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Yemen: MSF treats more than 40 wounded following airstrike on marketplace

16 Mar 2016
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Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) medical teams working in Abs Hospital, Yemen, treated more than 40 patients injured in two deadly airstrikes on a marketplace in Khamis village in northern Hajja Governorate.

Two people died in transit to the hospital, and four patients arrived in critical condition, including an eight year old child who was referred on for specialist neurosurgical care.

We condemn this latest example of the way war is being waged in Yemen – with a total disregard for civilian life – and call again for the protection of civilians by the warring groups.

Women, children and elderly injured and killed

Local sources confirm that at the time of the attack – yesterday at midday – Khamis was full of people who had gathered for the weekly market day.

Dozens of civilians were present at the time of the airstrike, including women, children and the elderly, and many were injured or killed in the attack. 

“The people of this area have been living with insecurity for months; many have been displaced. They have gone through so much already, and this kind of violence makes them yet more vulnerable,” says Albert Stern, MSF field coordinator in Abs.  

Medical care for displaced people

Almost a year of regular attacks in northern Hajja have pushed more than 90,000 people to seek refuge in Abs district to the south. We recently visited the health centre in Khamis and found it barely functioning, and local medical staff living in constant fear of being bombed.

Since April of last year, we have been providing medical care to the displaced people through mobile clinics in internally displaced persons (IDP) camps.

We have been providing more than 275,000 litres of water per day to 17,000 IDPs in the area, and in January distributed more than 150 non-food item (NFI) kits to a wave of new arrivals.

In July 2015, we rehabilitated and started work in the Abs Rural Hospital, providing emergency and surgical care, maternity, paediatric, as well as post-operative services.

“Indiscriminate violence”

Despite new IDPs arriving from the northern areas and a clear increase of the humanitarian needs in the IDP camps, we are concerned that humanitarian assistance is decreasing.

“Yesterday´s attack is not the first, and it is unlikely to be the last. The constant and indiscriminate violence in this area is creating humanitarian needs that are increasing by the day.  Now is not the time for humanitarian organisations to downsize their responses,” says Juan Prieto, MSF Country Representative in Yemen.

MSF in Yemen

As an impartial and neutral medical humanitarian organisation, MSF manages and supports more than 25 hospitals throughout Yemen, providing medical care to people irrespective of their religious, tribal, political or military affiliations.

More than 31,000 war-wounded patients have been treated in MSF-supported hospitals in Yemen since March 2015, when the most recent conflict started.

Find out more about our work in Yemen