View allAll Photos Tagged IDP
IDPs displaced by the Sri Lanka Army & Air Force's bombing and shelling during their current offensive into the Vanni.
19 January 2012. El Fasher: A man from Kassab camp for Internal Displaced Persons (IDP), in Kutum (North Darfur), during the meeting of the local leaders with the UNAMID Joint Special Representative Ibrahim Gambari. More than 25,000 IDPs live in the camp and UNAMID troops organize patrols every day to control the area.
Photo by Albert Gonzalez Farran - UNAMID
The European Commission has announced €122.5 million for Ethiopia to address the immediate needs of people affected by the worsening humanitarian situation caused by one of the most extreme El Niño weather phenomenon on record. This brings the total amount of humanitarian funding for Ethiopia to over €190 million since December 2015. Four EU Commissioners travelled to Siti, one of the most affected areas, to understand where emergency aid needs to be prioritised. ©EU/ECHO/Anouk Delafortrie
After the Russian invasion in 2008, 130, 000 citizens of Georgia were forced from their homes: 25, 000 of them are still internally displaced. 35 000 houses have been completely destroyed and burner in the conflict zone.
The Georgian government gave internally displaced persons cottages of just 67 square meter; people had to restart their lives from nothing.
The photo project tries to describe the life during these 11 years created by individuals, according to their taste, opportunities, transformed environment and indirect effects of war. The photo project describes implacability of fate, work, effort, love of life, giving up and despair.
Author - Nika Somkhishvili / Gori Photographers Club
Some of the tens of thousands of the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) arrive by truck with their few possessions at the Zamzam camp.
04/06/2009. El Fasher, Sudan. UN Photo/Olivier Chassot. www.un.org/av/photo/
Two young girls in the IDP camp. Waiting until their villages are safe to return to after the Merapi volcano eruption.
Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Al-Mazraq, Yemen Oct. 9, 2009. A boy waits in line for food at the Mazraq refugee camp in Hajjah province. The displaced persons at Mazraq camp have fled the ongoing fighting in the Sa'ada province of northern Yemen.
Photo: Paul Stephens / IRIN / 201003230957150509
Read more reports at www.irinnews.org
Children carry their water containers as they walk towards one of 22 boreholes that the AusAid have helped to fund in partnership with Unicef in the Budiriro District. The area was badly affected by a cholera outbreak.
Photo: Kate Holt / IRIN | www.irinnews.org
A young girl draws pictures in a schoolroom run by the NGO Save the Children at the Mazraq refugee camp in Hajjah province.
Photo: Paul Stephens / IRIN / 201003231033420994
See more reports at www.irinnews.org
The family spent four days in a basement in Debaltseve without water and electricity before a ‘green corridor’ was opened so that civilians could escape the battle zone. Now Vika and her child are staying in Svyatohirsk in an old house without heating.
Save the Children, Svyatohirsk, Ukraine September 2015
A displaced family in their tent at Mazraq refugee camp. The displaced persons at Mazraq camp have fled the ongoing fighting in the Sa'ada province of northern Yemen.
Photo: Paul Stephens / IRIN / 201003231015010947
See more reports at www.irinnews.org
Al-Mazraq, Yemen Oct. 9, 2009. A young girl ties down her family's tent at the Maraq refugee camp in Hajjah province.
Photo: Paul Stephens / IRIN / 201003230955270087
See more reports at www.irinnews.org
14 June 2016. Malakal: A woman walks outside her shelter in the Protection of Civilians (PoC) site in Malakal, South Sudan.
The rainy season started and made the living conditions very difficult for the displaced people in one of the most crowded PoC in South Sudan. In some areas, the density in this camp is around 9 square meters per person, which is highly below the UN standards (30). People are facing health risks such malaria and cholera due to the lack of good draining infrastructures. 32,000 people are currently living in this PoC that faced on of the most violent episodes in the South Sudanese civil war.
Fighting between elements of the Shilluk and Dinka communities erupted in the Malakal PoC on February 17. UN reports confirmed that armed men in Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) uniforms entered the UN camp and fired on civilians, looting and burning tents. At least 18 people were killed and more than 90 wounded.
After the clashes, Dinka families (approximately 4,000 people) fled outside the PoC and sought refugee into Malakal town, while about 26,000 Nuer and Shilluk IDPs, mostly women and children, sought refugee in the former PoC.
Photo by Albert Gonzalez Farran - AFP - www.albertgonzalez.net
JRS Iraq project director and logistics assistant on their way to the JRS Community Centre in Hay Sumer, Qaraqosh during lockdown.
Sentayehu Chibsa Trained Teacher ( PSS/EM) “I also became disturbed because of the conflict and was sometimes angry at my students for misbehaving. But after the training I have learned how to handle these situations. Some kids are coming with pain. And I am learning not to be angry any more. I give advice and I work with parents.”
Baby Evan was born here in this unfinished building outside Dohuk. Eighty-six families have occupied the first three floors. There is little shelter from the wind and the rain, and soon the cold winter will be upon them.
Report + Photo Gallery: www.maginternational.org/our-impact/news/the-families-at-...
Photographer: Abdurrahman Warsameh
Description: Displaced people fleeing from the escalating voilence in the capital Mogadishu to the IDP camps on the outskirts of Mogadishu. Newcomers build thier own makeshiflt shelters.
Hopes dashed after sustained shelling, displaced people who had returned Mogadishu are once again fleeing, Abdurrahman Warsameh reports for ISN Security Watch.
Note: You must credit the photographer and the International Relations and Security Network when using these photographs.
A woman stands outside her tent in the Mazraq refugee camp in Hajjah province.
Photo: Paul Stephens / IRIN / 201003231038480931
See more reports at www.irinnews.org
Waheb and his family at a MAG 'risk education' session in Chereran village.
"We fled from Mosul because our house was in no-man's land between Government forces and ISIS," he explained.
"Our house is now destroyed and it is very dangerous there. Thank you for these lessons. There are items all around here and this is very valuable for the children."
Report + Photo Gallery: www.maginternational.org/our-impact/news/the-families-at-...
Soviet-flat near the Tbilisi sea. IDP's live here without gas or running water. The soot marks near some windows are caused by the chimneys of wood heaters.
A resident of Melford Farm elderly people's home sits for a photograph in Harare, Zimbabwe. Like thousands of elderly Zimbabweans he has been forced to find refuge in an elderly people's home, as ongoing economic problems throughout Zimbabwe means he no longer has a means of income to support himself.
Photo: Kate Holt / IRIN | www.irinnews.org
Pregnant and malnourished Abayti Aden, 38 year old mother of six lost her 14-year old son shot dead during a conflict. Her husband also gone, her children with nothing to eat and suffering from oedema, she tells us “It is my first time to see drinking water being sold. We are used to free water from the river, but here, you have to pay for the water otherwise you will die of thirst.” | Enceinte et mal nourrie, Abayti Aden, 38 ans, mère de six enfants, a perdu son fils de 14 ans, tué pendant les combats. Son mari est également parti et ses enfants n’ont rien à manger et souffrent d’œdèmes. Elle nous dit: «C’est la première fois que je dois payer pour l’eau potable. Nous avons l’habitude d’utiliser l’eau gratuite de la rivière, mais ici, il faut payer pour l’eau, sinon on meurt de soif.»
© EU/ECHO