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  • A horse stands in front of the abandoned train station in Gali, Abkhazia, a large hazelnut growing area on the border with Georgia, on 20 April 2019.
  • Map of Georgia showing Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Russia, Gali District, Sukhumi, Tbilisi
  • In February, IOM and WHO conducted a training session about Ebola prevention in a military barracks outside of Yei town in Central Equatoria state. WHO sent health workers that responded to the 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa to impart lessons learned.
  • Map of Democratic Republic of Congo showing North Kivu and Ituri provinces with Ebola outbreak and Uganda, South Sudan, and Rwanda as well as Goma and Butembo
  • Aisha Calalagan waits inside her family’s tent at the Sarimanok evacuation site in Marawi. The government gave her a sewing machine to help her earn money, but most of her customers are other displaced families.
  • A building destroyed during the five-month siege of Marawi.
  • A tricycle taxi negotiates an accessible part of Marawi’s central core.
  • Many homes in Tumaco are wooden shacks on puny stilts that spill out into the sea. Some have no sewage, running water, or electricity.
  • Map of Tumaco showing control by dissidents compared to formerly FARC territory
  • A mural of a FARC leader on the wall of a camp building
    A mural of a FARC leader on the wall of a camp building
  • Map of Colombia showing Coca growing regions
  • Mexican officials check out paperwork of migrants seeking asylum in the United States at the El Chaparral border crossing in Tijuana, Mexico.
  • A church in the Nyamata Parish that became a killing ground for approximately 2,000 people, is now a memorial site. Clothing of the victims are still piled up on the benches and plastic buckets hold the remains of the deceased.
  • Jacqueline and Mathias work the land. Every month, community members gather for ‘Umuganda’, where they contribute to national development and reconciliation. Officially, every Rwandan between the ages of 18 and 65 has to attend this ‘Community Work Day’.
  • “We were neighbors before, and we are neighbors again,” says Jacqueline. “Every day, he has to see me and I have to see him. If there had been any quarrels between him and me, he couldn’t help me on the land today. I wouldn’t let him.”
  • A room with scattered chairs and a handwritten sign on the wall with the name of the association.
    The interior of the headquarters for the Association of Families Searching for Their Disappeared Relatives – Mannar District.
  • A man sits in front of microphones at a press conference
    The chairman of the Office of Missing Persons, Saliya Pieris, speaks to the press in Mannar District.
  • Ramakli Pubameswary got separated from her daughter, whose picture she holds, after they were ordered onto separate buses while fleeing from violence just a month before the war ended in 2009. Her daughter was 14 at the time, and she never saw her again.
  • Umapathay Borin, an activist for families with missing relatives, stands near her home in Mannar District. Her husband disappeared after she surrendered him to the military at the end of the civil war.
  • Manuel Udaya Chandra, the president of the Association of Families Searching for Their Disappeared Relatives – Mannar District, waits outside a courthouse, where a magistrate later ordered an end to excavations of a mass grave.

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