doctors without borders

Six months after the attack that killed 42 men, women and children, the U.S. military's lack of transparency is still hurting Afghans.
A new Doctors without Borders survey documents the alarming scale of the abuse of women and children in the country.
Children as young as 6 weeks old have been injured in clashes between desperate migrants and authorities, Doctors Without Borders says.
The four attackers told a guard they were visiting their mother.
"Every time Mary came in for treatment, she was terrified of going back home and getting beaten again."
After U.S. airstrikes destroyed a Kunduz hospital, Afghans must travel for days to reach life-saving treatment.
Two workers from Doctors Without Borders are among the dead.
"The destruction of this hospital deprives about 40,000 people of healthcare in this conflict zone."
Airstrikes hit 112 Syrian medical facilities in 2015 and 13 so far this year.
The deadly bombing is just the latest to hit a hospital supported by the aid group in Syria.