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  • Young girls staying at the Chimanimani Hotel doing the dishes. The hotel provided shelter for more than 500 people after the storm.
  • A man stand above a chasm from a washed away road
    Cyclone Idai washed away roads in Zimbabwe’s Chimanimani district, cutting the area off from much of the country and forcing residents to band together.
  • Map of Zimbabwe showing neighouring countries and CHIMANIMANI
  • Map of Malawi showing Cyclone Idai affected region and Mozambique border
  • Trouble is a fisherman and watchman who rescued stranded families from tree tops and high roofs.
  • Maria's village, Masanduko, was totally submerged by the flood waters. She is now living in temporary accommodation at Khungu Bwe Camp in Chikwawa District.
  • Households escaped the floods mostly via dugout canoe, with whatever possessions they could salvage from the rising water. This canoe is pictured in flood waters near Bangula in Nsanje district.
  • Rwanda has made strides to bring people together since the genocide. Part of that involves “Umuganda,” which often means banding together to achieve a goal and is celebrated on the last Saturday of each month across Rwanda as a community service day.
  • Adelite Mukamana, the manager of Never Again Rwanda’s Psychotherapy and Healing Unit. She oversees a team of five psychotherapists and 64 community members trained to identify trauma. Only a small fraction of those suffering from trauma seek medical help.
  • Vincent Sezibera is a clinical psychologist at the University of Rwanda and Director of the Center for Mental Health.“Yes, we were wounded by the genocide and genocide ideology, but we don’t give up.”
  • Aliane and her father, Hakizimana Evaliste, in their home in Rwanda’s Western Province. Evaliste’s family was killed in the genocide. Now, his 20-year-old daughter is learning how to work through the trauma she has inherited.
  • Staff fit a patient for a new artificial limb at the ICRC’s orthopaedic centre in Kabul.
  • Artificial limbs lean against a wall at the ICRC's orthopaedic centre in Kabul.
  • A man with crutches sits on a bench in a medical facility
    Ali Ata, 36, lost both of his legs in a Taliban attack. He moved to Kabul because he couldn’t find treatment in his home province.
  • A woman in a wheelchair
    Shabobo, 30, lost her left leg in a rocket strike earlier this year. She’s being treated at an NGO-run clinic for war injuries. “In Afghanistan,” she says, “these things happen every day.”
  • A woman works on a prosthetic limb.
    Staff at the ICRC's orthopaedic centre make artificial limbs. Most of the employees are amputees themselves; they started as patients before training for a job helping others with disabilities.
  • Some young men from the village scrape by sewing bags in the market.
  • Ladi Mattias inspects her stock before they are bagged and loaded unto a truck.
  • Tario Guvakuva holding her newborn “Gunners”, named after the soldiers that helped her give birth on the night of the cyclone.
  • Madonna Muzimba, Prince Charles Mhondera and Tafadzwa Tenda standing in what used to be the main shop of a small community of loggers deep in the Chimanimani mountains. People from surrounding communities used to come to this shop for their supplies.
  • Logo OSF
  • Volunteers move a tent at the new UN camp for Venezuelan migrants in Maicao, Colombia on 20 March 2019.
  • A family sits in a tent
    Freddy Pacheco (left) and Tilsa Garcia (right) pose for a photo with some of their children. The couple arrived at the camp with five children. They had been sleeping in the streets of Maicao for several weeks.

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