Photo Library
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A four-year-old drinks rehydration solution at a Hodeidah hospital -
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Rebels release child soldiers in Pibor town, South Sudan. -
Child soldiers are released from SPLAIO and the National Salvation Front. -
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Coast Trust is the first southern NGO to be certified by the Humanitarian Quality Assurance Initiative (HQAI), an independent auditing and advisory service for relief aid agencies, based in Geneva. COAST gained its certificate in January 2018. -
Women in Sinjar's mountain camp say life is tough all year round. -
Sinjar's old town lies in ruins -
View of the UN Security Council vote in favour of the draft resolution on Syria. -
A boy receives polio vaccination drops in a small neighbourhood outside Spin Boldak in southern Afghanistan’s Kandahar Province. Building polio immunity requires repeated rounds of vaccination. -
An Afghan health worker holds a bag of oral polio vaccines. Building polio immunity requires repeated rounds of vaccination, which makes consistent access to children essential. -
Health worker Asadullah, 22, uses a megaphone to announce a vaccination campaign in a neighbourhood in Kandahar. He says parents sometimes refuse to vaccinate their children: “They had heard gossip that the vaccine is bad," he says. -
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A satellite image taken on 27 February 2018 village shows extensive new construction south of Hla Poe Kaung village in Myanmar’s northern Rakhine State. -
According to an analysis of satellite imagery, new construction near Hla Poe Kaung includes at least 110 new buildings and two possible helicopter landing pads. Rights groups say Myanmar has built up excessive security infrastructure in northern Rakhine. -
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Iraq says it will take $88b to rebuild Iraq, include Mosul's destroyed Old City -
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Samia Naz has started delivering babies at an NGO-run clinic, even though she has not been formally trained to do so. -
Mehreen Bibi, 24, sits down at a free NGO-run health clinic near her home in Bhagwal in Pakistan’s Punjab province. Pregnant and worried, Bibi hopes to see a doctor about her pregnancy, but she can’t afford to travel to a government-run clinic. -
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Labourers work at a new construction site near Hla Poe Kaung village in Myanmar’s northern Rakhine State in late January 2018. -
Nurul Hoque, a Rohingya refugee from Myanmar, sealed his family’s ID cards and old photos in plastic after arriving in Bangladesh. He keeps them under his pillow when he sleeps. -
A view of a Rohingya refugee settlement in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. Aid groups estimate that more than 900,000 Rohingya refugees now live in the area. -
Rohingya refugees have etched their fragile homes into slippery hillsides or along floodplains. Aid groups fear a cyclone or monsoon rains could be a disaster in Bangladesh’s packed refugee camps.