Photo Library

Journalist or researcher? Learn about using our images.

Photo Library

Displaying 14433 - 14464 of 44997
  • Phineas Soko, 48, is waiting to be circumcised at Bophelo Pele Male Circumcision Centre in Orange Farm, outside Johannesburg
    Esperando a vez, Phineas Soko conta: "Minha mulher perguntou 'Por que não fizeste isto antes?'"
  • Sibusiso Mbele has just been circumcised at Bophelo Pele Male Circumcision Centre in Orange Farm outside Johannesburg
    Sibusiso Mbele, logo após o procedimento: "Doeu menos do que eu esperava"
  • HIV/AIDS education/demonstration at a school in Cameroon. August 2009
  • Farmer literacy class in Magaria, Niger
  • The appearance of rickets usually associated with a lack of sunlight in Bangladesh is unexpected
  • Lebanon’s snow-covered mountains could become a rare sight if temperatures rise due to climate change
  • Lebanon’s cedar trees, many of which are over 2,000 years old, are now in danger of extinction due to climate change
    Les cèdres du Liban, dont beaucoup ont plus de 2 000 ans, sont aujourd’hui menacés d’extinction en raison du changement climatique
  • Mothers with their babies at a clinic waiting to get Gulazyk supplement
  • Baby Barsbek and his mother at a clinic
    Baby Barsbek and his mother at a clinic
  • The man-made lake Qaraoun in the Bekaa Valley is one of Lebanon's only two dams
  • Breeder Mamadou Difjao is vaccinating his animals in Niger's Diffa region himself to save on gas cost
  • A sick cow unable to eat passes on grazing
  • Of 1.7 million women living with HIV in Asia, 90 percent are estimated to have acquired the virus from their long-term partners
  • Quelea quelea distribution
  • Quelea quelea distribution
    Quelea quelea distribution
  • Medicines dispensed by ‘hakims’ (traditional healers), such as this roadside practitioner, are not always safe
  • Diabetics gather outside the central pharmacy in hot weather in the hope of receiving insulin shots
  • Dozens of health workers have been killed, abducted and intimidated by insurgents and other armed groups over the past two years, according to aid agencies
  • Haj Saleh Al-Faqeeh, 70, turned to selling pomegranates to make money for medicine
  • Health centre in the Gbessia Port 1 neighbourhood of the Guinea capital Conakry. August 2009
  • Regina Cumbuia is a widow who lives in Chitobe, central Mozambique. She was the first woman to openly disclose her HIV status in her village
  • Seventy-year old Abed Abu Eida refuses to leave the rubble that remains from his family home in Jabaliyah after many of his extended family was advised to evacuate the area by UNDP teams due to hazardous material being on site
    Seventy-year old Abed Abu Eida refuses to leave the rubble that remains from his family home in Jabaliyah after many of his extended family was advised to evacuate the area by UNDP teams due to hazardous material being on site
  • UNDP teams removing rubble containing hazardous material from a residential site in Jabalyah. About 10 percent of the rubble in Rafah and Khan Younis is asbestos material, according to UNEP
    UNDP teams removing rubble containing hazardous material from a residential site in Jabalyah. About 10 percent of the rubble in Rafah and Khan Younis is asbestos material, according to UNEP
  • A home HIV test
  • James Otieno was displaced in the 2007 violence and spent months in an internally displaced people’s camp
  • A water source in Isha which has since dried up
  • A donkey cart near the Isha  well in Baidoa. Carts like this have to wait until nighttime to ferry water as none is available during the day
  • Southern Sudanese children in the Akobo region of Jonglei state are weighed as part of efforts to check for malnutrition by the aid agency Medair
  • Southern Sudanese women displaced by recent fighting in Jonglei state wait to collect food supplies delivered by a United Nations helicopter
  • A southern Sudanese woman recovers in Akobo hospital from gunshot wound to her arm and a spear thrust in her back in this 7th August photograph. The woman, who is pregnant, survived a massacre at her fishing village in which 185 people were killed
  • In addition to providing essential obstetric care the midwives raise awareness on family planning and HIV/AIDS
  • Afghanistan needs up to 8,000 midwives to curb its high infant and maternal mortality ratios

Become a member of The New Humanitarian

Support our journalism and become more involved in our community. Help us deliver informative, accessible, independent journalism that you can trust and provides accountability to the millions of people affected by crises worldwide.

Join