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  • In October 2009, CIP officially launched the Sweetpotato for Profit and Health Initiative (SPHI) in Namulonge, Uganda. SPHI is a 10-year, multi-donor initiative that seeks to reduce child malnutrition and improve smallholder incomes through the effective
    The orange stuff is good for you
  • In Delta State’s Oporoza community people say they still need development, including access to clean water
  • Two Egyptian men help each other fix papermasks used to protect against the tear gas-filled air in Cairo's Tahrir Square during protests against the ruling military council in November 2011
  • Egyptian volunteers pick up garbage left behind by protesters in Cairo's Tahrir Square in November 2011. At its peak, the square was the gathering place for over 100,000 Egyptians. Garbage trucks are sent once a day to collect the trash
  • Egyptians line up to give blood during November 2011 clashes between police and protesters demanding the ruling military council step down. The blood goes to the downtown hospitals who have received the most injured. Egyptians do not normally donate blood
  • An unconscious protester is taken away from Mohamed Mahmoud Street, site of the fiercest clashes between the Egyptian police and protesters in November 2011. Motorcycles use the evacuation corridor designed for the ambulances in order to carry away the le
  • Paper masks are not enough to fight the heavytear gas on Mohamed Mahmoud Street, the site of the fiercest clashes between police and protesters in Egypt in November 2011
  • Jeffrey James says he joined the militancy to make government pay attention to concerns in the Niger Delta
  • Ex-militants receiving vocational training in Warri say they have embraced peace for now
  • Orphan Soy Chet, 16 at her home in Anlong Chrey village, Kampong Cham province, Cambodia. She is unsure whether she will be able to complete primary school as her neighbours are no longer able to assist after the floods submerged their village and destroy
  • Lesotho’s textile industry is the country’s largest employer and constitutes close to 20 percent of GDP
  • a temporary school in Anlong Chrey village, Kampong Cham province, Cambodia. After more than two months of flooding, children in the village were unable to reach their primary school about one kilometer away. The temporary school was set up to prevent the
  • Sudanese refugees at a site just inside neighbouring South Sudan protest about the lack of humanitarian response shortly after the site came under aerial bombardment
  • Church of the Brethern, Maiduguri. One of 11 attacked since 2009
  • Nigeria, Maiduguri streets
  • Residents who are nominally Bangladeshi, but reside within India's borders in a community known as an enclave in India's West Bengal State. They are campaigning to gain Indian citizenship
  • The IPCC is uncertain about climate change’s impact on river-related flooding
  • Buildings in rubble at night
    Deposed leader Muammar Qaddafi used Tawergha as a base to attack Misrata, which was heavily damaged by fighting during the war
  • Women and children in room
    Displaced women and children from Tawergha say continued mistreatment of their ethnic minority could create a cycle of violence
  • Rampant unemployment in Somaliland has prompted thousands of young people to leave the territory every month
  • Members of a cocoa growers cooperative in Sikensi, 100km northwest of Abidjan
  • Cocoa beans in Sikensi, 100km northwest of Abidjan
  • Locals in the narrow streets of the Igbikisikala-Ama settlement in Port Harcourt’s waterfront shantytowns
    Locals in the narrow streets of the Igbikisikala-Ama settlement in Port Harcourt’s waterfront shantytowns
  • The Okrika waterfront
    Authorities in Rivers State, southern Nigeria, have threatened to demolish informal settlements along the waterfront of Port Harcourt, the state capital.
  • Women sort shellfish taken from the nearby river in Igbikisikala-Ama
    Women sort shellfish taken from the nearby river in Igbikisikala-Ama settlement, Port Harcourt, Nigeria
  • Many people living in Nigeria’s Port Harcourt shanty town of Olumogbogbo-Ama rely on the delta for fishing or collecting and ferrying mangrove timber
    Many people living in Nigeria’s Port Harcourt shanty town of Olumogbogbo-Ama rely on the delta for fishing or collecting and ferrying mangrove timber
  • A woman sells food in Igbikisikala-Ama, Port Harcourt, Nigeria
    A woman sells food in Igbikisikala-Ama, Port Harcourt, Nigeria
  • Housing foundations in the low lying land of Olumogbogbo-Ama. Many of the houses in the shanty towns are built on reclaimed swampland
    Many of the houses in the settlements are built on reclaimed swampland in Port Harcourt, Nigeria
  • Children crowd in the doorway of their home in Igbikisikala-Ama. Home owners will be compensated for their houses, but tenants will be left struggling as the waterfronts represent the lowest cost housing in Port Harcourt
    Children crowd in the doorway of their home in Igbikisikala-Ama, Port Harcourt, Nigeria
  • Young men make bricks out of sand to build houses in Olumogbogbo-Ama settlement, Port Harcourt, Nigeria
    Young men make bricks out of sand to build houses in Olumogbogbo-Ama settlement, Port Harcourt, Nigeria
  • Ifubaraboye George's livelihood selling rice and other food in Nigeria’s Port Harcourt slum area of Igbikisikala-Ama will be threatened if the slums are demolished
    Ifubaraboye George's livelihood selling rice and other food in Nigeria’s Port Harcourt slum area of Igbikisikala-Ama will be threatened if the slums are demolished
  • Children play in the street at Bundu waterfront, one of the sprawling shanty towns in Port Harcourt, Nigeria
    Children play in the street at Bundu waterfront, one of the sprawling shanty towns in Port Harcourt, Nigeria

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