Ivory Coast: Marked deterioration of situation in west
Ivory Coast, Liberia / 07.03.11
Médecins Sans Frontières Asks Parties to Conflict to Allow Medical Teams to Care For All Patients
Ivory Coast/Liberia, March 4, 2011 -- The international medical humanitarian organisation Médecins Sans Frontières today expressed concern over the deteriorating situation in the west of Ivory Coast and the border region with Liberia. As the population flees violence, medical personnel are deserting health posts. Faced with this increasing volatility, Médecins Sans Frontières medical teams are adapting their operations and the organisation is asking all parties to the conflict to allow its medical teams to care for patients, regardless of their affiliations.
In the west of Ivory Coast, where local medical personnel have abandoned health centers, a mobile Médecins Sans Frontières team has begun providing primary healthcare services in the north of the Duékoué district. However, on March 3, as residents of this area began to flee, Médecins Sans Frontières was forced to halt its activities due to security concerns. Displaced persons around the city of Toulepleu, located near the Liberian border and currently inaccessible, have also taken flight.
“It is critical for patients to have access to health facilities,” said Mego Terzian, Médecins Sans Frontières emergency coordinator. “Médecins Sans Frontières medical teams, who strictly adhere to the principles of impartiality and neutrality, must be able to care for patients, regardless of their affiliation.”
Médecins Sans Frontières has been present in the west of Ivory Coast since the end of December, providing medical care in the city of Guiglo and in a camp in Duékoué housing 12,000 displaced people. Médecins Sans Frontières has also been working for the last five weeks in Duékoué’s hospital, where it is caring for 63 wounded patients. Although the Médecins Sans Frontières surgical team withdrew after local personnel returned, Médecins Sans Frontières is continuing to provide consultations in the hospital.
In the town of Danané, near the border with Liberia, Médecins Sans Frontières last week treated about 10 wounded patients in the area hospital, where teams had pre-positioned medical equipment. Because electricity is no longer available in the area, access to potable water is problematic.
Médecins Sans Frontières has also witnessed a worrisome deterioration in the city of Abidjan, and is working to provide support for hospital facilities there.
Across the border in Liberia, where more than 70,000 refugees have been registered in the district of Nimba, Médecins Sans Frontières teams have increased their assistance to the local and refugee populations.
“The health centers need medical staffing support and drugs,” said Helga Ritter, Médecins Sans Frontières coordinator in Liberia. “The refugees urgently need shelter and water."
Médecins Sans Frontières teams are providing support to the health centers and are also operating mobile clinics and a medical facility in the Bahn refugee camp. Roadways have been made nearly impassable by rainfall, so the movement of refugees toward the camp, which was designed to house 15,000 people, has been slowed.
“In Liberia, starting on February 24, we have witnessed the arrival of a second wave of refugees,” said Ritter. “People are afraid and do not speak of returning. And they fear for those who have remained in Ivory Coast. It is important to continue to provide assistance wherever the refugees are found, and wherever the local population has been made vulnerable by this massive influx of people.”
Médecins Sans Frontières opened its first project in Ivory Coast in 1991. Until 2007, Médecins Sans Frontières teams were working in MACA prison in Abidjan, in the hospital of Bouaké city, and in the western regions in the hospitals of Danané, Man, Bangolo, and Zouan Hounien. The teams conducted primary and secondary healthcare activities as well pediatric and obstetric care. During the crisis period, Médecins Sans Frontières also provided surgical treatment to wounded people, ran a nutrition project and an integrated HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis treatment program. Médecins Sans Frontières withdrew in September 2007, when the situation in the country had stabilised.
Médecins Sans Frontières has worked in Liberia since 1990. In June 2010, Médecins Sans Frontières transferred the last of its hospital-based health care projects to local authorities. Médecins Sans Frontières continues its work in the capital of Monrovia, supporting the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare with the medical needs of victims of sexual violence.