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  • Women and a child sit in the shade amid the rubble of a home in Rafah town in Egypt's North Sinai governorate. The building was destroyed in October during the security forces' counter-terrorism campaign against militants. (Photo taken by Sophie Anmuth in
  • In the foreground of al-Mehdiya village, in Egypt's North Sinai governorate, sits a former olive tree orchard, destroyed in the fall of 2013 during security forces' campaign against militants in the area. (Photo taken by Sophie Anmuth in October 2013 - BU
  • A Bedouin man walks through the desert in South Sinai, Egypt.
    Un Bédouin traversant le désert du Sud-Sinaï
  • The home of Shadi el-Menai, founder of the jihadist group Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis, in al-Mehdiya Village in Egypt's North Sinai governorate. The army destroyed his home in the fall of 2013 during its months-long campaign against militants in the restive Sina
  • A Bedouin man in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula (2007)
    Un Bédouin dans le Sinaï
  • Members of the Philippine military load relief goods at Tacloban's airport
    Members of the Philippine military load relief goods in Tacloban
  • “We want to resume classes. We just don’t know how,” Noel Lombres, principle of the Marabut Central Elementary School in Samar Province, where 468 children aged 5 to 11 years of age once attended classes. Education was badly shaken by Typhoon Haiyan
  • A typhoon-damaged school in Palo, Leyte Province. Thousands of classrooms were damaged or destroyed by Typhoon Haiyan which struck the central Philippines on 8 November, 2013
  • Bamboo is brought in by boat on Olotayan Island off the coast of Panay on 28 November 2013
    Le bambou
  • The view from a damaged home in al-Mehdiya village, North Sinai governorate. Egyptian security forces have led a months-long military campaign in the area to root out increased militancy. (Photo taken October 2013)
  • The Supreme Court building in Islamabad.
    The supreme court – struggling for supremacy
  • Muhammad Ibrahim Khan, 85, from Jalalpur, Punjab, holds up pictures of his son, 18 year old Muhammad Zubair, who was picked up by security forces on 9/11/2009. “He was our only child, and was just married,” Khan said. “At least tell us what he was c
    Muhammad Ibrahim Khan (centre) says he does not even know if his son is alive or dead
  • Nelson Mandela
    Nelson Mandela put on an HIV-Positive T-shirt during a visit to an HIV programme in Khayelitsha in December 2002
  • A resident of the typhoon-affected town of Palo works to repair his home one month after Typhoon Haiyan, which struck the central Philippines on 8 November 2013
  • A mother bathes her child at a hospital in Bossangoa, where
medical staff are treating an overwhelming number of children for
malnutrition, malaria and anaemia.
  • Children wait for water at a school where Muslims have sought shelter from increasingly brutal sectarian violence that has pitted largely Christian self-defence groups against Muslim rebels turned state forces and the wider community by association.
  • Elsa Raganas, 43, a single mother of four, lost her home to Typhoon Haiyan in the town of Palo on 8 November, 2013
  • One month after Typhoon Haiyan struck the central Philippines on 8 November, 2013, Alberta Hijanda, 55, a resident of Palo, has yet to receive the shelter assistance she needs. She currently shares living space with 12 other people under a single tarpauli
  • Officials hope the recent introduction of simplified, lifelong ARV treatment for pregnant women will help to cut transmission rates and reduce maternal deaths.
    Officials hope the recent introduction of simplified, lifelong ARV treatment for pregnant women will help to cut transmission rates and reduce maternal deaths.
  • Woman and child after Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) in Tacloban
  • A deserted village 4km south of Jowhar in Somalia’s Middle Shabelle region.  Flooding since late August has left thousands of people in the region homeless
  • The Mother-Baby Pack, a colour-coded take-home box of essential medicines, including antiretrovirals, will make it easier for women who cannot return to a clinic to stay healthy.
    The Mother-Baby Pack, a colour-coded take-home box of essential medicines, including antiretrovirals, will make it easier for women who cannot return to a clinic to stay healthy.
  • One of the main obstacles has been a shortage of medical professionals, with most local doctors and nurses preferring to find employment in other countries.
    One of the main obstacles has been a shortage of medical professionals, with most local doctors and nurses preferring to find employment in other countries.
  • In Lesotho, the rate of mother-to-child transmission is still high, and the big challenge now will be to reach pregnant women in remote areas.
    In Lesotho, the rate of mother-to-child transmission is still high, and the big challenge now will be to reach pregnant women in remote areas.
  • In stark contrast, good progress has been made in preventing mother-to-child transmission of the virus.
    In stark contrast, good progress has been made in preventing mother-to-child transmission of the virus.
  • Globally, AIDS-related deaths amongst adolescents increased by 50 percent between 2005 and 2012.
    Globally, AIDS-related deaths amongst adolescents increased by 50 percent between 2005 and 2012.
  • Most new infections occur in young women, who are up to three times more likely to get infected than young men.
    Most new infections occur in young women, who are up to three times more likely to get infected than young men.
  • Testing and treating adolescents is becoming a critical part of Lesotho’s campaign to fight the third highest HIV prevalence in the world
    Testing and treating adolescents is becoming a critical part of Lesotho’s campaign to fight the third highest HIV prevalence in the world
  • Schoolchildren wait to get tested for HIV in Mekaling, Lesotho. Those who are 12 years and older are legally allowed to be tested without parental consent.
    Schoolchildren wait to get tested for HIV in Mekaling, Lesotho. Those who are 12 years and older are legally allowed to be tested without parental consent.
  • Farm workers in central Kachin state collect a harvest of lentils in a hillside field near Mai Ja Yang.
  • Maternal health care after disasters tends to come too little, too late. In the aftermath of Typhoon Haiyan, experts estimate some 300,000 pregnant women are in need of care. This woman is receiving care in Tacloban.
  • Rose Gilbes fled fighting in Papua province for neighbouring Papua New Guinea whose return home has been inhospitable

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