bunia, leaving thousands without medical care. Yet
MSF continued its work in the city hospital, where surgeons operated
on adults and children who had survived gunshot wounds,
machete attacks, burning or sexual violence. Elsewhere in the DRC,
MSF teams provided hospital and basic care to local populations
and people displaced by violence.
In Colombia, people have been forced for decades to live amid violent
confrontations among government forces, paramilitary groups
and armed guerrillas, which have terrorized and targeted civilians
in both rural and urban areas. In its projects around the country,
MSF tries to alleviate some of the suffering by bringing medical
services, including psychological care, to vulnerable and displaced
civilians. Similarly, in the Haitian capital of Port au Prince, civilians
have also been caught in the crossfire of political and criminal
violence that has wracked their city in waves since September 2004.
While living conditions in several of the poorest neighborhoods
deteriorate and brutal attacks intensify, the number of people who
have been injured by violent acts – and who have received emergency
medical and surgical care from MSF – continues to grow. In July
2005, MSF spoke out about the worsening security situation and
publicly called on all armed groups to respect the safety of civilians
and to allow the wounded to obtain emergency medical care.
Calling attention to Darfur's ongoing violence
Today, approximately two years after violence broke out in Sudan's
western region of Darfur, the conf lict has faded from the media.
But the terror it inf licts on civilians remains ever-present. Many of
those gathered in camps within Sudan or just across the border in
eastern Chad see no end in sight to their plight, and repeated village
burnings, sexual violence and attacks have made returning
home an unrealistic option for most. Yet the camps or villages in
which they have gathered are far from secure. People living in these
areas continue to be subjected to repeated aggression and recurring
displacement. During 2005, MSF continued to assist more than one
million people forced to f lee their homes or otherwise affected by
the violence and its consequences.
In addition to the medical care provided, MSF spoke out on a
number of occasions, including before the UN Security Council, on
what our teams have witnessed in Darfur. After having provided
medical care to hundreds of women and girls who had survived
rapes or other sexual violence in Darfur, MSF spoke out on violence
against women in a March 2005 report. The report's stark
findings led the Sudanese government to arrest two MSF international
volunteers who directed MSF's work in Darfur. International
outcry finally led to the men's eventual release. MSF staff members
see it as a responsibility to make people and governments aware of
the abuses they witness. To remain silent is impossible. How MSF
can best assist victims of sexual violence remains a pressing issue
and is highlighted in an essay within these pages.
Meanwhile, the inhabitants of wide areas of southern Sudan have
started to suffer from malnutrition due to food scarcity. MSF teams
working there are treating a growing number of children suffering
from severe malnutrition as the precarious nutritional situation
has been aggravated by the return of displaced people and refugees
now that the peace agreement is in place.
Improving care for those with neglected diseases
Every day, in countries around the world, MSF confronts another
form of violence that touches millions. Patients living with diseases
such as malaria, tuberculosis (TB), HIV/AIDS, sleeping sickness
and Chagas disease, to name only a few, die simply because the
medicines needed to treat them are not available in sufficient quantities,
are too expensive or do not even exist. An essay on malaria
included here suggests that, because these diseases mainly affect
poor people living in developing nations, there is little urgency to
increase the supply of crucial medicines, find new treatments or
develop better diagnostic tools. In recent years, there has been a
timid resurgence of research on these diseases, however, considering
the decades of neglect, these improvements are precarious and
disproportionately minor for patients awaiting diagnosis and treatment
today.
While MSF and many others have shown that it is possible to treat
HIV-positive adults – even those living in very resource-poor settings
– the same has not been true for the disease's youngest victims.
Today our efforts to treat children infected with HIV/AIDS
are severely hampered by a lack of appropriate drug formulations
and diagnostic tools. Despite the fact that MSF is now successfully
treating more than 45,000 patients in 29 countries, our field teams
are forced to devise makeshift solutions, such as breaking adult
pills in two or struggling to get young children to swallow syrups
frequently, to treat them.
For HIV/AIDS patients who are also
infected with TB (the most common opportunistic infection
accompanying HIV/AIDS), the obstacles are just as big. Problems
in diagnosing TB, high pill loads, drug interactions, and the lack of
coordinated care are some of the difficulties facing our medical
teams in various countries, especially in parts of southern Africa,
where both diseases kill thousands every year. However, as a feature
story in this report shows, it is possible to successfully integrate
HIV/AIDS and TB care. In countries such as South Africa,
some important headway has enabled extremely ill patients to
regain their health and restart their lives.
Fulfilling our commitments
Whether caring for an HIV/AIDS patient co-infected with TB, a
gunshot victim in DRC or Haiti, or a malnourished child in Niger,
MSF continues to strive to bring medical assistance to those who
most need it. Yet our ability to gain access to people in need is challenged
by the abuse of humanitarian symbols for political purposes,
and the concurrent violence against humanitarian aid workers
themselves. The responsibility of states in respecting the role of
impartial humanitarian action is something explored in another
essay included in this report. This essay discusses the need for
action based on principles. MSF has been accused at times of being
"old fashioned" and even extremist for reaffirming its basic principles
in an evolving world. However, it is the use of these very principles
to interpret and respond to a changing environment that
allows us to carry out pragmatic actions under such conditions. We
hope this report provides insight into the work MSF does, merging
principles and pragmatism in many different contexts and different
ways. However, we always have one goal in mind: to provide medical
assistance to those who need it, whatever the circumstances.
Rowan Gillies, M.D., President, MSF International Council
Marine Buissonnière, MSF Secretary-General |