GENEVA: The medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said Wednesday it had been ordered to leave Libya by November 9, with no reason given for its expulsion.
MSF had already been forced to suspend its activities in the country in March, and said it was told to leave in a recent letter from the Libyan foreign ministry.
“No reason has been given to justify our expulsion and the process remains unclear,” Steve Purbrick, who heads MSF’s programs in Libya, said in a statement.
“We believe that MSF still has an important role to play in Libya, particularly in the diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis, in supporting the Libyan health system, but also in providing access to health care for refugees and migrants who are excluded from care and subject to arbitrary detention and serious violence,” he said.
Purbrick said MSF’s registration with the UN-recognized government remained valid, and the Geneva-based organization still hoped to find a “positive solution” to the situation.
MSF said that in collaboration with the Libyan health authorities, it had carried out more than 15,000 medical consultations last year.
In 2023 it provided emergency medical aid following flash floods in the coastal city of Derna that killed thousands of people.
Libya is split between the UN-recognized government in Tripoli, led by Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah, and a rival administration in the east.
The north African country has remained divided since a NATO-backed revolt toppled and killed longtime leader Muammar Qaddafi in 2011.
In March, MSF’s premises were closed by Libya’s Internal Security Agency, and several of its staff faced “interrogation,” it said.
“This wave of repression also affected nine other humanitarian organizations operating in the west of the country,” said MSF.
“In a context of increasing obstruction of NGO intervention, drastic cuts in international aid funding, and the reinforcement of European border policies in collaboration with the Libyan authorities, there are now no international NGOs providing medical care to refugees and migrants in western Libya,” it said.
Founded in 1971, MSF says it has more than 67,000 staff working in more than 70 countries.
MSF ordered to leave Libya by November 9
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MSF ordered to leave Libya by November 9
- MSF had already been forced to suspend its activities in the country in March
- “No reason has been given to justify our expulsion and the process remains unclear,” Purbrick said













