Syrian MSF pharmacist: “Our own staff have had to gather their families and flee”

Interview with Ahmed, MSF's pharmacy manager based in Kilis, Turkey

Ahmed is the manager of the MSF pharmacy in Kilis, Turkey. At present he is working on MSF´s donation programme, which provides donations of drugs and medical supplies to more than 15 hospitals and health centres inside Syria, and distributes essential household goods to internally displaced people caught up in the conflict.

There are tens of thousands of people on the move from their villages to the border, and some have settled near our hospital in Al Salamah. Those people don’t have a place to sleep: the first night, many slept in the street. They don’t have any access to toilets or clean water. They´re not getting any support at all.

Our own staff have had to gather their families and leave their villages, joining the thousands of other people on the move toward Turkish border. About fifty of our colleagues and their families have had to flee, and have settled temporarily in Al Salamah or are staying in tents in a camp along the border. The first day we had to reduce the hospital´s activities because of the sheer number of people arriving there, looking for support.

I cannot give an estimate how many people are on the move. There were at least 500 families at the main gate of the border that first day – but those are just the ones that I saw. I have heard there are many, many more at unofficial border crossings.

Yesterday I talked to some of the displaced people about what they needed in terms of assistance. “We didn’t come to stay in a tent,” they told me. “We just want to get inside Turkey.” They don’t have any medical care, they don´t have adequate shelter. They don´t have enough tents, and those they had couldn´t be pitched quickly enough to cope with the number of new arrivals.

In MSF´s Al Salamah hospital, lots of the staff who normally work in the pharmacy are now doing logistics – getting drugs and medical supplies from point A to point B – because that´s what´s needed.  A week ago we completed a round of donations Aleppo city, during which we donated three months’ worth of supplies to five health centres, five first aid posts as well as 10 hospitals in Aleppo and another five in the countryside. Thankfully, we were able to do this before the road was blocked.

The Turkish government has closed the border to everyone except medical doctors. The border guards have a list of medical staff, and they allow them to pass, which is positive. We are able to get medical help to those who need it on the Syrian side.

ENDS

Angela Makamure

Press Officer, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) Southern Africa

Kate Ribet

Media Liaison Officer, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) Southern Africa

Share

Latest stories

Website preview
A shot of urgency: Five key pathways to reach more people with lifesaving vaccines
Vaccines save millions of lives every year. They reduce the risks of getting a disease by working with the body’s natural defences to build protection against vaccine-preventable diseases. Immunisation – the process of protecting the human body against infectious disease, typically through vaccination administration – currently prevents 3.5 million to 5 million deaths every year from vaccine-preventable diseases like diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough), influenza, and measles. Vaccines are also very important in preventing and controlling infectious disease outbreaks.
msf-sa-press.prezly.com
Website preview
SA: MSF Calls on Business Leaders to Drive Impact at Inaugural Golf Day in Johannesburg
Doctors Without Borders (MSF) Southern Africa is calling on golf enthusiasts, business leaders, healthcare advocates, and humanitarians to take action at its inaugural Golf Day, an initiative aimed at raising critical funds to support its global medical humanitarian work amid mounting needs.
msf-sa-press.prezly.com
Website preview
Nigeria: 350,000 children vaccinated against crippling diphtheria epidemic
The humanitarian medical organisation Doctors Without Borders (MSF) and the Borno State Ministry of Health have successfully completed a vaccination campaign against diphtheria targeting children until 14 years old in Maiduguri Metropolitan Council (MMC) Local Government Area (LGA) in Nigeria’s Borno state.
msf-sa-press.prezly.com

About Doctors Without Borders (MSF) Southern Africa

Contact

70 Fox Street, 7th Floor Marshalltown, Johannesburg South Africa

011 403 4440

DL-JNB-Joburg-Press@joburg.msf.org

www.msf.org.za