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Etiopie: Tigraj sužuje nekončící krize a nedostatek pomoci na venkově
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«أطباء بلا حدود»: الوضع بتيجراي الإثيوبي غير مطمئن وسكانه يعيشون في خوف
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Many of the six million people in Tigray, Ethiopia, live in mountainous and rural areas where they are all but invisible to the outside world. While teams of aid workers have been sent to the main cities of this northern Ethiopian region over recent months, aid is failing to reach more remote communities, where the impact of the conflict that sparked the current crisis has often been severe. Many people have been unable to access healthcare and other basic services for the past six months and are still living in fear.
When a small mobile team from Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) reached Adiftaw for the first time in mid-March, they found the health post had been looted and partially destroyed. Medical files, broken equipment and torn medicine packets were chaotically dispersed across the floors of every room; none of the beds had mattresses; and no medical staff were present.
Tigray crisis: Many people in rural areas are cut off from aid
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When a small Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) mobile team reached the Ethiopian village of Adiftaw for the first time in mid-March, they found the health post had been looted and partially destroyed. Medical files, broken equipment, and torn medicine packaging were strewn across the floors of every room. None of the beds had mattresses, and no medical staff were present.
Adiftaw is a town of 10,000 people in the conflict-hit Tigray region of Ethiopia, three hours north along hilly dirt roads from the regional capital of Axum. What the team found there was part of a shocking pattern, mirrored by their experiences on almost every visit to a new place anywhere across this region. Many of the six million people who call Tigray home live in remote, mountainous areas that are extremely difficult to reach. Unable to access medical care and other essential services, they are bearing the brunt of