ETHIOPIA

Ethiopia

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) resumed activities in Ethiopia’s Amhara, Gambella, Somali and Tigray regions in 2022, while continuing to work in Afar and Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples’ Region (SNNPR)

Despite the lifting of government restrictions, insecurity and administrative barriers continued to hamper humanitarian access to the estimated 20 million people in need of assistance across Ethiopia in 2022. Although the two-year conflict in Tigray ended in November, thousands of people were killed or displaced by fighting across the country.

In March 2022, we resumed healthcare services for South Sudanese refugees in Kule camp, Gambella region, and started to respond to malnutrition, cholera and measles in Somali region, an area badly affected by drought.

We also focused on malnutrition in Afar region, where we supported Dupti hospital, and ran mobile clinics and an inpatient centre providing care for malnutrition.

Throughout the year, our teams in SNNPR ran mobile clinics, and later, when conflict subsided, rehabilitated and supported health facilities.

In July, we reopened our project in Abdurafi, Amhara region, offering treatment for kala azar, a deadly tropical disease, and snakebites.

In northern and eastern Amhara, and northern Afar, we provided healthcare in conflict-affected communities through mobile clinics. We also donated medical supplies and rehabilitated looted and damaged health facilities. People we met described immense suffering, recounting personal stories of extreme violence, loss of livelihoods, homes and lands, and constant fear.

In November, we restarted our response in northwestern Tigray, supporting two healthcare facilities and running mobile clinics in rural areas, where health facilities and water infrastructure had been damaged or destroyed.

Ethiopia Map

MSF continues to call for accountability for the death of our colleagues

On 24 June 2021, our colleagues María Hernández Matas, Tedros Gebremariam Gebremichael and Yohannes Halefom Reda were brutally and intentionally killed, while clearly identified as humanitarian workers, in Tigray. After extensive engagement with the Ethiopian authorities, we still do not have any credible answers regarding what happened to our colleagues. MSF will keep pursuing accountability for this incident, with the hope that this will help improve the safety of humanitarian workers in Ethiopia.

 
Refugees, Migration and displacement

MSF providing medical care and assistance in Sudan to people fleeing the violence in Ethiopia

Crisis Update 28 Nov 2020
 
Access to medicines

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

Press Release 11 Nov 2020
 
COVID-19 Coronavirus

MSF challenges COVID-19 myths with new quiz challenge app

Article 10 Nov 2020
 
A boy leads a donkey with water canisters from the berkit (rainwater collecting clay pond)[Photo:Susanne Doettling/MSF]
Access to Healthcare

Giving birth on the move

Stories from the Frontline 13 Dec 2019
 
MSF and TB activists disrupt opening of TB conference to protest drug corporations keeping life-saving medicines from people
Access to medicines

MSF and TB activists disrupt opening of TB conference to protest drug corporations keeping life-saving medicines from people

Press Release 31 Oct 2019
 
Videos and Photos

Tips to De-Stress

30 Oct 2019
Videos and Photos