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As I was walking across the hospital, a group of 7 women called out and asked I come across and see what they were doing. The women were HIV patients in a literacy class. The woman demonstrated what they had learnt, and then explained that she may be sick but that should not stop her learning.
With the municipality we have set up 2 45,000 litre tanks to provide water to the village. It is a better use for this land than it had been in the past.
Caption to come. Photographer's caption: DO NOT PUBLISH
two boys selling corns for 30 cents for one (Syrian money) in one of the most destroyed area of Ma'arat al Nu'man, IDLIB District. (Syria)
As I was walking across the hospital, a group of 7 women called out and asked I come across and see what they were doing. The women were HIV patients in a literacy class. The woman demonstrated what they had learnt, and then explained that she may be sick but that should not stop her learning.
_yo no quiero mas una sociedad con mal trato la duraaaa
yo no quiero ver a niños como esta imagennn :( me da mucha lata cada vez mas se ven cazoz como este ! NO MASSSSSSSS!
YA
haste socio y ayuda :)
PARLAMENTO JUVENIL MERCOSUR
Trabajo realizado para el Ministerio de Educación y Unicef Argentina donde participaran varios paises de la región a realizarse en el 2010.
These photo was taken during the Khangai Regional Children's IV Forum in Tamir camp in Arkhangai province. The forum was attended by representatives from 8 provinces - Arkhangai, Uvurkhangai, Bulgan, Orkhon, Khuvsgul, Gobi-Altai, Zavkhan and Byankhongor.
©UNICEFMongolia/2018/ Mungunkhishig Batbaatar
Calls for aid to Iraqi children, during a press conference at the UNICEF Jordan headquarters.
Amman, Jordan / May 23, 2007
تدعو لتقديم المساعدة لأطفال العراق خلال مؤتمر صحفي نظمته اليونيسف
عمان، الاردن / 23 أيار 2007
© Royal Hashemite Court
UNICEF and World Food Programme staff with health workers and children, outside a kindergarten in Pyongyang during the Child Health Day in November 2012.
© UNICEF DPR Korea/2012/Tuya Mungun
Unicef Survival Kit for children.
In many African countries, every fourth child dies. Basic things like vaccines, mosquito nets and soap help to save children's lives. Every donation helps.
Advertising Agency: Serviceplan Munich/Hamburg, Germany
Creative Directors: Alex Schill, Maik Kähler, Christoph Nann
Art Directors: Maik Kähler, Till Diestel, Amelie Graalfs
Copywriter: Christoph Nann
Photographer: Beatrice Heydiri
Post Production: Alphadog
Published: October 2007
Agnes the UNICEF project officer was going over a project with the Head mistress in which UNICEF will provide materials to support an out reach centre for the school.
The inauguration of the UNICEF-assisted projects Ferekessa Jawi & Wetero-dino WS Projects in Arsi Zone, Merti Woreda.Oromia Water, Mineral & Energy Bureau is currently engaged in the implementation of rural water supply projects in different UNICEF assisted projects in Arsi Zone, Merti Woreda. The chronic water supply problem forces the community to collect water from Arba River, which takes 2:30 hours (for one trip), forcing children and women to invest their time that could otherwise be applied in productive activities. Jane Bevan and Kitka Goyol UNICEF officaly opening water points © UNICEF Ethiopia/2016/Michael Tsegaye
UNICEF and Solidarites and health centre staff built a latrine, incinerator, placenta pit and refuse pit for the Marabo health clinic. The incinerator is vital for destroy sharps and other dangerous materials from the centre.
A female student receives a de-worming pill during a Child Health Day at a secondary school in Pyongyang in November 2012. Because she is older, there is no need to crush up the pill.
© UNICEF DPR Korea/2012/Tuya Mungun
Children say that the water pump is everything to them, it’s like their “soul”. Since the Unicef-supported pump was installed two weeks ago, life has changed dramatically. Before children were travelling three hours to get water, over terrain so rocky that even donkeys struggled to climb the hills. One father says that life was often unbearable; if a family member died they’d have to keep the body for several days before being able to wash it as part of traditional funeral preparations. The children spent all their time travelling to find water, and therefore were unable to go to school. Many of the children were sick too, often having bouts of diarrhoea as the river they travelled too was dirty.
For one mother, Fatuma Abdullah, sadly the new pump came too late for her seven year old son, Anwar. His tummy pains were so bad after drinking dirty water that he asked his mother to tie his stomache to try and stop them. Fatuma says, “I think my child’s problem came from drinking dirty water from the river, and drinking the water that our cows drink. There is a severe water shortage here, its our main problem. The journey to collect the water was tough, even the donkeys sometimes miscarried due to the steep hills”. Her son is still alive but in a poorly way at home. She says at least she doesn’t have to fear that her other children will fall ill now though, families are “joyful” about the pump and the children are now able to go to school. Water Point, Lode Lamhffo Kabele, Sire Woreda, Arsi Zone. © UNICEF Ethiopia/2016/Ayene
An outpatient therapeutic centre in Hodeidah treats children suffering from moderate acute malnutrition. According to UNICEF’s latest State of the World’s Children report , 58 per cent of children in Yemen suffer from moderate and severe stunting and 15 per cent of under-fives suffer from moderate and severe wasting; 46 per cent are underweight. © UNICEF Yemen/2010/Majed Abu Manneh
Leonel Messi, Embajador de Buena Voluntad de UNICEF, junto a Javier Mascherano, en el lanzamiento de la 4º Edición de la Semana del Prematuro, una campaña destinada a difundir y hacer cumplir los derechos de los prematuros.
© UNICEF/NYHQ2014-0440/UNICEF Pacific
On Sunday 15 March 2015, a woman who is past her due date to deliver her baby faces a situation where she has no access to water, food, power and shelter as a result of storm damage in in Malapoa, on the outskirts of the capital Port Vila in Vanuatu. Tens of thousands of children are in urgent need of assistance in Vanuatu after tropical Cyclone Pam ripped through the island. The category 5 storm hit late on Friday night, 13 March, and continued into the early hours of Saturday morning, leaving children at particular risk..
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It is estimated that at least half the population of Vanuatu has been affected by cyclone Pam. Of these, at least 54,000 are children. Many homes in Vanuatu have likely been destroyed as they are built with natural and local materials such as thatched and corrugated roofs that are vulnerable to strong winds and floods. Health centres have likely sustained severe damage and will need rebuilding and restocking with medical and nutrition supplies. Many of these buildings are likely to have suffered structural damage. Lifeline facilities like hospitals, electrical utilities, water supply and telephone systems are most likely severely damaged. Power and water supply has been affected across Vanuatu, including in the capital city Port Vila. Schools are being used as evacuation centres, and UNICEF will be supporting children's education, including providing school in a box kits. Child friendly spaces will be set up in evacuation centres to provide children with psychosocial assistance. Churches and community halls are being used as emergency shelters. Other Pacific Island countries have been severely impact as well, including the Solomon Islands, Tuvalu and Kiribati. UNICEF is on the ground in the affected countries, providing immediate assistance. Most urgent needs include the provision of water containers, purification tablets, soap and temporary sanitation facilities. UNICEF's immediate needs to assist the affected countries is at least US $2 mill
A Community Health Worker during her household visits in Sana’a governorate.
Together with the EU’s Development aid (EuropeAid), UNICEF launched Community Health Workers Networks in Yemen, to bring to communities much needed health services. The community health workers offer services which include immunization, screening and referral for childhood illnesses and malnutrition.
There are currently more than 1,800 community health workers in Yemen, that have been trained by the local health authorities with the support of UNICEF and the EU. So far, 639,000 under five children received health services, including malnutrition screening and treatment and more than 353,000 pregnant and lactating women were reached with maternal health and newborn care services.
Every day, the partnership between the European Union and UNICEF supports the lives of the most affected children and families in Yemen.
Photo: UNICEF Yemen/2018/Al-Mahbashi
Vaccination (measles and polio) arrives for the newly arrived abducted children in Gambella by the Bureau of Health at the President's Guest House, Gambella Region.© UNICEF Ethiopia/2016/Meklit Mersha
Le operazioni di ricerca e soccorso continuano a seguito del terremoto di 7,8 magnitudo che ha colpito il paese il 25 aprile.
Il governo ha dichiarato una situazione di emergenza in 35 distretti colpiti nel paese, dove più di 1.3 milioni persone – oltre la metà dei quali sono bambini – sono colpite dal disastro. Case e infrastrutture vitali, tra cui ospedali, sono stati gravemente danneggiati o distrutti, lasciando migliaia di bambini e famiglie senza tetto, vulnerabili e in urgente bisogno di cibo, riparo, acqua potabile e servizi igienico-sanitari e salute sostegno. In risposta al disastro, l'UNICEF sta fornendo ospedali da campo, teli, kit di emergenza medica, vaccini e relative forniture, zinco e sali di reidratazione orale per prevenire l'insorgenza di malattie diarroiche e spazi temporanei di apprendimento e di consulenza psicosociale per i bambini.
©UNICEF/NYHQ2015-1054/NyboNEPAL, 2015
A girl plays with a toy from an Early Child Development (ECD) kit at St. Benedict Kindergarten. The class is held in a UNICEF-supplied tent in a camp for people displaced by the quake, in Port-au-Prince, the capital. ECD kits contain materials such as hand puppets, coloring pencils, building blocks and games; they are primarily used to help young children regain a sense of normalcy after natural disasters or war. Since March 2010, UNICEF has distributed nearly 1,500 ECD kits throughout the country in support of the Ministry of Education and NGO early childcare programs.
© UNICEF/NYHQ2011-2080/Dormino
Learn more: www.unicefusa.org/haiti