MSF to provide medical care for stranded asylum-seekers in the Netherlands
Amsterdam, 25 August 2022 – Starting today, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) will provide medical care to hundreds of people stranded outside the main Dutch reception centre for asylum-seekers in Ter Apel. The international humanitarian organisation calls on the Dutch government to urgently provide access to medical care and improve conditions for people forced to sleep outside the overcrowded centre.
Last Friday, an MSF team carried out an assessment of the situation outside the reception centre in Ter Apel which is the first entry point for refugees in the Netherlands. The centre is completely overwhelmed and unable to meet the most basic needs of new arrivals. Among those living in a field outside the facility in inhumane and undignified conditions were pregnant women, children and people with chronic diseases (such as diabetes), some of whom had run out of medication. There are no showers on site and the very few toilets available are not sufficiently maintained. Tents and makeshift shelters had been removed and people were sleeping on the ground, exposed to the elements. MSF saw people suffering from skin disease, upper respiratory tract infections, urinary tract infections, diarrhoea and vomiting, mental health problems, dental problems and injuries in various states of healing. The very real concern is that if this situation is allowed to continue, it may lead to serious medical emergencies.
Provision of basic healthcare
Following consultation with the relevant authorities and the Red Cross, MSF has dispatched a medical team with immediate effect to provide basic healthcare to people in Ter Apel who are seeking asylum in the Netherlands. A medical team will be present on site outside the centre to treat illness and injury, ensure that those with chronic disease can continue with their medications, triage cases that need to be referred to hospital or seen at a health centre, as well as providing psychological first aid to adults and children.
Structural solution needed
“However, our intervention is a stop gap measure. The Dutch government and local municipalities must urgently improve living conditions and take on the responsibility of providing vulnerable people with medical care. Furthermore, there must be a structural solution, such as creating multiple, and more humane reception locations. This is something that the Dutch government has been called upon to do for years.” said Judith Sargentini.