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  • A boy among families who fled their homes in Diabir, on the outskirts of Ziguinchor in Casamance, Senegal. September 2009
  • Sign for 'Kabonketoor', a women-led conflict resolution group in Senegal's Casamance region. Kabonketoor means 'forgive ourselves and one another' in the Diola language. September 2009
  • Pre-school children in Ziguinchor, main city of Senegal's Casamance region. September 2009
  • Pre-school children in Ziguinchor, main city in Senegal's Casamance region. September 2009
  • A woman in the village of Etama in Senegal's Casamance region. September 2009
  • Pre-school children who receive meals through the UN World Food Programme. Ziguinchor, Casamance, Senegal. September 2009
  • People fleeing Diabir, on the outskirts of Ziguinchor, the main city in Casamance, Senegal. September 2009
  • Chit Lin Nwe with her favourite tree
  • Monasteries can double up cyclone shelters
  • Students marching fro abstinence in Nairobi, Kenya
  • After arriving in Yemen and registering as refugees, many Somalis live in difficult conditions
  • Floods in northern Nigeria 2009
  • U Hla Han stands against the remains of the school which was destroyed by a tornado in the Khit San village
  • Most houses built from the fronds of the Dani palm cannot withstand storms and strong winds
  • The frongs of the Dani palm trees in the Ayeyarwady Delta are used to build huts: note the land is very low-lying
    The frongs of the Dani palm trees in the Ayeyarwady Delta are used to build huts: note the land is very low-lying
  • Tornadoes are a new phenomenon in Myanmar’s Ayeryardway Delta: This photograph of a twister forming over the Ayeryardwady River were taken by an aid worker recently
  • Young boys at an evacuation camp in Datu Odin Sinsuat, Mindanao, await aid
  • A mother and her baby wait for food rations in Mindanao, the southern Philippines
  • Member of Handicap International demining team in Casamance indicates size of one type of antipersonnel mine found in the area. September 2009
  • Handicap International's head of humanitarian demining operations in Casamance shows how demining team prods the ground for mines. September 2009
  • Wounded men in a hospital in Kandahar
  • An injured man in a hospital in Kandahar
  • A government car is set ablaze in Hargeisa, capital of the secessionist territory of Somaliland, on 12 September as opposition supporters and civil service activists protested the closure of the lower house of representatives
    A government car is set ablaze in Hargeisa, capital of the secessionist territory of Somaliland , on 12 September as opposition supporters and civil service activists protested the closure of the lower house of representatives
  • A sign in Senegal's Casamance region warning of potential presence of landmines
  • A government car is set ablaze in Hargeisa, capital of the secessionist territory of Somaliland , on 12 September as opposition supporters and civil service activists protested the closure of the lower house of representatives
  • A Street in Hargeisa, capital of the secessionist territory of Somaliland
    A street in Hargeisa, the Somaliland capital: Political events in recent months have rocked the region's relative stability (file photo)
  • Woman ostracized for marrying a man from a marginalized clan
  • Thousands of animals have perished because of drought in Somalia
    Thousands of animals have perished because of drought in Somalia
  • Like many young Cambodians, Kou Channyyon travelled to Malaysia to seek work, but found himself trapped by the human traffickers
  • A sewage lagoon next to a sewage pumping station in Beit Lahiyah, Gaza. The UN has called for full and unrestricted access for spare parts and materials critically needed to restore Gaza’s water and sanitation services
    Un étang de stabilisation à proximité d’une station de pompage à Beit Lahiyah, à Gaza
  • In the drought-ravaged Gedo region of Somalia, obtaining water can involve treks of 20km or more
    In the drought-ravaged Gedo region of Somalia, obtaining water can involve treks of 20km or more
  • There are an increasing number of sink holes in the southern shores of the Dead Sea as a result of shrinking water levels
    There are an increasing number of sink holes in the southern shores of the Dead Sea as a result of shrinking water levels

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