MSF, Doctors Without Borders, health impacts of climate change
Climate emergency

MSF and West African artists sound the alarm on the health impacts of the climate crisis

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) and artists call for urgent action to protect vulnerable communities with the release of the song “Oya”, ahead of the crucial COP30 climate talks in Brazil.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) launches Clima Yaakaar, an artistic initiative blending music and contemporary African dance to draw attention to the health consequences of climate change on the world’s most vulnerable populations.

The climate emergency is a major health threat to millions of people worldwide, and communities on the African continent are among the hardest hit. In 2024 alone, MSF teams responded to devastating floods in West Africa and South Sudan, repeated cyclones in Madagascar, and severe heatwaves and drought in the Horn of Africa. Across the Sahel, the deadly combination of malaria and malnutrition overwhelmed pediatric services. In Chad, MSF is now providing year-round treatment and prevention for malnutrition.
 

Video

OYA - Clima Yaakaar

The climate crisis is a health crisis, and the African continent – where Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) carries out most of its projects – is disproportionately affected. Vulnerable communities are paying with their health and their lives for a problem they did not create.Urgent action is needed now to limit the damage and support the communities that are suffering the most.
MSF

“The climate emergency is first and foremost a health emergency. Vulnerable communities are paying with their health and their lives for a crisis they did not create,” said Dr Didier-Mukeba Tshialala, MSF Medical Coordinator for West and Central Africa.

Last year was the hottest ever recorded, the tenth consecutive year of record-breaking heat. According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), nearly 70% of global deaths are linked to climate-related diseases. Yet climate action remains far too limited.

Art as a voice for climate and health

In response, MSF is turning to art as a powerful medium to raise awareness and call for action. Clima Yaakaar (“Climate Hope” in Wolof) brings together West African musicians and dancers to deliver a clear message: action is needed now.

The initiative takes the form of a music video featuring an original composition by artist Mao Sidibé, paired with choreography from Senegal’s world-renowned École des Sables, founded by Germaine Acogny.
 

“The artistic approach brings together several emotions: sadness, urgency, defiance, but also hope. Together, we are stronger,” explains Mao Sidibé, composer of the song Oya.

The lyrics of Oya are inspired by testimonies from MSF patients and staff in Niger, Cameroon, and Madagascar - giving a voice to communities directly affected by the crisis.

The project underscores a vital message: climate change threatens health through the spread of infectious diseases, increasingly extreme weather events, and rising heat.

“These problems will only intensify if nothing is done. Action is needed now to prevent the worst health and humanitarian consequences of the climate crisis,” said Dr Tshialala. “Through art, we want to remind people that hope exists - if we act together.”