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  • An Iraqi boy receives assistance from the World Food Program (WFP) after flooding in Abu Ghraib in April 2014, caused by militants of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) who took control of the Nuaimiyah dam.
  • Ammunition dumped on a beach in the Somali capital Mogadishu
  • In the capital Freetown, once known as 'the darkest city in the world' blackouts are a part of life.
    Sierra Leone is unable to provide adequate electricity to its citizens.
  • Sierra Leone is increasingly looking to solar to solve it's energy woes.
    Sierra Leone is increasingly looking to solar to generate electricity.
  • The lights shine for 8 hours a day, and cut down hugely on energy bills.
    They can be on for up to eight hours a day, and help reduce electricity bills.
  • Mr Benga, also from Tombo, bought two to power his children's bedrooms and other communal areas.
    This home in Tombo also uses such lights.
  • Aminatta uses an Indigo, pay-as-you-go solar powered light to run her bread and fizzy drinks business in Tombo village.
    Aminatta uses an Indigo pay-as-you-go solar powered light to run her shop in Tombo village.
  • But generators frequently break down, and are well beyond the price range of most.
    which often break down.
  • People wanting to charge their mobile phones pay 1,000 leones (23 US cents) to the lucky few who own generators…
    People wanting to charge their mobile phones pay 1,000 leones (23 US cents) to the lucky few who own generators…
  • Mariama relies on a plastic light in a neighbouring shop to run her street-food business in Freetown.
    Mariama relies on a plastic light in a neighbouring shop to run her street-food business in Freetown.
  • A fisherman in John Obey village, which has no grid electricity despite being just an hour from the capital.
    A fisherman in John Obey village, which has no grid electricity despite being just an hour from the capital.
  • A neighborhood in Freetown. Sierra Leone has long been unable to provide adequate electricity to it's citizens
    In the capital Freetown, once known as “the darkest city in the world”, power cuts are common.
  • Termites inside of a mound
  • A volunteer teacher holds a class under the trees in Doyaba transit camp in Sarh, southern Chad, May 2014. Some 3,200 primary and pre-primary school age children are enrolled in the school, set up by displaced teachers from CAR.
  • An ethnic Hmong woman in Ban Houythao, northern Luang Prabang, which still practices shifted cultivation on their traditional lands. The Hmong migrated from southern China in the nineteenth century to the mountainous areas of Laos, Vietnam and Thailand
  • An ethnic Hmong woman in Ban Houythao, northern Luang Prabang, which still practices shifted cultivation on their traditional lands. The Hmong are an Asian ethnic group from the mountainous regions of China, Vietnam, Laos, and Thailand
  • A policeman patrols the area around Mugunga IDP camp during the TSC field visit near Goma
  • Cambodia and Australia flags
  • Ou Virak, chairman of the Cambodian Center for Human Rights
  • SINS OF THE FATHERS - film use only
  • SINS OF THE FATHERS - film use only
  • he Somali National Army and troops from the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) successfully executed a joint operation in the Lower Shabelle Region of Somalia today, capturing the key town of Qoryooley from the extremist group Al-Shabaab. The captu
  • Hiraan, Somalia. Food assistance allows the beneficiaries to maintain vital livelihood assets that they might otherwise have had to exchange for food at deflated prices.
  • The skyline beyond the northern suburbs of Mogadishu is seen through a bullet hole in the window of a hotel in Yaaqshiid District, where African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) forces have pushed Al Shabaab militants beyond the city's northern fringes t
  • Road access for the  country's mobile court programme remains problematic. First introduced in 2008, mobile courts are currently operational in four districts - Ainaro, Manufahi, Bobonaro, and Cova Lima - with plans to scale the programme in Dili District
  • Inside a mobile court session in rural Timor-Leste. First introduced in 2008, mobile courts are currently operational in four districts - Ainaro, Manufahi, Bobonaro, and Cova Lima - with plans to scale the programme in Dili District and others pending fun
  • Tuaregs discuss the future of northern Mali in Burkina Faso's Mentao camp
  • Children from CAR in southern Chad's Doyaba transit camp. May 2014.
  • Alaa Zaidaan and his family fled the Iraqi capital Baghdad for Jordan in late 2013 after he was repeatedly attacked by Islamist militants. Zaidaan's family are Sabeans, a minority sect belonging to the gnostic religion Mandaeism. His family now lives in a
  • Tariq Mohinudeed, 21, volunteer, Colombo - Muslim. Many believe Sri Lanka's young people hold the key to the country's future peace and reconciliation
  • Data from sensors in Rawalpindi and Islamabad is displayed at the control room in real time
  • A water level gauge in the Gawalmandi neighborhood, Rawalpindi, along the Lai Nullah

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