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  • A trader counts money at a market stall selling grain in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0072.jpg
  • Grain for sale is on display at a store in the market of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0075.jpg
  • Grain for sale is on display at a store in the market of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0074.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
  • 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 (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
  • 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
  • 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
  • Community leader Suparjiyem, 49 (left), gets emotional while giving money and other items to Sumikem, 59 (center), a member of farmer's cooperative Menur, in Wareng, Wonosari subdistrict, Gunung Kidul district, Yogyakarta Special Region, Indonesia. Sumikem's husband Rajiman, 63 (right), had a stroke seven years ago.
    RO.OXFAM.IDN.2013.03.1953.jpg
  • "If I was detained, I would not be able to go home. I would be worried about being sent back to my country and having to pay money. Or maybe they would send me to jail for a long time. I would be afraid of punishment."
    Image17_RO.MYS.2013.09.00512.JPG
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Rodrigo Ordóñez Photography

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