MSF_Sudanese_Refugees_In_Central_African_Republic

Central African Republic

Thousands of people have been killed or wounded and millions displaced during years of bloody – but largely neglected – conflict in the Central African Republic.

Although conflict abated in major towns controlled by the government and foreign allied forces in 2022, insecurity remained high in rural areas where armed opposition groups were active. By the end of the year, nearly one million people were either internally displaced Central Africans or refugees from neighbouring countries, according to the UN.

Our activities in 2022 in Central African Republic

Data and information from the International Activity Report 2022.

MSF IN CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC IN 2022 Despite ongoing insecurity, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) continues to run programs focused on maternal and child health and responding to conflict, displacement and disease outbreaks in Central African Republic (CAR).
MSF Central African Republic International African Republic Map 2022

Although conflict abated in major towns controlled by government and foreign allied forces in 2022, insecurity remained high in rural areas where armed opposition groups were active. By the end of the year, nearly one million people were either internally displaced Central Africans or refugees from neighbouring countries, according to the UN.

Violence continued to affect people’s lives and restrict the delivery of humanitarian aid. MSF teams were victims of several incidents, including an attack on a convoy of vehicles on the outskirts of Kabo in January, which forced us to close the project we had been running there for 16 years.

We continued to run 12 basic and specialist healthcare projects across the country, focusing on maternal and child health, surgery, sexual violence, and treatment for HIV and tuberculosis. We implement a decentralised model of care where possible, thereby delivering services closer to patients.

We also responded to outbreaks of diseases resulting from low vaccination coverage, such as whooping cough in Baoro, and launched a vaccination campaign in Kembé to offer protection from preventable diseases, including measles, polio, yellow fever and meningitis.

In Ippy, we assisted thousands of people displaced by fighting by providing medical care and multi-antigen vaccinations, installing water and sanitation facilities, and distributing relief items.

Malaria remained the leading reason for visits to our health facilities and the main cause of death among children under five.

In line with the continuous efforts made since 2014 to reduce CAR’s maternal and child death rates in the capital, Bangui, MSF completed the construction of new maternity and neonatal wards in a hospital and started providing emergency obstetric and neonatal care.

IN 2022

 
Hospitalisation Survivors project
HIV/AIDS

ICASA 2017: "Communities are key for a successful response"

Press Release 8 Dec 2017
 
Central African Republic

Batangafo: “People are afraid for their lives. It’s the only thing they have left.”

Patient and Staff Stories 7 Dec 2017
 
HIV/AIDS

Delivering differently to reach people living with HIV in West and Central Africa

Press Release 5 Dec 2017
 
Central African Republic

CAR: MSF suspends activities following attack in Bangassou

Press Release 22 Nov 2017
 
Central African Republic

In Bangui, unsafe abortions have become a real emergency

Patient and Staff Stories 28 Sep 2017
 
HIV/AIDS

CAR: “The only people left in Zemio are those who couldn’t run away”

11 Sep 2017