July 29, 2004
Afghanistan: Doctors Without Borders Pulls Out Of War-Torn Country
by Antoine Blua
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The international aid group Doctors Without Borders (Medicins Sans Frontieres) has been in Afghanistan since 1980. It has braved the Soviet occupation from 1979 to 1989, the civil war in the 1990s, and the rule of the hard-line Taliban. The medical charity has now decided to pull out of Afghanistan, becoming the first major aid agency to quit the war-ravaged country since the ouster of the Taliban in late 2001.
Prague, 29 July 2004 -- Doctors Without Borders (MSF) announced yesterday that the organization will leave Afghanistan after 24 years.
Officials from the international aid group said the decision is a response to the killing in June of five staff members, the danger of further attacks, and its frustration with both the U.S.-led coalition and the Afghan government.
MSF's director of operations, Kenny Gluck, told a news conference in Kabul yesterday that poor security meant the group cannot continue its work.
"Independent humanitarian action, which involves unarmed aid workers going into areas of conflict to provide aid, has become impossible," Gluck said.
Lack of security had already forced MSF to stop its work in much of Afghanistan's south and east in recent months. But prior to June, it had continued operating in 13 of Afghanistan's 34 provinces, with 80 international volunteers and 1,400 Afghan staff.
In early June, five MSF workers -- three Europeans and two Afghans -- were shot and killed in a targeted attack in the northwest Badghis Province.
Senior Afghan officials have said the man behind the killings was a local police chief who was angry because he had recently been fired. But neither he nor the alleged gunmen have been detained.