Médecins Sans Frontières works with prominent Chechen surgeons, like Professor Yandarov. And Dr Khunarikov, a vascular specialist, co-ordinates the program. Both men worked in Chechnya during some of the heaviest phases of the war, living in basements and operating on patients in makeshift field-hospitals and administrative buildings. The Médecins Sans Frontières programme hopes to give them an opportunity to exchange ideas and surgical techniques with French surgeons. Three Chechen surgeons have already visited hospitals in Lyon and Fontainebleau, and more visits are planned.
Since the program began in July 2006, 52 patients have had operations. Médecins Sans Frontières doctors have catalogued the accidents, burns, bullets and mine explosions that caused their injuries. Some have had a number of failed or poor quality operations in Chechnya or neighbouring republics over the years, and many will now face a series of reconstructive surgeries to correct past trauma or operative error.
'One of my patients, Madina, was 18 in 2002, and living in Vedeno [a southern part of Chechnya where fighting was, and is, prevalent] when she was shot in both hips by a sniper with explosive bullets', recalls Professor Yandarov.
'Her hip bones shattered, riddling her legs with fragments, and she lost a lot of blood. It took two days to get her to hospital, on terrible roads and through numerous checkpoints. She was just alive when she reached us, and I managed to stabilise her and do a basic operation with the equipment I had available. However, I had to discharge her quickly as we were running out of space in the ward.
Last August she came to see me again, and although one of the legs that I had hurriedly repaired was OK, the other had not healed well and was crooked, causing her to have a painful limp. This time I could do what I needed to do: we broke her leg again, straightened it, took a bone transplant and fixed a metal plate. Now she is able to walk normally on her leg.'
Already the word is spreading about the program. 'At the start, patients could not believe they were going to be able to access such operations for free, and they tried to press money upon us. But we refused, and now they have got used to it. We expect the numbers coming to the clinic to rise,' says Dr Khunarikov. Médecins Sans Frontières plans to do between 25 and 30 operations of varying complexity each month.