Christopher Lockyear on war, allegations of racism and first -line rescue workers.
Doctors without borders, known by its French initials MSF, provide more than 16 million medical consultations each year, often in the most dangerous places in the world. But even this winning organization of the Nobel Peace Prize rings the alarm: the global humanitarian system collapses.
The secretary general of the MSF, Christopher Lockyear, speaks in Tel Aviv Tribune to work in war areas like Sudan and Gaza, the impact of reductions in aid financing and the fight against accusations of racism against the organization. While crises are intensifying and confidence in institutions fades, can the world always take care of those who need it most, or does compassion collapse with the system?