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  • A Somali refugee woman with her child as she waits to be admitted to Dadaab refugee camp, Kenya, October 2008.
    A Somali refugee woman with her child as she waits to be admitted to Dadaab refugee camp, Kenya, October 2008.
  • A group of newly arrived Somali women and children wait to be registered at Dadaab refugee camp, Kenya, October 2008.
    A group of newly arrived Somali women and children wait to be registered at Dadaab refugee camp, Kenya, October 2008
  • Somali children look on as they wait for their turn to be registered by the UNHCR prior to admission to Dadaab refugee camp, Kenya, October 2008.
    Somali children look on as they wait for their turn to be registered by the UNHCR prior to admission to Dadaab refugee camp, Kenya, October 2008.
  • Afghan aid workers are more vulnerable to security risks than internationals, according to aid workers.
  • A Somali man carries his wife (with his children behind him) to the queue for admission to Dadaab refugee camp, Kenya, October 2008.
    A Somali man arrives at Dadaab refugee camp, Kenya, October 2008
  • Somali refugees queue up outside the gate of the UNHCR compound prior to admission to Dadaab refugee camp, Kenya, October 2008.
  • A group of newly arrived Somali refugees listens to instructions from a security officer in Dadaab, Kenya, October 2008. The conflict in Somalia has forced many people to seek refuge in northeastern Kenya.
    A group of newly arrived Somali refugees listens to instructions from a security officer in Dadaab, Kenya, October 2008
  • Somali men wait to be registered by the UNHCR in Dadaab refugee camp, Kenya, October 2008.
    Somali men wait to be registered by the UNHCR in Dadaab refugee camp, Kenya, October 2008
  • A young schoolboy at the Sambulawan elementary school in Mindanao. Thousands of children are not attending school regularly as a result of the conflict which reignited in August 2008.
  • “They don’t want us here," Mohammad Ismail says, refering to village residents close to the camp.
  • In an effort to improve security, more than 50 solar street lights have been installed at both government-run Rohingya refugee camps in southern Bangladesh - including both Kutupalong and Nayapara.
  • A scene inside the the Kutupalong refugee camp in southern Bangladesh. Conditions have improved over the past two years following greater flexibility by the Bangladesh government.
  • A young Rohingya girl looks to the camera. There are upwards of 200,000 unregistered Rohingya in the country and 28,000 documented Rohingya refugees.
  • The Rohingya, an ethnic, linguistic and religious minority, are de jure stateless in accordance to the laws of Myanmar. There are upwards of 200,000 Rohingya refugees in the country, the vast majority of which are undocumented.
  • Conditions at the two Rohingya refugee camps in southern Bangladesh remain poor, despite improvements made over the past two years.
  • A young Rohingya girl in southern Bangladesh. There are up to 200,000 Rohingya refugees from Myanmar, of which just 28,000 are documented.
  • WFP rations are provided to 23,00 documented Rohingya refugees at two government-run camps in southern Bangladesh, providing an average of 2,160 kilocalories per person per day.
  • Close to 11,000 documented Rohingya live at the Kutupalong refugee camp in southern Bangladesh where they receive regular food and non-food related relief supplies from the United Nations.
  • A Rohingya boy looks to the camera in southern Bangladesh. There are upwards of 200,000 Rohingya in the country, many of whom fled Myanmar in 1991.
  • A young Rohingya man at the Kutupalong stands before one of a number of shelters now being replaced at the government-run camp.
  • Thousands of unregistered Rohingya like these were forced to leave the villages they lived for several years and have settled around the Kutupalong refugee camp. UNHCR has requested the government to encourage them to return
  • Thousands of unregistered Rohingya like these were forced to leave the villages they lived for several years and have settled around the Kutupalong refugee camp. UNHCR has requested the government to encourage them to return.
  • Three Rohingya boys smile to the camera in southern Bangladesh. Muslim residents from Myanmar's northern Rakhine State, the Rohingya are de jure stateless in accordance to the laws of Myanmar
  • As rain begins to fall, a young Rohingya man at the Kutupalong refugee camp takes shelter under his umbrella. There are 28,000 documented Rohingya refugees in the country, but thousands more are undocumented.
  • A scene at the Kutupalong refugee camp in southern Bangladesh, home to around 11,000 documented Rohingya refugees.
  • A young Rohingya girl at the Kutaplong refugee camp in southern Bangladesh, one of two government-run camps for the 28,000 documented Rohingya refugees in the country
  • A young Rohingya boy smiles to the camera at the Kutapalong refugee camp in southern Bangladesh. There are two government-administered camps in the area which house close to 28,000 Rohingya refugees.
  • Buildings inside the high-rise town of Shibam, where recent floods forced many of its thousands of residents to flee.
  • A young Rohingya man and his son at the Kutupalong refugee camp in southern Bangladesh. There are upwards 200,000 Rohingya refugees in the country, about 28,000 of whom are documented and live at two government-run camps in the area.
  • Dubbed the 'Manhatten of the desert', Shibam's 2,000-year-old mud-brick buildings are in danger of collapsing after recent floods.
  • A Somali woman at the gate of the UNHCR compound prior to registration and admission to a refugee camp in Dadaab, Kenya, October 2008.
  • A Somali woman at the gate of the UNHCR compound prior to registration and admission to a refugee camp in Dadaab, Kenya, October 2008.
    A Somali woman at the gate of the UNHCR, Kenya 2008

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