Photo Library

Journalist or researcher? Learn about using our images.

Displaying 41249 - 41280 of 44030
  • At a transit center in Mongoumba, returnees are offered health checks, a yellow fever vaccination, food to last three months, and a cash distribution worth $76 per child, $152 per adult, and $84 per family.
  • Saturnin Mbenga (left) and his family, sing, laugh and greet people as they travel from Bétou to Mongoumba, a town in southwestern CAR close to the Congo-Brazzaville border.
  • After six years living in a refugee camp in Congo-Brazzaville, 32-year-old Mermoz Mongo (wearing a green vest) is waiting to be transported back to his village in CAR.
  • Photo of a mother holding a child in Central African Republic
  • Photo of man standing above refugee camp in Bangladesh.
    A man looks out over Bangladesh’s crowded refugee camps, which are home to nearly one million people.
  • Philip Kleinfeld
  • Michelle Caracas hiking up La Z.
  • Photo of Kadia camp in Iraqi Kurdistan.
    Kadia Camp in Iraqi Kurdistan, home to an estimated 15,000 Yazidis, is where many survivors are taken when they return to Iraq.
  • Photo of a husband and wife smiling and laughing near Sinjar, Iraq
    Survivor Bevereen and her Husband Faisal at home in a Sinjar village.
  • Photo of a Yazidi woman in Sinjar grieving by a mass grave
    A young Yazidi woman grieves by a mass grave in Sinjar.
  • Photo of a building that has fallen into the river due to erosion in Bangladesh
    Erosion along the Padma river severely damaged this 50-bed health complex in Naria.
  • Photo of woman in Bangladesh in the door of her home
    Since losing her land, Rita Begum has lived in a shed made from tarpaulin and pieces of her old home.
  • Year Baksh Laskar points to where a saw mill he owned used to stand. River erosion destroyed much of the businessman’s property.
  • A woman stands on the bank of a river in Bangladesh reading a small piece of paper
    Aklima Begum, 57, reads a copy of her national ID card on the riverbank in Kedarpur village. Erosion wiped away her home and much of her possessions.
  • Photo of a woman in Bangladesh walking up a mountain of sand bags from the river
    Local authorities have placed sandbags to reinforce riverbanks near Kedarpur village. Some river management experts say Bangladeshi authorities need to better prepare for erosion, rather than reacting to disasters as they happen.
  • Photo of an empty market in Syria's al-Hol camp.
    The main market at the entrance to al-Hol camp was shuttered after a stabbing attack against a camp guard, 3 July 2019.
  • Photo of Romida Begum looking into the camera
    Romida Begum has grown frustrated after a year in office as an elected camp leader. She said she has faced resistance and threats from majhis and others opposed to her leadership.
  • Photo of a man walking in a Rohingya camp with an umbrella in Bangladesh
    A man walks through Shalbagan, part of Bangladesh’s Rohingya refugee camps now home to nearly one million people.
  • Photo of Rohingya camp in Bangladesh with temporary structures and cattle
    People walk along a path in Shalbagan. More than 900,000 people live in Bangladesh’s refugee camps.
  • A photo of woman in front of camp buildings smiling with several people behind her
    Shahina Begum voted for Romida in the camp elections. Almost all Rohingya were barred from voting or running for office during Myanmar’s last national elections in 2015.
  • Photo of Romida Begum sitting inside with her hand covering her smiling mouth
    Romida Begum covers a smile as she meets with TNH after winning the job of camp leader in an election held in June 2018. Polls have taken place in four of the 34 Rohingya refugee camps.
  • A photo of Mohib Ullah
    Mohib Ullah has become one of the most prominent Rohingya voices in the camps, though he has never run for office.
  • Photo of a farmer in flannel amongst tall tea plants
    A farmer steps carefully through a tea field in Hsipaw township. Local civil society groups say renewed conflict has increased landmine casualties in parts of northern Shan.
  • Photo of an exploded vehicle on the side of a road
    The debris of a car normally used to transport landmine victims to hospital lies on the side of a road between Hsipaw and Lashio in northern Shan State. The car was destroyed in February during clashes between armed groups near the village of Man Li.
  • Portrait of young person in Myanmar with tea and a shirt that says "hate mornings."
    Hna Mon Non, 16, was injured by an explosive device as she walked through the cornfields of her village in northern Shan State. Weeks earlier, two competing armed groups had been fighting in the area.
  • Photo of a child wearing red in Myanmar on a tea plantation near landmines.
    A young monk accompanies his mother as she picks tea on the slopes leading up to their village. Local families fear an overgrown plantation 100 metres away is contaminated by landmines.
  • Photo of the outside of a restaurant in Istanbul.
    A worker relaxes outside a restaurant during a quiet period in Istanbul's Fatih district.
  • Rural incomes have plummeted as a result of Burundi's drought.
  • Map showing Burundi and neighbouring DRC, Uganda, and Rwanda as well as Goma and Bujumbura.

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