MSF Told to Close Last Project in Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas

Sa'adia Khan/MSF

The international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), was told by the Pakistani authorities to close its medical activities in Bajaur Agency in north-western Pakistan. The closure will leave thousands of people in Bajaur Agency without access to free vital healthcare. The announcement comes just seven weeks after MSF was forced to close its project in Kurram Agency, also in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA). With the closure of its project in Bajaur, MSF will have no presence in FATA, one of the areas of the country where the need for emergency, maternal, and child healthcare is most acute.

“We are extremely disappointed by the authorities’ decision to refuse permission for MSF to continue providing urgently needed medical care in Bajaur Agency,” said Azaad Alessandro Alocco, MSF country representative in Pakistan. “Healthcare services are very limited in the area and most of our patients cannot afford to pay even for basic medical care. As the only major hospital providing free, quality healthcare in the area, the closure of MSF’s activities will leave a major gap and have serious negative implications for the health of people living in Bajaur and the surrounding areas such as Mohmand Agency.”

MSF has been informed by the Pakistani authorities that the no-objection certificate (NOC) required for carrying out medical activities in Bajaur will not be renewed, although no explanation has been given. Without a valid NOC, MSF is not permitted to continue providing medical services. MSF has informed its team and the local community in Bajaur Agency about the decision and will complete the closure process within two weeks.

In Bajaur, MSF has supported the Ministry of Health at the Tehsil Headquarters hospital at Nawagai since 2013, providing medical care in the outpatient, emergency room, and mother and child health departments. As the authorities have not permitted MSF international staff members to access Bajaur Agency, the project is run by 120 Pakistani staff with support from international staff based in Timergara in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and in Islamabad.

“The number of people seeking healthcare at Nawagai hospital has continued to increase, illustrating the enormous need for medical care in the area,” said Alocco. “Since extending the emergency services at the hospital in February 2017 to be open 24 hours, seven days a week, we have seen the number of patients treated in the stabilization room more than double. The end of MSF’s support will likely mean that people in need of life-saving emergency, maternal and pediatric care will face challenges accessing it, especially at night time when travelling is more difficult.”

In the first nine months of 2017, MSF teams provided care to 41,029 patients in the hospital, compared to 38,865 in all of 2016. More than 14,400 patients were seen in the stabilization room between January and September 2017, compared to around 8,200 in all of 2016. In addition, 1,152 deliveries were assisted by skilled MSF medical staff between January and September 2017, compared to 1,291 in all of 2016.

In 2016 MSF teams at Nawagai hospital conducted more than 31,000 outpatient consultations and treated 167 children for malnutrition. The team also treated more than 800 patients infected with Leishmaniasis, which is an endemic disease in Bajaur. MSF also manages support services in the hospital such as the laundry and infection control. MSF has also provided support including medical supplies and training to the Ministry of Health Khar Agency Headquarter Hospital for responding to mass casualty events. For severely ill patients in need of more intensive medical care than what can be provided at Nawagai hospital, MSF ensured their referral to Khar Agency Headquarter Hospital or to the MSF-supported district hospital in Timergara, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

MSF has worked with Pakistani communities who are affected from natural disasters, conflict, or lack of access to healthcare, since 1986. MSF teams are currently providing free emergency medical care in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Sindh, and Balochistan provinces. MSF relies solely on private financial contributions from individuals around the world and does not accept funding from any government, donor agency, or military or politically-affiliated group for its activities in Pakistan

Read More: Pakistan: MSF Forced to Close Health Services in Kurram Agency