Le 15 mars 2025, des véhicules clairement identifiés MSF ont été délibérément ciblés par des tirs sur l'axe reliant le Centre d'Urgence de Turgeau et l’hôpital traumatologique de Carrefour. © MSF
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Haiti: MSF withdraws from the Turgeau Emergency Care Centre the Carrefour Trauma Hospital amid intense and widespread violence

On Wednesday, April 9, 2025

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Following the targeted attack on 15 March against a Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) convoy travelling between its Turgeau emergency centre and its Carrefour Trauma Hospital, and in view of the deteriorating security situation in downtown Port-au-Prince, the organisation has taken the difficult decision to withdraw from these two structures for a minimum period of three months.

This period will allow an assessment as to whether the evolving security context offers the necessary conditions for the return of MSF teams. 

MSF is continuing its activities at the Tabarre trauma hospital, the Cité Soleil emergency centre, the Pran Men'm clinic for survivors of sexual violence, and in the South department in Port-à-Piment. 

La réouverture de l'hôpital Isaïe Jeanty à Chancerelles marque une avancée significative pour la santé publique en Haïti. La réhabilitation de l'hôpital vise à fournir des soins obstétriques de qualité, à réduire la mortalité maternelle et néonatale et à rétablir l'accès aux services de santé essentiels pour les communautés vulnérables de Port-au-Prince. © Quentin Bruno/MSF
Objective: The reopening of the largest maternal health hospital in Port-au-Prince
Currently in Haiti, Wilma van den Boogaard, operational researcher at LuxOR, explains the progress of MSF's new sexual and reproductive health project set to open in the coming months,in a context where women are trapped between violence and poverty.

On the day of the attack, MSF had already evacuated the Turgeau Emergency Centre, as the fighting and the front line had advanced dangerously close to the hospital, with stray bullets landing in the hospital compound every day. During the evacuation of teams from Turgeau to the Carrefour Trauma hospital, clearly identified MSF vehicles, using the only access road separating the two structures were deliberately targeted by at least one hooded man in uniform. The MSF vehicles were shot 15 times. The incident has forced MSF to stop using this route.   

“The Turgeau Emergency Centre and the Carrefour Trauma Hospital are closely linked in their operations. 

Without the possibility of using this road to transfer patients, transport personnel or deliver medical supplies, these structures can no longer function. This is why we have also been forced to withdraw from Carrefour as of 9 April 2025. 

This is an extremely painful decision, at a time when the population's vital medical needs continue to grow”, says Benoît Vasseur, MSF's Head of Mission in Haiti. 

At these two medical facilities, MSF teams noted an alarming increase in the number of victims of violence. Between January and March 2025, MSF treated more than 750 people for violent trauma. At the same time, 3,600 emergency cases were treated. 

They were the only medical facilities in the area to offer free care to victims of road accidents and domestic accidents, or to refer patients to appropriate facilities.

MSF condamne fermement l'ouverture intentionnelle de tirs sur quatre de ses véhicules alors qu'ils cherchaient à mettre leur personnel en sécurité dans un contexte d'escalade de la violence à Port-au-Prince, en Haïti.

Despite these withdrawals, MSF is continuing its activities in other medical facilities in Port-au-Prince and the south region of Haiti. 

The Tabarre Trauma Reference Centre continues to treat victims of serious burns, accidents, and violence. Hôpital Drouillard in Cité Soleil maintains a 24-hour emergency service, which includes physical and mental health treatment for survivors of sexual and gender-based violence. The Pran Men'm clinic continues to provide comprehensive medical and psychological care to sexual violence victims and survivors, including at its main facility in Delmas and at the Isaïe Jeanty maternity hospital. Since 2021, MSF has also been deploying mobile clinics to several sites for displaced persons and disadvantaged neighborhoods in Port-au-Prince. However, medical transport has been suspended for all MSF teams in Port-au-Prince. Finally, in the south region, notably in Port-à-Piment and in the surrounding area, MSF continues to provide emergency obstetric and neonatal care, as well as maternal health services.

For over 30 years, MSF has responded to the major crises that have hit Haiti – earthquakes, hurricanes, cholera epidemics – and continues to support the population in the face of the current violence. 

However, MSF staff cannot continue risking their lives to provide this service. Previously, on 22 November 2024, the organisation had to suspend all operations for around three weeks due to repeated attacks and threats against its staff. This is the second critical incident the organisation has suffered in the last four months, and MSF is still waiting for the results of the investigations carried out by the Haitian authorities.

“The extreme suffering of people in Haiti makes this decision all the more heartbreaking, but a dead or injured doctor or nurse can do nothing for patients in need. We reiterate our appeal to all parties concerned to respect the medical mission and ensure the protection of health structures, ambulances, patients and staff”, concludes Benoît Vasseur. 

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