Commune of Ranobe, Amboasary District.
Armed conflict

MSF adapts and scales up activities amid escalating Middle East conflict

  • Amid the sharp escalation in Middle East violence, bombing has killed, injured and displaced people.
  • MSF teams in Lebanon and Iran are adapting activities in response, while scaling up as much as possible.
  • We urge for the protection of civilians and all medical infrastructure. 

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is alarmed by the dramatic escalation in conflict across the Middle East region, following strikes by US and Israeli forces in Iran and Iran’s subsequent retaliatory actions in several countries. MSF is adapting our programmes to respond, and we are closely monitoring the rapidly evolving humanitarian needs.

Across the region, the escalation in violence has brought fear to the lives of millions of people. Bombing continues across multiple cities and villages, often hitting densely populated areas, and casualties are mounting. MSF calls for the protection of civilians, hospitals, health facilities, and other essential infrastructure at all times.

In Lebanon, thousands of people have been displaced.

“The escalation in conflict comes after 15 months of a ‘ceasefire agreement’ that never brought real safety for people in Lebanon,” says Francesca Quinto, MSF programme manager. “The latest strikes and evacuation orders to all of Beirut’s southern suburbs, and almost all of the south of the country, are now forcing even more people to flee. And there is nowhere safe to go.” 
 

The latest strikes and evacuation orders to all of Beirut’s southern suburbs... are now forcing even more people to flee. And there is nowhere safe to go. Francesca Quinto, MSF programme manager.
MSF, Doctors Without Borders, Lebanon war
Tens of thousands of people are fleeing their hometowns in Lebanon following relentless Israeli bombings. In response, MSF deployed a mobile clinic providing medical consultations and psychological first aid in Saida, southern Lebanon, where some shelters have exceeded capacity.
MSF

For many people in southern Lebanon and other areas of the country, evacuation orders mean reliving the trauma of displacement all over again.

“Families who were slowly beginning to recover from previous fighting are being told to leave their homes,” says Quinto. “Some have been stranded on the roads with children, elderly relatives, and sick family members, facing extremely harsh conditions.”

Our teams in both Iran and Lebanon are currently confirmed safe, and we are monitoring developments and assessing how to provide support to the people affected. We have medical supplies in both countries ready to be used or distributed.

Before 28 February, when the escalation began, MSF had been running three projects in Iran, providing essential healthcare to marginalised people. This included providing 6,000 medical consultations per month, as well as midwifery care, infectious disease screening and treatment, and mental health support. Although airstrikes have created operational challenges and despite the communication blackout, MSF has so far been able to continue some activities. 

Video

Families Flee Israeli Airstrikes in Lebanon

Tens of thousands of people in Lebanon have been forced to flee their homes following intense Israeli airstrikes across the country.  MSF has deployed a mobile clinic providing medical consultations and psychological first aid to displaced families.
MSF

In Iran, receiving information from our staff is extremely difficult. Our clinic in Tehran remains temporarily closed due to heavy bombing, while our clinics in Mashhad and Kerman are still open, operating with reduced staff. Our teams are seeking authorisation from authorities to scale up emergency care support in response to conflict-related needs – including opening our clinics 24/7 and supporting the local health system – and are awaiting a response.    

In Lebanon, our teams are adapting activities to respond to the emerging needs of displaced people, while ensuring continuity of care across our regular projects in the country. Since 4 March, a mobile clinic has been providing medical consultations and psychological first aid in Saida, southern Lebanon, where some shelters have exceeded capacity.

We also started providing shelters in Beirut with clean water, and conducting assessments in Beirut, Rashaya, and other areas to scale up mobile clinics and supplies. We are in touch with the relevant authorities to provide additional support where needed.

Elsewhere in the region, our teams in Gaza and the West Bank in Palestine continue to address significant medical and mental health needs. In Iraq, MSF has medical supplies available to be used or distributed in the region if needed.

MSF activities in Iran and Lebanon

In Iran, MSF works to address healthcare gaps among marginalised communities, including Afghan refugees and other vulnerable populations. In South Tehran, where MSF opened a project in 2012, teams provide integrated primary healthcare through a fixed clinic, mobile clinics, and outreach activities. Services include care for infectious and non-communicable diseases, sexual and reproductive health, mental health and psychosocial support, wound care, hepatitis C screening and treatment, referrals to secondary care, and social support and health promotion. In Mashhad, near the Afghan border, MSF has been present since 1996 and runs mobile clinics providing medical and psychological consultations and screening for infectious diseases among vulnerable groups, alongside services in the Golshahr district for Afghan refugees that include counselling, health education, social support, and referrals.

In Kerman province, MSF is the only medical organisation providing direct healthcare services to Afghan refugees. Its primary healthcare centres serve the underserved areas of Kerman city, which hosts around 200,000 Afghans. Since April 2024, MSF has operated the Vahdat clinic outside the city and runs another clinic in partnership with health authorities, offering care for communicable and non-communicable diseases, sexual and reproductive health, mental health and psychosocial support, wound care, and screening for tuberculosis, HIV, and hepatitis B and C.

In Lebanon, MSF teams support diverse communities facing barriers to accessing healthcare, going beyond primary healthcare to include distribution of relief items and referrals to

secondary-level treatment in a country reeling from the aftermath of war. MSF currently runs clinics in Bourj Hammoud, the northern suburbs of Beirut, targeting mostly migrant workers, and providing medical and mental health care. In the governorate of Baalbek-Hermel, MSF runs two clinics in Arsal and Hermel, providing primary health care to communities in need, hosts and refugees alike. In the north of Lebanon, MSF supports the Ministry of Health's clinics in Tripoli, Lebanon’s second largest city, which faces deep economic hardship, and runs mobile clinics in Akkar, reaching Syrians who don’t have access to healthcare. In southern Lebanon, in the South and Nabatiyeh governorates, we have been running mobile clinics and supporting fixed primary healthcare facilities since the conflict surged in 2024.