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Armed conflict

Women defying the consequences of conflict to care for each other

In contexts of conflict and war around the world, women are fulfilling indispensable roles to address the healthcare needs of other women in their communities and provide important linkages to care by organisations such as Doctors Without Borders (MSF).

Women’s regular health needs do not disappear when conflict erupts or war breaks out. Instead, they become more critical, as women struggle to obtain adequate food, safe drinking water or basic sanitation; and lose access to contraception, maternity care, or protection from sexually transmitted infections, and become increasingly exposed to incidents of sexual and intimate partner violence.

As a result, women face a heightened likelihood of becoming sick or dying, which is why they need dedicated and comprehensive health services and protection as a priority as part of any humanitarian response.

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People continue to be displaced due to surging conflict in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, seeking refuge near Goma. Basic needs such as food, water and sanitation are unmet, and there is a critical lack of measures to protect people from further harm. The lack of security and means to survive has proven particularly dangerous for women, as evidenced by the high number of cases of sexual violence seen in Kanyaruchinya’s health facilities supported by MSF.
MSF/Marion Molinari

In Chad, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Palestine, and many other contexts of conflict and war, MSF is often only able to establish and expand women’s health services thanks to the contribution of women in the affected communities. They become pivotal to the response, sharing their skills, their lived experience, their local knowledge and their solidarity to enable more women to have access to medical care and social support and avoid suffering in silence.

 

I want to keep mothers and babies safe. Khadija Yahia Adam, Midwife

Khadija Yahia Adam* is an experienced midwife and one of the more than 600,000 Sudanese refugees now trying to survive in Chad. Most of the refugee women in eastern Chad prefer delivering at home, assisted by midwives in the community. However, in a camp like Adré, midwives typically lack the necessary tools and hygienic conditions, which exacerbates the risks for the mothers and their babies. Khadija is unable to work formally in Chad but has been trained by MSF as a volunteer, supporting much-needed antenatal and postnatal care and referrals for safe delivery care at the MSF-run maternity department.

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A trained MSF volunteer working as a Midwife in Chad

"Khadija Yahia Adam* is an experienced midwife and one of the more than 600,000 Sudanese refugees now trying to survive in Chad. Unable to work formally she has been trained as a volunteer by MSF, supporting much-needed antenatal and postnatal care and referrals for safe delivery care with MSF in Adré. ""I want to keep mothers and babies safe.""
MSF

As midwives, community health volunteers, intercultural mediators and in other roles, women provide comfort and confidential advice, sometimes in the privacy of their own homes. They refer women to appropriate services or directly participate in providing contraceptive care, pregnancy and postnatal care, sexual violence care, safe abortion care, and mental health support.

They play a vital role by raising awareness about women’s health issues, enhancing community engagement and reducing stigma. They can also support women with the knowledge and skills to manage parts of their own healthcare through self-care, enabling them to care for themselves and others.

I am a displaced person… I’m also a health volunteer. Henriette Mbitse, Community Healthcare Volunteer

Among the many people displaced due to surging conflict in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, community healthcare volunteers like Henriette Mbitse are helping increase survivors’ safe and confidential access to care in MSF’s sexual violence care program in Kanyaruchinya. Maman Henriette, as she’s affectionately called, was a health volunteer in her home village before fleeing with her family. Clara* too fled to Kanyaruchinya, from Rutshuru territory, with eight children in her care. She was raped when she went to collect wood in the forest to sell as firewood.

“I thank the health volunteer who brought me here because if she didn’t, I could die.”

International Women's Day: Women live in inhumane conditions in the DRC - DRC Congo
Henriette Mbitse (Maman Henriette) is one of many people who have fled armed conflict in North Kivu, DRC, and live in extremely difficult conditions in displacement camps around Goma. A community health volunteer in her home village, she is now helping increase survivors’ safe and confidential access to care in MSF’s sexual violence care program.
MSF/Marion Molinari

The actions of these community members demonstrate their own resilience in the face of having fled conflict and been displaced; surviving direct violence; grieving the loss of a family member or more, being the head of their household with children to care for and protect; and often looking into a future filled with uncertainty.

“We’ve all suffered from the occupation, the shared circumstances, so we all feel this.”

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Noura Arafat, Intercultural Mediator helps women in Palestine.

Noura Arafat, an MSF intercultural mediator, has lived in Nablus in Palestine’s West Bank all her life. Since the war in Gaza, the situation across the occupied West Bank, including in Nablus, has continued to worsen, with greater movement restrictions and increased violence by settlers and Israeli forces. Noura helps women from her community access support in mental health programs to cope and to find hope in life.
MSF

Noura Arafat, an MSF intercultural mediator, has lived in Nablus in Palestine’s West Bank all her life. Since the war in Gaza, the situation across the occupied West Bank, including in Nablus, has continued to worsen, with greater movement restrictions and increased violence by settlers and Israeli forces. Grief is one of the many challenges women face. Noura helps women from her community access support in MSF’s mental health program to cope and find hope in life.

*A pseudonym has been adopted to protect individual privacy.