Photo Library

Journalist or researcher? Learn about using our images.

Photo Library

Displaying 22977 - 23008 of 45007
  • A soldier from the Sudan People’s Liberation Army carries his son in the streets of Yei, Juba, Southern Sudan, 29 June 2007. Almost half the displaced in Southern Sudan are children.
    A soldier from the Sudan People’s Liberation Army carries his son in the streets of Yei, Juba, Southern Sudan
  • Children attend school in the open in Yei, Southern Sudan, 27 June 2007. The children have been severely traumatised by the war, not only because of constant fear of death, but also abandonment and hunger.
  • A  portrait of Edward Lomude. He was kidnapped by the LRA on 19 May 2007 and kept for one month before being beaten and left for dead near Nabanga town on the DRC-Sudan border, Juba, Southern Sudan, 27 June 2007.
  • The harvest of key cash-crop cotton has fallen and is expected to be badly impacted by erratic weather this year.
  • An employee of Norwegian People’s Aid cleans an area of a mine field on the Juba-Yei road, Southern Sudan, 29 June 2007.
  • An employee of Norwegian People’s Aid tries to detect a land mine, on the Juba-Yei road. Southern Sudan, 29 June 2007. Sudan is a huge country with poor infrastructure. Mine victims are most often from rural areas many hundreds of miles from the nearest
  • An employee of Norwegian People’s Aid working to defuse landmines on the Juba-Yei road, Southern Sudan, 29 June 2007. The United Nations reported that landmines on key logistical routes were a great impediment to the delivery of humanitarian aid.
  • Lucy Mugure, 38, a mother of five and a resident of the sprawling Mathare slums. 4 July 2007.
  • An employee of Norwegian People’s Aid working to defuse landmines on the Juba-Yei road, Southern Sudan, 29 June 2007. The United Nations reported that landmines on key logistical routes were a great impediment to the delivery of humanitarian aid.
  • A mortar shell lies in the field 50km from Juba, Southern Sudan, 29 June 2007. Efforts are ongoing to remove land mines and to spread mine awareness among the civilian population.
  • Improving traditional rural technology with a water-powered mill is a life-saver for many Nepalese.
  • A sign on a tree warning of land mines on the Juba-Yei road, Southern Sudan, 29 June 2007. OSIL-Sudan with assistance from UNICEF and other humanitarian organisations conducts mine risk education activities in conflict zones. The programme focuses on chil
  • An employee of Norwegian People’s Aid clearing a mine field on the Juba-Yei road, Southern Sudan, 29 June 2007. Not many people have been educated about the mines and how to remove them. The Mine Wolf, a mechanical mine-clearance machine, was only used
    An employee of Norwegian People’s Aid clearing a mine field on the Juba-Yei road, Southern Sudan
  • A soldier at one of many check posts in Balochistan.
  • A couple pose in front of empty shelves in their shop in a village near Yei town in Southern Sudan, 27 June 2007. They claim they were attacked and looted by the Lord’s Resistance Army.
  • Children attend classes under a tree in a village near Yei, Southern Sudan, 27 June 2007. Children start school at six or seven. About 50 internally displaced teachers and 200 of their dependants have been helped home by the International Organisation for
  • A boy walks to school carrying his own chair, in Yei, Southern Sudan, 28 June 2007. With calm returning to most of the area, children are now able to experience a normality that was absent during the ravages of the war. Children were not able to walk free
    A boy walks to school carrying his own chair, in Yei, Southern Sudan
  • School-children prepare to begin classes in Yei, Southern Sudan, 28 June 2007. The war has corroded education in Sudan. Women tend to have better education and job employment in urban areas in the north but in Southern Sudan, most people are not educated
    School-children prepare to begin classes in Yei, Southern Sudan
  • Teenagers playing cards in Yei, Southern Sudan, 26 June 2007. Unlike the refugees, who have received HIV/AIDS education, prevention, care and support, the residents of Southern Sudan are poorly informed about the syndrome. A survey by the Sudanese Nationa
  • Edward Lomude and his stepfather from the village of Yandaru, 22km from Yei town. Lomude was kidnapped by the LRA on 19 May 2007 and kept for one month before being beaten and left for dead near Nabanga town on the DRC-Sudan border, Juba, Southern Sudan,
  • A portrait of Justin Okot from Gulu, Uganda, abducted by the Lord’s Resistance Army in 2000. He was shot and captured by the Sudan People’s Liberation Army and held as a PoW in SPLA Military Barracks in Yei, Central Equatorial State, Southern Sudan, 2
  • Justin Okot from Gulu, Uganda, was abducted by the Lord’s Resistance Army in 2000. He was shot and captured by the Sudan People’s Liberation Army and held as a PoW in SPLA Military Barracks in Yei, Central Equatoria State, Southern Sudan, 27 June 2007
  • Children attend school in the open in Yei, Southern Sudan, 27 June 2007. The children have been severely traumatised by the war, not only because of constant fear of death, but also abandonment and hunger.
  • A doctor from Physicians for Human Rights examines a Sudanese baby who recently crossed the border into Israel.
  • A mural in Maputo chronicles Mozambique’s political history.
  • A hand woven tag bearing the HIV symbol on sale at the Sokoni Market in the on going Young Women Christian Association conference in Nairobi, Kenya 4 July 2007.
  • Participants of the Extraordinary World Council Conference voting at the KICC, Nairobi, Kenya, 4 July 2007.
  • Flood affected people camp in the open in Sarkano District.
  • A hand woven bearing the HIV symbol on sale at the Sokoni market in the ongoing Young Women Christian Association conference in Nairobi, Kenya 4 July 2007.
  • A refugee child from southern Sudan waits to see a volunteer doctor.
  • Flood affected people camp in the open in Sarkano District.
  • Flood affected people camp in the open in Sarkano District.

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