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An MSF team walk on foot to access a village cut off by damage caused by Cylone idai in Chimanimani. Photo: MSF
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International staff stories:
We also had some interesting stories from our international staff last month. Pooja Iyer, a clinical psychologist from Mumbai, returned home after spending six months in the Balkans (Serbia and Bosnia) providing mental health support to migrants from various countries including Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria and India who attempt to enter Europe through the Balkan route. Migrants have to traverse through extended barren landscapes and dense forests with little to no access to healthcare to enter Europe, at the risk of getting caught by border security forces who, more often than not, resort to beating and critically injuring them. Pooja points out that most migrants trying to enter Europe are victims of torture and sexual violence.
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Two Syrian men cook with improvised materials at an informal settlement near Velika Kladuša, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Photo: Kamila Stepien/MSF
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“Migrants leave with minimal belongings and very little to eat before attempting to cross the border. During winter, migrants are also susceptible to frostbite. We had to amputate the toes of a 15 year old who suffered from frostbite.”
-Pooja Iyer, mental health manager, Doctors Without Borders
In 2017, MSF had exposed the violence that continues to be perpetrated on children and young people by European Union border authorities and police on Serbia’s borders with Hungary, Bulgaria and Croatia in a report titled Games of Violence. You can check out the report here.
“For more than a year our doctors and nurses have continued to hear the same, repetitive story of young people being beaten, humiliated, and attacked with dogs for desperately trying to continue their journeys.”
-Stephane Moissaing, ex- Head of Mission for MSF in Serbia.
Pooja is presently in Bangladesh providing mental health support to Rohingyas. She has previously worked in Ukraine, Malawi and with a local NGO in Mumbai and has experience working in the field of HIV, TB, and migration. Do reach out to us if you wish to talk to or interview her! We will be sharing plenty more stories once she returns from Bangladesh, so stay tuned!
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Know someone in your newsroom who would be interested in our stories? Click on the link below or email us at aditi.sonrexa@new-delhi.msf.org
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