Refuge camp in Cabo Del Gado
Mozambique

Urgent assistance needed for people displaced by violence in northern Mozambique

MSF teams bring health care to beneficiaries through mobile clinics, Pemba, Mozambique
 In this picture, MSF staff is introducing the organization while beneficiaries are waiting to be seen by medical professionals at Impire village.
Joaquim Guinart

By now over 400,000 people from Mozambique’s northern province of Cabo Delgado have been displaced according to government estimates announced last week. After fleeing violence from ongoing attacks by armed groups and military actions from Mozambican forces, these displaced people now face serious health risks and inadequate living conditions 

“Approximately 10,000 displaced people arrived by boat to the provincial capital of Pemba last week alone,” said MSF Project Coordinator, Joaquim Guinart in Cabo Delgado. “They were dehydrated. Women gave birth at sea. There have been cases of severe, potentially fatal diarrhoea. There’s a lot of pressure on local medical staff, as 20,000 people have arrived throughout the last month and more will continue to come.”

Displaced people in northern Mozambiqueas as a result of ongoing conflict
A growing number of IDPs continue to arrive in Pemba as a consequence of the ongoing conflict in Cabo Delgado. To respond to their increasing needs, MSF's second mobile clinic became operational on 28 October in Nangua. In this picture, beneficiaries wait to receive medical consultations. 
Joaquim Guinart

Approximately 100,000 internally displaced people (IDPs) have sought refuge in and around Pemba in temporary shelter sites, such as school buildings, or with host families, increasing by one third the city’s population. Many IDPs lack clean drinking water and are exposed to malaria with barely any protection while they remain in unsanitary, crowded conditions, increasing the risk of an outbreak of measles, diarrhoea or COVID-19.

With no end in sight, the fighting that started in October 2017 has continued to increase in intensity, forcing almost a fifth of the province’s population to leave their homes and reducing to almost nothing access to care and other services in the area.

We had to suspend medical activities in Mocimboa da Praia in March, followed by Macomia in May after an insurgent attack, during which the health centre in Macomia where our teams worked was ransacked and burned. It is estimated that more than 20 local health facilities have been destroyed during the conflict. 

Displaced people in Cabo del Gado due to ongoing conflict
The MSF Impire mobile clinic became operational in September to respond to IDPs and host communities growing needs. In this picture, MSF teams prepare to receive beneficiaries for medical consultations at the local Primary school in Impire Village, offered by the community to be used by MSF.
Joaquim Guinart

We have relocated our base to the city of Pemba, where we have been providing medical assistance to arriving IDPs and the host community. Even so, we struggle to remain operational in Cabo Delgado due to administrative constraints and COVID-19 travel restrictions, which force the organization to work with minimal capacity while needs continue to grow exponentially. 

MSF started a mobile clinic in Metuge district in September and, due to the constant new arrival of IDPs, a second mobile clinic was launched on 28 October, which we hope to use to reach more people in more remote districts in the coming weeks. We are also providing water and sanitation assistance at IDP sites and health facilities and running the diarrhoea treatment centre in Pemba.

With the support of partners, We are building 150 latrines and restoring 27 manual water pumps and five water systems in the Metuge district, ensuring access to safe water ahead of the upcoming rainy season. However, these activities only address a fraction of the area’s growing needs.

“MSF is deeply concerned about the continued violence and deteriorating conditions in Cabo Delgado and the quickly growing number of displaced people, especially with the onset of the rainy season. The basic needs of the displaced people remain largely unmet despite existing efforts to provide humanitarian assistance,” said MSF Head of Mission for Mozambique Alain Kassa. “If no immediate action is taken, this situation will rapidly deteriorate, and MSF calls upon the Mozambican authorities for support to mobilize additional humanitarian staff and supplies without delay.”