MSF staff detained in Colombia were released

"Now our teams will be able to resume their daily work: to provide essential medical services to most vulnerable and displaced civilians in Colombia."

The two staff members of the international medical aid organisation Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), that were detained by an armed group in the northeast of Colombia, have been released.

"We are very happy that this difficult situation has come to an end," says Geoff Prescott, general director of MSF-Holland. "Now our teams will be able to resume their daily work: to provide essential medical services to most vulnerable and displaced civilians in Colombia."

The two staff members were part of a team exploring possibilities to expand health services to the population in Norte de Santander, a province isolated by violence along the border with Venezuela. They were treated well throughout their detention and are in good health.

In Norte de Santander and many other areas MSF teams use mobile clinics to reach communities, that often have no other way to obtain health care. Spending two to three days at each site, the teams see an average of 90 patients per day.

At present MSF has 49 international and over 150 national staff working in Colombia.
Location
2006
Issue
2006