Afghanistan: “I’m Trying to Lead a Normal Life, Because Kabul Is My Home”
Hedayat has been working at the EMERGENCY Surgical Centre in Kabul since it opened in 2001.
Hedayat has been working at the EMERGENCY Surgical Centre in Kabul since it opened in 2001.
EMERGENCY's commitment to building a culture of peace is being demonstrated every day in Ashti Camp.
Achieving surgical excellence doesn’t just mean operating on patients at the highest medical standards, but also taking care of them afterwards.
At the EMERGENCY Paediatric Centre in the Mayo refugee camp, Sudan, our staff provide free of charge medical care to children up to 14 years old, as well as to future mothers. Paediatric and obstetric visits and follow-ups are performed…
Over the coming weeks and months, Mark - a British nurse - will be sharing his experiences from Iraqi Kurdistan.
Mohammed lives in Shash Darak, the district where two bombs exploded one after another.
His name is Ansarullah and he is two years old.
The constant activity at the hospital in Kabul is a clear signal of how the situation in Afghanistan is getting worse.
On Sunday morning, an attack on a voter registration centre caused dozens of deaths and over one hundred injuries.
We began to see smoke rising above the houses. A car bomb had exploded outside the stadium about a mile away from us.