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  • The capital of the Tigray region, Mekele offers an attractive setting for inhabitants.
  • A police post has been erected inside the grounds of an empty mosque in the Rakhine State capital, Sittwe.
  • A group of ethnic Rahhine people attend a storytelling workshop in Sittwe run by PDI Kintha, a local peacebuilding organisation.
  • Nyi Nyi Zaw, an ethnic Rakhine teacher with the peacebuilding organisation People to People, says he was formerly prejudiced against his Rohingya neighbours: ”I used to be blinded just like the people who come to our trainings.”
  • Sittwe, the capital of Myanmar's Rakhine State.
  • The huge boulders at Wanjenuwa.
  • An excavator clearing the mud and boulders at completely destroyed Wanjenuwa trading centre.
  • Simon Mashipwe who lost a shop and rentals seated in the boulders that destroyed several trading centres in Bududa.
  • Lawrance Khisa seated in the boulders at Wangemen trading centre which was completely destroyed.
  • Fred Wesonga speaking to IRIN.
  • Vailsa Wazemba 89, a grandmother of 56 grandchildren.
  • John Namutambo former shopkeeper at Wangemen trading centre.
  • Esther Nambuba showing of where her resturant and bar covered with boulders.
  • A Humane Borders water station in southern Arizona.
  • View of the Sonoran Desert in Southern Arizona.
  • A mural in Ajo, Arizona where humanitarian volunteers have been arrested and charged with crimes related to aid work in the desert.
  • The cross marking the spot where Stephen Saltontall stopped to say a prayer while on a Humane Borders water run in southern Arizona.
  • Ila Abernathy in her home in Tucson with a satchel dropped by a migrant on a trail.
  • A section of the border fence in between the US and Mexico in southern Arizona. People have to hike three to 10 days from this point in the desert.
  • Survivors of the earthquake queue to register to receive aid from Sulteng Bergerak.
  • Onlookers examine the rubble that was once Petobo, 22 October.
  • Norma Tandjokara carries the first aid to Labuana.
  • Village residents had painted “HELP” on several roads to get the attention of aid helicopters flying overhead that delivered to local governments but seemed to take too long to reach them, many said. 24 October.
  • Unloading the aid in Labuana in water that has not receded since the tsunami wiped out the first three rows of houses.

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