Ukraine: Treating the Consequences of Combat in Debaltseve

Two months after the Minsk agreement, the situation in Eastern Ukraine is, on the whole, calm. Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has expanded its medical activities to respond to remaining medical needs on both sides of the frontline.

In Debaltseve, an MSF team is providing assistance to the affected population in the city, which is situated between Donetsk and Luhansk. Debaltseve, which is now controlled by rebels, experienced heavy fighting through February 18—three days after the cease-fire came into effect. Here, MSF emergency coordinator Natalie Roberts describes the current situation:

Debaltseve suffered so much destruction during the fighting—what is it like there now?

There is no more fighting; it stopped in February. The city has been cleaned of unexploded devices. Otherwise, it’s just the same situation, the same level of destruction. There has been hardly any repair. When I arrived at the beginning of March, almost every window in the city had blown out, walls had huge holes, and most roofs had extensive damage. You couldn’t turn around without seeing a damaged building and you still can’t.

Today people are living in the same conditions. Most of them have left the basements and shelters where they took refuge during weeks of shelling [and] moved back into their houses. But shelter remains the main issue. The reconstruction of Debaltseve hasn’t started yet. People are still living in buildings with no heating and no water supply. People want to rebuild their homes, but there are no building materials, just plastic sheeting for the windows.

It is still cold—it snowed ten days ago. And the communal heating system is not functional, because the pipes were damaged by the weather and the fighting. Electricity was reinstalled in just some locations. To get water, people have to walk to get it from wells, and the water quality is appalling.

Are people who fled their homes coming back to Debaltseve?

People are coming back every day. Most of the city’s 25,000 residents had fled the city; around 5,000 were left behind. Those who stayed had no choice or nowhere else to go. Some couldn’t leave because they were too old, disabled, or they just didn’t want to leave their homes. Today the population has grown to 13,000. Some are coming home because they have nowhere else to go, but there is not a lot for them to come back to. And all of them, those who stayed as well as those who are coming back, are completely dependent on food aid.

What is MSF doing in Debaltseve?

When we first arrived in Debaltseve, in February, we started visiting people in their homes. We now have a phone number that people can call and a nurse or a doctor will drive out to see them, like a district nursing service. Most of the population is elderly. And most of the treatments we are providing are for people with chronic medical conditions, like hypertension or arthritis, who have gone for months without treatment. The conditions they have been living in—the cold, the stress—have made their illnesses far worse.

We also run a mobile clinic out of a van which moves around the town in different, pre-advertised locations each day. We advertise where we’ll be, and treat about 60 people each day, limiting the numbers so that people have enough time with the doctor.

Without any improvements to their living conditions, people with chronic illnesses will carry on getting worse, despite the medical care we can provide. I’ve met elderly people who say that they would just like to die. They don’t have depression; they just don’t want to be 80 years old and living in a basement. People are not sure what the future holds, and they don’t know what to do with themselves. It is almost as if the fighting went on for so long that people dare not hope that it won’t start again.

Read the Update: In Ukraine, MSF Continues to Provide Assistance on Both Sides of the Front Line

"Without any improvements to their living conditions, people with chronic illnesses will carry on getting worse, despite the medical care we can provide. I’ve met elderly people who say that they would just like to die. They don’t have depression; they just don’t want to be 80 years old and living in a basement."

Natalie Roberts
Medical needs remain urgent on both sides of the frontline, for residents and displaced people. Many health workers have left the rebel-held area, leaving thousands of people without access to adequate healthcare in remote villages. Many medical facilities have been damaged or destroyed, and there are critical shortages of basic and specialized medicines. MSF continues to expand its medical activities to meet the needs of people living in the hardest-hit areas, and to people who had to flee the conflict. Since the beginning of the conflict, MSF has supplied more than 110 facilities, hospitals, ambulatories and social facilities, with medicines and medical materials and equipment.