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  • Saah A. David, Jr, National REDD+ Project Coordinator at Liberia's Forestry Development Authority (FDA), shares the experience of the Africa Palm Oil Initiative at the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 11, 2016. His presentation was about the results and the outlook of the Africa Palm Oil Initiative, the first signature initiative of TFA 2020. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.11.0242.jpg
  • Saah A. David, Jr (right), National REDD+ Project Coordinator at Liberia's Forestry Development Authority (FDA), presents during a session on the Africa Palm Oil Initiative at the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 10, 2016. In these working sessions participants established the 2016-18 strategy for TFA 2020's initiatives in priority countries and regions. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.10.0186.jpg
  • Maimouna, 11, leaves the home of family friends in Man, western Côte d'Ivoire, the morning before being reunited with her family. She is carrying a plastic bag with her belongings. <br />
Maimouna had been separated from her family for three months, since the moment armed conflict broke out in her hometown, Duékoué, and she had to flee to Man. Save the Children facilitated the reunion with her parents and her return home.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0206.jpg
  • Children dance, sing and clap to a song about peace. <br />
Save the Children set up tents to serve as temporary classrooms in the school grounds of the Catholic Mission displacement camp in Duékoué, western Côte d'Ivoire. In these spaces, Save the Children is providing education to children under five.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0331.jpg
  • Emma, 13, poses for a photograph. In December 2010, she fled post-election violence in her home village, in western Côte d'Ivoire. She has been separated from her family for more than four months. She is temporarily living with a host family in Danané until her parents are found.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0152.jpg
  • (From left to right) Fousseni, 1, Fati, 13, Lucie, 1, and Thérèse , 10, pose for a photograph at displacement camp CATD1 in Guiglo, western Côte d'Ivoire.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0117.jpg
  • A boy piles up color blocks to form a tower. <br />
Save the Children set up tents to serve as temporary classrooms in the school grounds of the Catholic Mission displacement camp in Duékoué, western Côte d'Ivoire. In these spaces, Save the Children is providing education to children under five.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0336.jpg
  • Maimouna, 11, poses for a photograph in Man, western Côte d'Ivoire, the morning before being reunited with her family. <br />
Maimouna had been separated from her family for three months, since the moment armed conflict broke out in her hometown, Duékoué, and she had to flee to Man. Save the Children facilitated the reunion with her parents and her return home.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0204.jpg
  • Temporary workers hired by Save the Children walk past a school's wall painting as they unload a truck with relief items in Man, western Côte d'Ivoire. <br />
Save the Children chartered a cargo plane carrying urgently needed items, including plastic sheeting, mosquito nets, buckets and water purification tablets. The children's charity will be handing out these basic supplies to 5,000 families displaced by conflict in western Côte d'Ivoire to help prevent the spread of diseases.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0058.jpg
  • Temporary workers hired by Save the Children unload tents from a cargo plane in Man, western Côte d'Ivoire. <br />
Save the Children chartered a flight with tents that will be used to set up temporary classrooms and monitored playgrounds for children displaced by conflict in western Côte d'Ivoire, so they can continue their education and regain a sense of normalcy.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0133.jpg
  • Children dance, sing and clap to a song about peace. <br />
Save the Children set up tents to serve as temporary classrooms in the school grounds of the Catholic Mission displacement camp in Duékoué, western Côte d'Ivoire. In these spaces, Save the Children is providing education to children under five.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0319.jpg
  • Mariana, 12, poses for a photograph in the school yard. <br />
Save the Children distributed education kits to students at Groupe Scolaire Quartier Lycée in Man, western Côte d'Ivoire. Children received a backpack with school supplies such as pens, pencils, sharpeners, notebooks, rulers, a pair of compasses and a portable chalkboard.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0282.jpg
  • (From left to right) Moussa, 5, Maimouna, 11, and Awa, 3, pose for a photograph with their parents Maka, 33, and Toumari, 38, outside their family home in Duékoué, western Côte d'Ivoire.<br />
Maimouna had been separated from her family for three months, since the moment armed conflict broke out in her hometown, Duékoué, and she had to flee to Man. Save the Children facilitated the reunion with her parents and her return home.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0231.jpg
  • Save the Children staff Mark Buttle writes down the names of women attending a meeting at CATD2 displacement camp in Guiglo, western Côte d'Ivoire. <br />
Save the Children will distribute essential relief items to the 500 families living in this camp, including buckets, water purification tablets, soap, mosquito nets, tarpaulins and ropes.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0072.jpg
  • A Save the Children staff member (left) talks to Maimouna's father Toumari, 38, at the family's home in Duékoué, western Côte d'Ivoire.<br />
Maimouna had been separated from her family for three months, since the moment armed conflict broke out in her hometown, Duékoué, and she had to flee to Man. Save the Children facilitated the reunion with her parents and her return home.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0216.jpg
  • Maimouna, 11, looks through the window of a car taking her to meet her family in Duékoué, western Côte d'Ivoire.<br />
Maimouna had been separated from her family for three months, since the moment armed conflict broke out in her hometown, Duékoué, and she had to flee to Man. Save the Children facilitated the reunion with her parents and her return home.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0210.jpg
  • Emma, 13, poses for a photograph. In December 2010, she fled post-election violence in her home village, in western Côte d'Ivoire. She has been separated from her family for more than four months. She is temporarily living with a host family in Danané until her parents are found.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0147.jpg
  • Women attend a training on how to use a mosquito net at CATD1 displacement camp in Guiglo, western Côte d'Ivoire. Holding the net are Mark Buttle, Save the Children staff (left), and Abdula, a camp resident who helped with translation. <br />
Save the Children will distribute essential relief items to the 450 families living in this camp, including buckets, water purification tablets, soap, mosquito nets, tarpaulins and ropes.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0078.jpg
  • A girl peeks out of the window of a classroom.<br />
Save the Children distributed education kits to students at Groupe Scolaire Quartier Lycée in Man, western Côte d'Ivoire. Children received a backpack with school supplies such as pens, pencils, sharpeners, notebooks, rulers, a pair of compasses and a portable chalkboard.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0270.jpg
  • A girl closes the backpack with school materials she just received. <br />
Save the Children distributed education kits to students at Groupe Scolaire Quartier Lycée in Man, western Côte d'Ivoire. Children received a backpack with school supplies such as pens, pencils, sharpeners, notebooks, rulers, a pair of compasses and a portable chalkboard.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0287.jpg
  • Save the Children staff Anne Civel (standing, center) hands a backpack with school materials to a student. <br />
Save the Children distributed education kits to students at Groupe Scolaire Quartier Lycée in Man, western Côte d'Ivoire. Children received a backpack with school supplies such as pens, pencils, sharpeners, notebooks, rulers, a pair of compasses and a portable chalkboard.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0285.jpg
  • Maimouna, 11, walks through the streets of Man, western Côte d'Ivoire, in the company of family friends and Save the Children staff, the morning before being reunited with her family. She is carrying a plastic bag with her belongings. <br />
Maimouna had been separated from her family for three months, since the moment armed conflict broke out in her hometown, Duékoué, and she had to flee to Man. Save the Children facilitated the reunion with her parents and her return home.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0208.jpg
  • Dorée (left), 9, and Carole, 11, smile while examining the contents of the backpacks with school materials they just received. <br />
Save the Children distributed education kits to students at Groupe Scolaire Quartier Lycée in Man, western Côte d'Ivoire. Children received a backpack with school supplies such as pens, pencils, sharpeners, notebooks, rulers, a pair of compasses and a portable chalkboard.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0260.jpg
  • A temporary worker hired by Save the Children unloads a truck with relief items in Man, western Côte d'Ivoire. <br />
Save the Children chartered a cargo plane carrying urgently needed items, including plastic sheeting, mosquito nets, buckets and water purification tablets. The children's charity will be handing out these basic supplies to 5,000 families displaced by conflict in western Côte d'Ivoire to help prevent the spread of diseases.
    RO.CIV.2011.05.0066.jpg
  • Clockwise from left: Sahara Mahama, 40. Her daughter Mariama, 4. A bucket of millet at Sahara's home in Saran Maradi, Niger. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez/CARE)..Sahara Mahama has seven sons and a daughter. She lost four other children; one of them was only 14 days old. "I lost the youngest one during the rains, in the lean season. I didn't have enough to eat." .Eating has become increasingly harder through the years, recalls Sahara. "When I was a kid, we used to have three meals: in the morning, at noon, and in the evening.? However, one meal a day has now become the norm. "It's never guaranteed, but we try." .Sahara participates in CARE's cash-for-work project. With the money she receives, she buys cereal and gives her children two meals per day.
    Slide4-RO.NER.2012.05.0080.triptych....jpg
  • A returnee builds his new home in the outskirts of the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0106.jpg
  • Activity at a bike repair shop in the market of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0082.jpg
  • A woman loads hay onto a donkey, at the grass market in Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0046.jpg
  • Blacksmithing workshop in the market of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0084.jpg
  • Grain for sale is on display at a store in the market of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0075.jpg
  • Children play marbles near the grass market, in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0047.jpg
  • Grain for sale is on display at a store in the market of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0074.jpg
  • General view of the market in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0057.jpg
  • General view of the market in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0054.jpg
  • Women carrying grass on their heads walk across the grass market, in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0040.jpg
  • Participants interact and network at the end of a session of the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 11, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.11.0038.jpg
  • Blacksmithing workshop in the market of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0087.jpg
  • A rickshaw drives across the market in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0068.jpg
  • Trader Mohammed Abdulrahman, from El Muglad (left), gives change to a customer at his hardware store in the market of Abyei. Recent developments in Abyei town are making people settle down. "No one was thinking of using these materials before."
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0061.jpg
  • Trader Mohammed Abdulrahman, from El Muglad (left), gives change to a customer at his hardware store in the market of Abyei. Recent developments in Abyei town are making people settle down. "No one was thinking of using these materials before."
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0060.jpg
  • General view of the market in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0056.jpg
  • A man rides a cow and leads his cattle across the streets of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0052.jpg
  • Clockwise from left: Delou Ibrahim, 70. Her granddaughter Latifa, 8. Delou's hands hold sorrel leaves, used as a condiment, and grains of sorghum at her home in Saran Maradi, Niger. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez/CARE)<br />
<br />
Delou Ibrahim has four children and suffered the loss of nine. She has about 40 grandchildren, 16 of which live with her. <br />
"I've seen several crises. The famine in 1984 was the hardest. Rains were very weak. The stems of millet came out but the spikes gave no grain - nothing," she recalls. "Two years ago at least there were people who harvested millet, but this year the crops have been worse because of the drought and the leaf miners." Delou's last crop was 30kg, which only provided food for about two days.<br />
Delou and her family receive cash from CARE. "I get to buy cereal to feed my family, particularly my grandchildren." They have two daily meals, porridge in the morning and sorghum paste in the evening.
    Slide1-RO.NER.2012.05.0059.triptych....jpg
  • The group Anyim Lac (meaning “The future is wide” in Acholi), during one of their performances in Obolokome, northern Uganda.
    RO.UGA.2008.06.0030.jpg
  • A returnee builds his new home in the outskirts of the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0100.jpg
  • A returnee builds his new home in the outskirts of the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0099.jpg
  • A worker sews clothes at a tailoring workshop in the market of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0080.jpg
  • Trader Mohammed Abdulrahman, from El Muglad (right), examines a light bulb at his hardware store in the market of Abyei. Recent developments in Abyei town are making people settle down. "No one was thinking of using these materials before."
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0067.jpg
  • Trader Mohammed Abdulrahman, from El Muglad (right), owns a hardware store in the market of Abyei. Recent developments in Abyei town are making people settle down. "No one was thinking of using these materials before."
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0058.jpg
  • Map of land resources of the Abyei area.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0033.jpg
  • Clockwise from left: Sakina Moudi (left), 30, and Halima Abdou, 25. Their children Kassoumou (right), 4, and Massaoudou, 10 months. Sakina takes sorghum out of a sack at her home in Saran Maradi, Niger. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez/CARE)..Halima Abdou has five children. Sakina Moudi has six children and suffered the loss of one..Last year they harvested 40kg of cereal. "It only lasted for five days," says Sakina. This year they didn't get any crops. .In the periods without food, their husband collects and sells wood to buy yam flour. Now their husband participates in CARE's cash-for-work project and continues to sell firewood to get additional income. "With this support, we get to eat abundantly," explains Halima. "We buy millet, sorghum, and corn." They serve their children two meals per day, one in the morning and one in the evening.
    Slide2-RO.NER.2012.05.0096.triptych....jpg
  • Trader Mohammed Abdulrahman, from El Muglad (left), gives change to a customer at his hardware store in the market of Abyei. Recent developments in Abyei town are making people settle down. "No one was thinking of using these materials before."
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0063.jpg
  • Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, Coordinator of the Association for Indigenous Women and Peoples of Chad (AFPAT), makes closing remarks at the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 11, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.11.0270.jpg
  • A returnee builds his new home in the outskirts of the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0104.jpg
  • A group of men sits outside a tea shop in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0095.jpg
  • A woman passes by a satellite dish repeating the signal of the mobile phone network in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0094.jpg
  • A trader sells meat in the market of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0091.jpg
  • A rickshaw and a donkey-pulled kart drive across the streets of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0076.jpg
  • A trader counts money at a market stall selling grain in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0072.jpg
  • The owner of a market stall (left) in Abyei poses for a photo. He just returned from Khartoum and opened his shop two weeks ago.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0053.jpg
  • A man rides a cow and leads his cattle across the streets of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0051.jpg
  • Two young men unload poles from a truck at the grass market, in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0041.jpg
  • Mercy Corps' Program Manager JJ Franc de Ferrière (left) and Livelihoods Manager Augustino Sowa show the map of land resources of the Abyei area, produced by their program.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0031.jpg
  • Clockwise from left: Mariama Oumarou, 55. Her granddaughter Rakia, 4. A hand holds grains of corn in Mariama's home in Saran Maradi, Niger. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez/CARE)..Mariama Oumarou has ten children and three grandchildren. Through the years she has lost four children and two grandchildren. She participates in CARE's cash-for-work project. "Not only can we buy millet and sorghum now, but also corn and condiments."
    Slide5-RO.NER.2012.05.0035.triptych....jpg
  • Clockwise from left: Maka Ali, 80. Her granddaughter Maria, 10. Maka's hands hold sorghum at her home in Saran Maradi, Niger. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez/CARE)..Maka Ali has been a widow for twenty years. She has eight children and about twenty grandchildren. She has experienced the loss of six children, four of them at an early age. "I was alone taking care of them, so I cannot say their deaths weren't related to lack of food," Maka recalls..Nobody in her family can work, so she receives a cash transfer from CARE. "When I receive the payment, I buy sorghum and maize," Maka explains. "Before this support, I couldn't; I was eating leaves."
    Slide3-RO.NER.2012.05.0048.triptych....jpg
  • A girl carries a bucket on her head in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0097.jpg
  • The goal keeper kicks off the ball during a football match in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0096.jpg
  • Trader Mohammed Abdulrahman, from El Muglad (right), sells a light bulb to a customer at his hardware store in the market of Abyei. Recent developments in Abyei town are making people settle down. "No one was thinking of using these materials before."
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0065.jpg
  • Water covers the back streets of the town of Abyei, near the grass market.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0036.jpg
  • Latifa, 8, poses for a photograph at her home in Saran Maradi, Niger.<br />
Her grandmother Delou Ibrahim, 70, has four children and suffered the loss of nine. She has about 40 grandchildren, 16 of which live with her. <br />
"I've seen several crises. The famine in 1984 was the hardest. Rains were very weak. The stems of millet came out but the spikes gave no grain - nothing," she recalls. "Two years ago at least there were people who harvested millet, but this year the crops have been worse because of the drought and the leaf miners." Delou's last crop was 30kg, which only provided food for about two days.<br />
Delou and her family receive cash from CARE. "I get to buy cereal to feed my family, particularly my grandchildren." They have two daily meals, porridge in the morning and sorghum paste in the evening.
    RO.NER.2012.05.0064.jpg
  • Blacksmithing workshop in the market of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0086.jpg
  • A worker sews clothes at a tailoring workshop in the market of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0079.jpg
  • General view of the market in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0055.jpg
  • A man sits in the shade, leaning against the materials he is displaying for sale, at the grass market, in Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0045.jpg
  • Delou Ibrahim, 70, poses for a photograph at her home in Saran Maradi, Niger. <br />
Delou Ibrahim has four children and suffered the loss of nine. She has about 40 grandchildren, 16 of which live with her. <br />
"I've seen several crises. The famine in 1984 was the hardest. Rains were very weak. The stems of millet came out but the spikes gave no grain - nothing," she recalls. "Two years ago at least there were people who harvested millet, but this year the crops have been worse because of the drought and the leaf miners." Delou's last crop was 30kg, which only provided food for about two days.<br />
Delou and her family receive cash from CARE. "I get to buy cereal to feed my family, particularly my grandchildren." They have two daily meals, porridge in the morning and sorghum paste in the evening.
    RO.NER.2012.05.0059.jpg
  • Store selling fruits and vegetables in the market of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0092.jpg
  • Blacksmithing workshop in the market of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0088.jpg
  • David Hoyle, Associate Director at Proforest, delivers a presentation about the Africa Palm Oil Initiative at the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 11, 2016. His presentation was about the results and the outlook of the Africa Palm Oil Initiative, the first signature initiative of TFA 2020. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.11.0239.jpg
  • Chris Dragisic (center), Foreign Affairs Officer and REDD+ Focal Point at the U.S. Department of State, asks a question during a session on the Africa Palm Oil Initiative at the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 10, 2016. In these working sessions participants established the 2016-18 strategy for TFA 2020's initiatives in priority countries and regions. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.10.0152.jpg
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