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  • [Lebanon] Fatme from South Lebanon arrived in Sanayieh park in Beirut with her family as soon as the bombings started. [Date picture taken: 08/06/2006]
    Fatme, 13, has been living in Sanayieh Park with her family for three weeks.
  • [Lebanon] Sanayieh park is growing more and more overcrowded as the war drags on. [Date picture taken: 08/06/2006]
  • [Lebanon] Around 160 displaced children find respite in Hoops Sports Club in Beirut. [Date picture taken: 08/05/2006]
    Around 160 displaced children find respite in Hoops Sports Club in Beirut.
  • A smoke cloud rises after an Israeli air strike on the southern suburbs of Beirut, 7 August 2006. According to the Lebanese High Relief Council, the month of the Israel-Hezbollah conflict has resulted in more than 1,000 deaths and over 3,600 wounded in Le
  • [DRC] Ibanda Primary School (l'école primaire d'Ibanda) Bukavu, the largest primary school in South Kivu Province, DRC. [Date picture taken: 08/02/2006]
    Children outside their school in the DRC
  • [Lebanon] The popular public beach of Ramlet el-Baida covered with heavy fuel oil, Beirut, 29 July 2006. Much of Lebanon’s coastline is affected after oil spilled into the sea when storage tanks at a power plant in Jiyeh, 30km south of Beirut, were hit
    Much of Lebanon’s coastline was affected after 10,000 tonnes of oil leaked into the Mediterranean Sea when Israel bombed the Jiyyeh power plant.
  • [Lebanon] A general view of the polluted coastline at Ramlet el-Baida public beach, Beirut, 29 July 2006. A black coat of oil covers the Lebanese capital’s sandy Mediterranean shore after a power plant was hit by Israeli war planes more than two weeks a
  • [Lebanon] A man picks up garbage at the public beach of Ramlet el-Baida, Beirut, 29 July 2006. White sand is covered with oil that spilled out into the sea after a power plant was hit by Israeli jets on 13 July 2006. Officials said about 10,000 tonnes of
    A man picks up garbage on the oil-polluted public beach of Ramlet el-Baida near Beirut.
  • [Jordan] The palace of Justice, Amman. [Date picture taken: 08/05/2006]
    The palace of Justice, Amman
  • [Lebanon] A bombed out truck on the road between the Beqaa Valley and Beirut. [Date picture taken: 08/04/2006]
  • [Lebanon] A glass factory - one of many factories demolished by Israeli war planes. [Date picture taken: 08/03/2006]
  • [Mozambique] Young man in Namaacha. [Date picture taken: April 2006]
    Uma parte do dinheiro da multa deve ser para ele
  • [Mozambique] AIDS mural at market in Namaacha. [Date picture taken: March 2006]
  • [Mozambique] AIDS mural at market in Namaacha. [Date picture taken: March 2006]
  • [Lebanon] Two men smoke water-pipes at Ramlet el-Baida public beach which has been hit by thousands of tons of heavy fuel oil after Israeli air strikes bombed numerous tanks at the plant in the coastal village El-Jiye, 30km south of Beirut, 3 July 2006. T
  • [Lebanon] A man walks along a polluted coastline at Ramlet el-Baida public beach, after Israeli air strikes destroyed tanks at a power plant in the coastal village of El-Jiye, 30km south of Beirut, sending more than 10,000 tonnes of oil into the sea, 4 Ju
  • [Lebanon] A dead crab at Ramlet el-Baida public beach in Beirut, which was hit by thousands of tonnes of heavy fuel oil after Israeli air strikes hit tanks at a power plant in the coastal village of El-Jiye, 30km south of the capital, 3 July 2006. Officia
  • [Lebanon] Two men smoke water-pipes at Ramlet el-Baida public beach, which has been hit by thousands of tonnes of heavy fuel oil, after Israeli air strikes hit tanks at a power plant in the coastal village of El-Jiye, 30km south of Beirut, 3 July 2006. Of
  • [Senegal] Casamance : Mawdé Baldé, 50, left her husband, felt into the hands of the Movement of Democratic Forces in the Casamance (MFDC) and fled with her daughter to the regional capital Ziguinchor, where she lives now with a family of 47. She still h
  • [Senegal] Casamance : Bringing children to school is very important for displaced population of Casamance. The neighborhood gets organized to set up ‘alternative schools’ (here in Nema 2, a poor district just outside Ziguinchor, the regional capital),
  • [DRC] Bukavu, in South Kivu, east of DRC. [Date picture taken: July 2006]
    Bukavu a été le théâtre de nombreuses violences pendant les années de conflit
  • [Sudan] Small arms lined up on the ground at a disarmament collection point in Akobo, Jonglei State, South Sudan, July 2006. Efforts by the Government of South Sudan to disarm the White Army in early 2006 met widespread resistance and led to unusually hig
    Small arms lined up on the ground at a disarmament collection point in South Sudan.
  • [DRC] Albertine Erumui, internally displaced in Bunia, northeastern district of Ituri. [Date picture taken: 07/23/2006]
    The villagers have fled their homes to seek shelter elsewhere
  • [Senegal] Displaced children from southern Casamance, near Guinea Bissau, can go to school thanks to local-based organizations. The ‘alternative school’ offers education to 200 children per year. [Date picture taken: 07/23/2006]
  • [Senegal] The association of landmine’ victims, based in Ziguinchor, the regional capital of Casamance, southern Senegal, stands up for the rights of the 700 victims of landmines, used during the on-going conflict between the government and the 24-year
    Up to 80 percent of arable land in Casamance is mined
  • [Lebanon] Displaced persons from South Lebanon receive refuge at a Beirut school. [Date picture taken: 08/02/2006]
  • [Senegal] The grand-mother Baldé, 77-year old, fled her village of Sanka, south of Ziguinchor, the regional capital of Casamance, southern Senegal, where she lives along a three-generation family of 47. She says she is too scared to come back to her plac
    Many are still displaced by fighting in the region of Casamance, southern Senegal
  • [Senegal] Some of the 15 children of the Baldé family, crammed into two rooms with their parents and co-spouses in the poorest district of Néma 2, in the suburbs of Ziguinchor, the regional capital. The conflict has taken a hard toll on the children, es
    The children of a displaced family in Ziguinchor, Senegal
  • [Senegal] Fatou Mané, 48, fled to Ziguinchor 20 years ago, when the Movement of Democratic Forces in the Casamance (MFDC) cut her father’s throat and set her village on fire. She lives with her husband, his co-spouse and seven children in two rooms, wi
    A woman who fled fighting in her Casamance village in the 1980s (file photo) Fresh clashes between the army and alleged separatist troops are the most violent in years, residents say
  • [Senegal] Casamance : Displaced children from southern Casamance play into the used waters in the poor district of Nema 2, outside the regional capital Ziguinchor. Some 23,000 people live in the overcrowded place, most of them have fled the rebels of the
    Sand filled with toxic lead is being removed from the neighbourhood of Ngane Diaw.
  • [DRC] Women waiting at Panzi hospital in Bukavu, South Kivu. [Date picture taken: July 2006]
    Women waiting at Panzi Hospital in Bukavu - one of only two hospitals with 'safe blood' in South Kivu
  • [Sudan] Boys and men from the White Army civilian defence force carrying arms in Akobo, Jonglei State, South Sudan, July 2006. Some members of the White Army have resisted disarmament for fear of increased vulnerability to attack. Others do not accept the
    Young people are increasingly involved in armed conflicts and their grievances are increasingly viewed as a possible conflict-ignition factor

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