A mother cradles her sick baby in the children’s ward at Mora General hospital. Far-North, Cameroon, March 2020.

Cameroon

In 2020, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) assisted displaced people, refugees and vulnerable host communities in areas affected by violence in Cameroon and Nigeria,  and supported the national COVID-19 response.

In addition, a second, little-known humanitarian situation has also been evolving in the country's Northwest and Southwest Regions. Violence between government forces and separatist non-state armed groups from the English-speaking community has escalated sharply in recent years, forcing hundreds of thousands of people from their homes and leaving them in dire need of humanitarian assistance.

 

Our Activities in 2021 in Cameroon

MSF IN CAMEROON IN 2021 In 2021, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) supported displaced people, refugees and host communities in areas affected by conflict, violence and epidemics and supported the national COVID-19 and cholera responses in Cameroon.
Cameroon Map Activity

In 2021

2021 was marked by outbreaks of armed violence, resulting in large numbers of displaced people in the Far North and Southwest regions of Cameroon. By mid-year, almost two million people were displaced, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). The level of violence left our teams working in a more volatile context, resulting in limited access to healthcare services for vulnerable people.

To respond to the increasing healthcare needs, we supported hospitals and health centres, and ran a 24-hour ambulance service. We also provided a decentralised model of care through community health volunteers, who are trained to treat simple cases of common diseases.  

Limited access to healthcare for vulnerable people
In the Northwest region of Cameroon, where MSF activities were suspended by the authorities in December 2020, we were not granted permission to resume our medical activities and eventually had to remove most staff while maintaining a liaison office in Bamenda. This prolonged suspension left thousands of people deprived of lifesaving medical care.

In addition, in the anglophone Southwest region of Cameroon, we continue to witness public attacks on MSF, harassment and detention of our teams, which drastically reduces medical and humanitarian access. Despite these challenges, we continue to support people through numerous medical interventions, from surgeries to responding to epidemics.

Response to outbreaks
To support the authorities’ response to a cholera outbreak in Ekondo Titi, Southwest region, we treated patients in Idenau, Bamusso and Kombo Itindi health areas. We administered vaccinations, and facilitated water and sanitation and awareness activities on treatment and prevention.

MSF supported the national COVID-19 response during the second and third waves in Buea, Maroua, Mora and Yaoundé. Our response included constructing isolation units, treating patients, donating oxygen supplies, training healthcare staff, providing health promotion and assisting in vaccinations in Yaoundé. We also undertook scientific studies on COVID-19 in Cameroon.

 
Refugees, Migration and displacement

Unaccompanied minors: From the streets of Cameroon to a tent in Paris

Stories from the Frontline 22 Feb 2022
 
Refugees, Migration and displacement

"They had nowhere to stay, I decided to live with them"

Stories from the Frontline 20 Aug 2021
 
Access to Healthcare

Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is forced to withdraw its teams from Cameroon’s North-West region

Press Release 4 Aug 2021
 
Access to Healthcare

The Doctors Without Borders ambulance service in South-West Cameroon: an essential lifeline in a region beset by violence

Article 29 Jul 2021
 
Access to Healthcare

Cameroon: thousands of people continue to be denied urgent and life-saving health care as MSF’s activities in the North-West region remain suspended by the government

Press Release 22 Jun 2021
 
Access to medicines

MSF: Governments must demand pharma make all COVID-19 vaccine licensing deals public

Press Release 11 Nov 2020