Kyrgyzstan
In April 2010, President Bakiyev of Kyrgyzstan was ousted by a popular revolt. Then in June the south of the country was shaken by violence between Kyrgyz and Uzbek communities. Médecins Sans Frontières, running projects in Kyrgyzstan to treat prisoners infected with tuberculosis (TB), was able to assist those in need during the emergencies.
Political and intercommunal violence
When rioting began in the capital Bishkek, our team provided drugs and medical supplies to four health centres. In the south, we donated medical supplies and drugs to hospitals and clinics in the provinces of Osh and Jalalabad within days of violence breaking out. Almost 400,000 Uzbeks were displaced, and around 2,000 homes were destroyed. Many people in need of treatment were too afraid to leave their communities, so between June and August staff ran mobile clinics to reach people in need of care. Médecins Sans Frontières psychologists held over 660 mental health consultations and 3,700 patients participated in over 550 group therapy sessions.
Months later, tension and mistrust between the communities still hindered access to healthcare. We identified 50,000 people from all ethnic groups, in ten districts of Osh city, as particularly vulnerable: some because they had lost their homes, businesses or livelihoods in the clashes, others – single mothers, the elderly living on very small pensions, or large families with no income – were already in precarious situations before the June events. Our teams operated in seven public health facilities, where staff helped to ensure the provision of care in a non-discriminatory and neutral manner.
Treating TB in prison
Médecins Sans Frontières, has been treating prisoners infected with TB in Kyrgyzstan since 2005. The incidence of the disease in prisons has declined over the years: the number of patients detected each year dropped from 700 to 350 between 2006 and 2010. This is mainly because of a reduction in the prison population. Around two-thirds of infectious TB patients in the penitentiary system have drug-resistant TB (including all forms of drug-resistant TB). The treatment programme for drug-resistant TB is often very long and difficult. In 2010, staff treated 230 new TB patients.
Prisoners diagnosed with TB are referred to treatment facilities in three prisons in and around Bishkek, where staff work in collaboration with the Ministry of Health, the prison authorities and international organisations such as the International Committee of the Red Cross.
One of the most important challenges is to assure uninterrupted treatment after release, as one-third of TB patients are released from prison before treatment is completed. Our tream provides medical and social support to former prisoners with TB and is working to find ways to motivate them to complete their treatment. In 2010, 78 TB patients were released from prison, and 57 of them were still receiving treatment at the end of the year. Médecins Sans Frontières, is advocating for a national TB control policy in the penal system.
Médecins Sans Frontières has worked in Kyrgyzstan since 2005.
Médecins Sans Frontières assists victims of violence in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan
21/06/2010
Interview with Alexandre Baillat, Médecins Sans Frontières Head of Mission in Kyrgyzstan.
Médecins Sans Frontières provides care to victims of Kyrgyzstan violence
21/06/2010
A week after massive and violent inter-ethnic clashes erupted in the South of Kyrgyzstan, Médecins Sans Frontières teams are providing medical care and assistance to the victims. The medical humanitarian organisation plans to...
Médecins Sans Frontières assists victims of violence in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan
16/06/2010
Bishkek/Tashkent, June 15th, 2010. The violent clashes that plunged the South of Kyrgyzstan into chaos since 10 June have led to an acute humanitarian crisis, with hundreds of people wounded and large displacements of population....
Médecins Sans Frontières provides emergency medical supplies to victims of violence in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan
09/04/2010
8 April 2010. Hundreds of wounded arrived in Bishkek hospitals on 7 April, following violent confrontations between armed forces and protesters in the streets of Kyrgyzstan’s capital. Médecins Sans Frontières’s team in Kyrgyzstan...
Struggling to control tuberculosis in Kyrgyzstan’s prisons
07/05/2007
In Kyrgyzstan, the impoverished, land-locked state of the former Soviet Union, the incidence of tuberculosis (TB) in the creaking penitentiary system is currently about 25 times higher than in the civilian population (2,700 per...

