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  • (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
  • A group of men sits outside a tea shop in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0095.jpg
  • A local tapper climbs a sugar palm tree to collect sap in East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. Planted around the perimeter of the Samboja Lestari rainforest is a belt of sugar palm trees, which serve both as a protective barrier against fires and as a source of income for local families. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0118.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
  • Verónica, 8 (left), hands some lemons to her aunt Mónica Jiménez.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0192.jpg
  • Indonesian men dressed up as German Waffen-SS soldiers stand in formation during a gathering of re-enactment enthusiasts in Cibubur, East Jakarta, Indonesia.<br />
Members of the 'Niederlande Kampfgruppe' group meet regularly to re-enact battles wearing Nazi Germany military uniforms and produce their own photos and videos. They claim that they do not do this because they identify ideologically with the Nazis, but because they are interested in World War II and military history. According to them, there is historical evidence that at least one Indonesian person was part of the 'Freiwilligen Legion Niederlande', the Dutch arm of the Waffen-SS, during World War II. Similar re-enactment groups exist in several cities across Indonesia, using the uniforms of Dutch, German and Japanese troops.
    RO.IDN.2013.05.0355.jpg
  • An Indonesian man dressed up as a German Waffen-SS soldier lies on the ground pretending to be dead during a gathering of re-enactment enthusiasts in Cibubur, East Jakarta, Indonesia.<br />
Members of the 'Niederlande Kampfgruppe' group meet regularly to re-enact battles wearing Nazi Germany military uniforms and produce their own photos and videos. They claim that they do not do this because they identify ideologically with the Nazis, but because they are interested in World War II and military history. According to them, there is historical evidence that at least one Indonesian person was part of the 'Freiwilligen Legion Niederlande', the Dutch arm of the Waffen-SS, during World War II. Similar re-enactment groups exist in several cities across Indonesia, using the uniforms of Dutch, German and Japanese troops.
    RO.IDN.2013.05.0306.jpg
  • A calf grazes on the banks of the Citarum river in Majalaya district, Bandung regency, Indonesia. The stream is colored with toxic waste dumped by a nearby textile factory. ..The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0021.jpg
  • A local tapper holds a glass filled with freshly collected sap from a sugar palm tree in East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. This liquid can be drunk directly as a juice with high sugar content or processed to produce sugar. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0125.jpg
  • Cars drive through young forests in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0024.jpg
  • Indonesian men dressed up as German Waffen-SS soldiers take positions and pretend to shoot their weapons during a gathering of re-enactment enthusiasts in Cibubur, East Jakarta, Indonesia.<br />
Members of the 'Niederlande Kampfgruppe' group meet regularly to re-enact battles wearing Nazi Germany military uniforms and produce their own photos and videos. They claim that they do not do this because they identify ideologically with the Nazis, but because they are interested in World War II and military history. According to them, there is historical evidence that at least one Indonesian person was part of the 'Freiwilligen Legion Niederlande', the Dutch arm of the Waffen-SS, during World War II. Similar re-enactment groups exist in several cities across Indonesia, using the uniforms of Dutch, German and Japanese troops.
    RO.IDN.2013.05.0271.jpg
  • A returnee builds his new home in the outskirts of the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0106.jpg
  • Karamatjon Yakubova, 73, poses for a photograph at her family compound in Bazar Korgon (Jalal-Abad province, Kyrgyzstan).
    RO.KGZ.2010.11.0125.jpg
  • Students wait for instructions during a practical exercise, part of a leadership training organized by Save the Children in School Kerme-Too (Osh, Kyrgyzstan).
    RO.KGZ.2010.11.0094.jpg
  • View of forests and tree canopies at Samboja Lestari, a reclaimed tropical forest conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0071.jpg
  • Detail of the bark of a 100-year-old Agathis tree (Agathis borneensis), the biggest in Indonesia, at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0084.jpg
  • Indonesian men dressed up as German Waffen-SS soldiers run through a pine forest and simulate combat during a gathering of re-enactment enthusiasts in Cibubur, East Jakarta, Indonesia.<br />
Members of the 'Niederlande Kampfgruppe' group meet regularly to re-enact battles wearing Nazi Germany military uniforms and produce their own photos and videos. They claim that they do not do this because they identify ideologically with the Nazis, but because they are interested in World War II and military history. According to them, there is historical evidence that at least one Indonesian person was part of the 'Freiwilligen Legion Niederlande', the Dutch arm of the Waffen-SS, during World War II. Similar re-enactment groups exist in several cities across Indonesia, using the uniforms of Dutch, German and Japanese troops.
    RO.IDN.2013.05.0319.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
  • A man casts his fishing net in the Citarum river near Cikarees, Bale Endah district, Bandung regency, Indonesia. ..The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0092.jpg
  • View of the Citarum river near Cikarees, Bale Endah district, Bandung regency, Indonesia. Bulldozers have dredged sludge and trash from the riverbed and piled it up on the banks. ..The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0065.jpg
  • A woman washes clothes using water from a well in Majalaya district, Bandung regency, Indonesia. Since residents from this area can no longer use the water from the Citarum river, they must use underground water, which is often contaminated because of filtrations. ..The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0015.jpg
  • Mr Asep, 48, actions a hand pump to fetch water from the well in Kampung Bolero, Dayeuhkolot district, Bandung regency, Indonesia. Since residents from this area can no longer use the water from the Citarum river, they must use underground water, which is often contaminated because of filtrations, or buy bottled water. ..The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0132.jpg
  • Girls wait for their turn to perform during the ceremony to mark the 'first bell', or first day of school, at School 124 in Osh, Kyrgyzstan.
    RO.KGZ.2010.09.026.jpg
  • Indonesian men dressed up as German Waffen-SS soldiers walk towards the parking lot after a gathering of re-enactment enthusiasts in Cibubur, East Jakarta, Indonesia.<br />
Members of the 'Niederlande Kampfgruppe' group meet regularly to re-enact battles wearing Nazi Germany military uniforms and produce their own photos and videos. They claim that they do not do this because they identify ideologically with the Nazis, but because they are interested in World War II and military history. According to them, there is historical evidence that at least one Indonesian person was part of the 'Freiwilligen Legion Niederlande', the Dutch arm of the Waffen-SS, during World War II. Similar re-enactment groups exist in several cities across Indonesia, using the uniforms of Dutch, German and Japanese troops.
    RO.IDN.2013.05.0379.jpg
  • An Indonesian man dressed up as a German Waffen-SS lieutenant addresses soldiers in formation during a gathering of re-enactment enthusiasts in Cibubur, East Jakarta, Indonesia.<br />
Members of the 'Niederlande Kampfgruppe' group meet regularly to re-enact battles wearing Nazi Germany military uniforms and produce their own photos and videos. They claim that they do not do this because they identify ideologically with the Nazis, but because they are interested in World War II and military history. According to them, there is historical evidence that at least one Indonesian person was part of the 'Freiwilligen Legion Niederlande', the Dutch arm of the Waffen-SS, during World War II. Similar re-enactment groups exist in several cities across Indonesia, using the uniforms of Dutch, German and Japanese troops.
    RO.IDN.2013.05.0371.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
  • Visitors walk on an elevated footbridge over the enclosure at the Sun Bear Sanctuary run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation in the Samboja Lestari conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0021.jpg
  • Visitors listen to a briefing at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0102.jpg
  • Justin Adams, Global Managing Director for Lands at The Nature Conservancy, enjoys the panoramic view of forests and tree canopies at the Arsari Lestari conservation area in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0054.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
  • Carlos Tolosa, a resident of Ocho de Mayo, worked in a metallurgic factory until 1989, when the company laid off some of its workers. "We are promised many things but never get anything, only the rich do."<br />
Informal settlements started to appear in the 1980s, coinciding with the end of full employment and the failure of the import substitution and industrialization model adopted by the Argentinean government
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0169.jpg
  • Indonesian men dressed up as German Waffen-SS soldiers run through a pine forest and simulate combat during a gathering of re-enactment enthusiasts in Cibubur, East Jakarta, Indonesia.<br />
Members of the 'Niederlande Kampfgruppe' group meet regularly to re-enact battles wearing Nazi Germany military uniforms and produce their own photos and videos. They claim that they do not do this because they identify ideologically with the Nazis, but because they are interested in World War II and military history. According to them, there is historical evidence that at least one Indonesian person was part of the 'Freiwilligen Legion Niederlande', the Dutch arm of the Waffen-SS, during World War II. Similar re-enactment groups exist in several cities across Indonesia, using the uniforms of Dutch, German and Japanese troops.
    RO.IDN.2013.05.0315.jpg
  • A man drinks mate while leaaning on a window at Caminito street, in La Boca neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina.<br />
Caminito is a pedestrian street created in the late 1950s by local painter Benito Quinquela Martín and other artist friends to recreate a version of the old immigrant neighborhood of La Boca, using wood and corrugated zinc painted in bright colors. Today, Caminito and the surrounding areas feature cafes, souvenir shops, tango dancers and other street performances aimed to attract tourists.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0240.jpg
  • View of balconies and windows decorated with paint in Caminito street, in La Boca neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina.<br />
Caminito is a pedestrian street created in the late 1950s by local painter Benito Quinquela Martín and other artist friends to recreate a version of the old immigrant neighborhood of La Boca, using wood and corrugated zinc painted in bright colors. Today, Caminito and the surrounding areas feature cafes, souvenir shops, tango dancers and other street performances aimed to attract tourists.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0238.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
  • A boy folds his net after fishing in the Citarum river near Cikarees, Bale Endah district, Bandung regency, Indonesia. <br />
<br />
The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0101.jpg
  • Girls ride a bicycle across a small bridge over the polluted waters of one of the distributaries of the Citarum river in Padamulya, Majalaya district, Bandung regency, Indonesia. ..The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0039.jpg
  • General view of the gates marking the entrance to the city of Jalal-Abad, built in 2002, and the equestrian statue of national Kyrgyz hero Kurmanbek Batyr.
    RO.KGZ.2010.11.0140.jpg
  • A boy participates in a relay sack race during the last day of activities at the child-friendly space located in Alim Tepe School (in Osh, Kyrgyzstan), established and supported by Save the Children. The closing celebrations included a sports competition, games and a cake.
    RO.KGZ.2010.09.183.jpg
  • A girl laughs during the ceremony to mark the 'first bell', or first day of school, at School 124 in Osh, Kyrgyzstan.
    RO.KGZ.2010.09.036.jpg
  • Save the Children staff members distribute construction materials to people who lost their homes in the area of Kizil Kishtak (in Osh, Kyrgyzstan).
    RO.KGZ.2010.09.099.jpg
  • A sun bear rests under the shade of a fenced area at the Sun Bear Sanctuary run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation in the Samboja Lestari conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. Sun bears (Helarctos malayanus) are classified as Vulnerable by IUCN, since large-scale deforestation in Southeast Asia has dramatically reduced their natural habitat. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0019.jpg
  • A sun bear sucks a paw, a stress response to human presence, at the Sun Bear Sanctuary run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation in the Samboja Lestari conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. Sun bears (Helarctos malayanus) are classified as Vulnerable by IUCN, since large-scale deforestation in Southeast Asia has dramatically reduced their natural habitat. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0010.jpg
  • Local staff members measure the diameter of a timber tree (Shorea laevis) at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. The plan for the Arsari Lestari conservation area is to preserve the virgin rainforest while creating value for ICTI and local people in a production-protection system that reduces emissions. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0060.jpg
  • A man stands on a jetty near Balikpapan, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0003.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 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
  • A boy peaks out of a window at School SDN 8 Nan Sabaris (Padang Pariaman district, West Sumatra, Indonesia).
    RO.IDN.2010.03.0172.jpg
  • Ocho de Mayo is crisscrossed overhead with electric wires tapping power from the few existing streetlights. The neighborhood lacks a reliable supply of electricity.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0220.jpg
  • Alberto, 9, plays with other children and looks through a hole in the wall of his home in Ocho de Mayo.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0205.jpg
  • Two Indonesian men dressed up as German Waffen-SS soldiers take a break to talk on the phone (left) and sit down during a gathering of re-enactment enthusiasts in Cibubur, East Jakarta, Indonesia.<br />
Members of the 'Niederlande Kampfgruppe' group meet regularly to re-enact battles wearing Nazi Germany military uniforms and produce their own photos and videos. They claim that they do not do this because they identify ideologically with the Nazis, but because they are interested in World War II and military history. According to them, there is historical evidence that at least one Indonesian person was part of the 'Freiwilligen Legion Niederlande', the Dutch arm of the Waffen-SS, during World War II. Similar re-enactment groups exist in several cities across Indonesia, using the uniforms of Dutch, German and Japanese troops.
    RO.IDN.2013.05.0339.jpg
  • A sign indicates that the tango song 'Caminito' was inspired by this place, Caminito street, in La Boca neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina.<br />
Caminito is a pedestrian street created in the late 1950s by local painter Benito Quinquela Martín and other artist friends to recreate a version of the old immigrant neighborhood of La Boca, using wood and corrugated zinc painted in bright colors. Today, Caminito and the surrounding areas feature cafes, souvenir shops, tango dancers and other street performances aimed to attract tourists.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0243.jpg
  • A cat can be seen on Caminito street, in La Boca neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina.<br />
Caminito is a pedestrian street created in the late 1950s by local painter Benito Quinquela Martín and other artist friends to recreate a version of the old immigrant neighborhood of La Boca, using wood and corrugated zinc painted in bright colors. Today, Caminito and the surrounding areas feature cafes, souvenir shops, tango dancers and other street performances aimed to attract tourists.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0231.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
  • 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
  • A boy holds a net with his catch, mostly small catfish, on the banks of the Citarum river near Cikarees, Bale Endah district, Bandung regency, Indonesia. ..The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0071.jpg
  • A small boat lies on sludge and trash by the Citarum river near Cienten, Dayeuhkolot district, Bandung regency, Indonesia. ..The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0161.jpg
  • Detail of the polluted water on a rice paddy in Padamulya, Majalaya district, Bandung regency, Indonesia. ..The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0032.jpg
  • Farmers till the soil of a rice paddy located next to a textile factory and the Citarum river in Sukamaju village, Majalaya district, Bandung regency, Indonesia.. .The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0029.jpg
  • Ms Sriwi Diangsih, 33, bathes her two-month-old baby girl Rahmawati in Kampung Bolero, Dayeuhkolot district, Bandung regency, Indonesia. Since residents from this area can no longer use the water from the Citarum river, they must use underground water, which is often contaminated because of filtrations, or buy bottled water. ..The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0138.jpg
  • A man and his son pick through trash and collect scrap metal by the Citarum river in Kampung Bolero, Dayeuhkolot district, Bandung regency, Indonesia. Sludge and trash dredged from the riverbed is now piled up on the riverbank. ..The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0110.jpg
  • Students discuss in groups during a leadership training organized by Save the Children in School Kerme-Too (Osh, Kyrgyzstan).
    RO.KGZ.2010.11.0098.jpg
  • Construction workers pour concrete for the base foundation of a home supported by Save the Children in Kizil Kishtak (Osh, Kyrgyzstan) with Sulaiman Mountain on the background.
    RO.KGZ.2010.09.108.jpg
  • The acronym SOS is painted on the broken windows of a private hospital in the area of Kizil Kishtak (in Osh, Kyrgyzstan) that was destroyed during the violence that broke out in the city in June 2010.
    RO.KGZ.2010.09.095.jpg
  • Visitors walk up the stairs of a forest fire lookout tower at Samboja Lestari, a reclaimed tropical forest conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. Because of logging and fires, this area used to be covered by grassland vegetation (Imperata cylindrica) but the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation started buying land and replanting local species of tress to bring forests back. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0053.jpg
  • An orangutan eats food provided by the keepers at the sanctuary run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation in the Samboja Lestari conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. This sanctuary offers a natural environment to orangutans that cannot be returned to the wild because of their severe disabilities or because they were raised in captivity and can no longer learn forest skills. Bornean Orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus) are classified as Endangered by IUCN because of the loss of rainforests to agriculture or fires, poaching and the pet trade. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0042.jpg
  • A sun bear rests under the shade of a fenced area at the Sun Bear Sanctuary run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation in the Samboja Lestari conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. Sun bears (Helarctos malayanus) are classified as Vulnerable by IUCN, since large-scale deforestation in Southeast Asia has dramatically reduced their natural habitat. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0016.jpg
  • Panoramic view of forests and tree canopies at the Samboja Lestari conservation area in East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0143.jpg
  • Ishak Yassir (right), Forestry Manager and Co-Founder of Samboja Lestari, briefs visitors at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. The plan for the Arsari Lestari conservation area is to preserve the virgin rainforest while creating value for ICTI and local people in a production-protection system that reduces emissions. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0083.jpg
  • Local staff members measure the diameter of a timber tree (Shorea laevis) at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. The plan for the Arsari Lestari conservation area is to preserve the virgin rainforest while creating value for ICTI and local people in a production-protection system that reduces emissions. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0065.jpg
  • General view of trees at the Arsari Lestari conservation area in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0050.jpg
  • Justin Adams (center), Global Managing Director for Lands at The Nature Conservancy, asks a question during a briefing about the Arsari Lestari conservation area in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. The plan for the Arsari Lestari conservation area is to preserve the virgin rainforest while creating value for ICTI and local people in a production-protection system that reduces emissions. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0046.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
  • An Indonesian man dressed up as a German Waffen-SS sergeant takes a break and smokes a cigarette during a gathering of re-enactment enthusiasts in Cibubur, East Jakarta, Indonesia.<br />
Members of the 'Niederlande Kampfgruppe' group meet regularly to re-enact battles wearing Nazi Germany military uniforms and produce their own photos and videos. They claim that they do not do this because they identify ideologically with the Nazis, but because they are interested in World War II and military history. According to them, there is historical evidence that at least one Indonesian person was part of the 'Freiwilligen Legion Niederlande', the Dutch arm of the Waffen-SS, during World War II. Similar re-enactment groups exist in several cities across Indonesia, using the uniforms of Dutch, German and Japanese troops.
    RO.IDN.2013.05.0292.jpg
  • General view of houses and a rooftop near Caminito street, in La Boca neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina.<br />
Caminito is a pedestrian street created in the late 1950s by local painter Benito Quinquela Martín and other artist friends to recreate a version of the old immigrant neighborhood of La Boca, using wood and corrugated zinc painted in bright colors. Today, Caminito and the surrounding areas feature cafes, souvenir shops, tango dancers and other street performances aimed to attract tourists.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0247.jpg
  • A cat naps on a window advertising a restaurant and tango lessons at Caminito street, in La Boca neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina.<br />
Caminito is a pedestrian street created in the late 1950s by local painter Benito Quinquela Martín and other artist friends to recreate a version of the old immigrant neighborhood of La Boca, using wood and corrugated zinc painted in bright colors. Today, Caminito and the surrounding areas feature cafes, souvenir shops, tango dancers and other street performances aimed to attract tourists.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0245.jpg
  • A poddle reflects the houses of Caminito street, in La Boca neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina.<br />
Caminito is a pedestrian street created in the late 1950s by local painter Benito Quinquela Martín and other artist friends to recreate a version of the old immigrant neighborhood of La Boca, using wood and corrugated zinc painted in bright colors. Today, Caminito and the surrounding areas feature cafes, souvenir shops, tango dancers and other street performances aimed to attract tourists.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0244.jpg
  • People can be seen trhough a photo stand-in at Caminito street, in La Boca neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina.<br />
Caminito is a pedestrian street created in the late 1950s by local painter Benito Quinquela Martín and other artist friends to recreate a version of the old immigrant neighborhood of La Boca, using wood and corrugated zinc painted in bright colors. Today, Caminito and the surrounding areas feature cafes, souvenir shops, tango dancers and other street performances aimed to attract tourists.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0236.jpg
  • A vendor sells curios in Caminito street, in La Boca neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina.<br />
Caminito is a pedestrian street created in the late 1950s by local painter Benito Quinquela Martín and other artist friends to recreate a version of the old immigrant neighborhood of La Boca, using wood and corrugated zinc painted in bright colors. Today, Caminito and the surrounding areas feature cafes, souvenir shops, tango dancers and other street performances aimed to attract tourists.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0234.jpg
  • A returnee builds his new home in the outskirts of the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0100.jpg
  • Boys chase each other and play with mud on the banks of the Citarum river near Cikarees, Bale Endah district, Bandung regency, Indonesia. ..The Citarum river, which runs about 270 kilometers through the province of West Java, is considered to be among the world's dirtiest. Over the last twenty years, the river has been severely polluted by toxic industrial waste, trash and raw sewage. The Citarum is one of the main sources of freshwater for West Java and supplies about 80% of water for Indonesia's capital Jakarta.
    RO.IDN.2012.10.0081.jpg
  • Teenagers read the instructions of a game during a teambuilding exercise in Osh (Kyrgyzstan). This activity gathered students, parents, relatives and teachers from 30 schools in Osh province where Save the Children carries out peace and reconciliation activities.
    RO.KGZ.2010.11.0174.jpg
  • A sun bear rests under the shade of a fenced area at the Sun Bear Sanctuary run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation in the Samboja Lestari conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. Sun bears (Helarctos malayanus) are classified as Vulnerable by IUCN, since large-scale deforestation in Southeast Asia has dramatically reduced their natural habitat. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0028.jpg
  • Metal tag attached to a tree at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0098.jpg
  • Visitors walk at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0086.jpg
  • Visitors join hands around the trunk of a 100-year-old Agathis tree (Agathis borneensis), the biggest in Indonesia, at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. The plan for the Arsari Lestari conservation area is to preserve the virgin rainforest while creating value for ICTI and local people in a production-protection system that reduces emissions. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0079.jpg
  • Ishak Yassir (right), Forestry Manager and Co-Founder of Samboja Lestari, briefs visitors at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. The plan for the Arsari Lestari conservation area is to preserve the virgin rainforest while creating value for ICTI and local people in a production-protection system that reduces emissions. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0071.jpg
  • Sajid Ali, 23, stands for a photograph in Bogor, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on January 7, 2015. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)<br />
Asylum seekers and refugees from Afghanistan and Pakistan have found solace in playing cricket as they wait for the review of their applications, which may take years. Many thought their stay in Asia would be a temporary transit before being resettled to other countries, such as Australia.
    RO.IDN.2016.01.07.0069.jpg
  • A boy steps on a puddle as he runs under the rain through the streets of Ocho de Mayo.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0228.jpg
  • Monument to the Volunteer Firefighter, by Ernesto Scaglia, in Caminito street, in La Boca neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina.<br />
Caminito is a pedestrian street created in the late 1950s by local painter Benito Quinquela Martín and other artist friends to recreate a version of the old immigrant neighborhood of La Boca, using wood and corrugated zinc painted in bright colors. Today, Caminito and the surrounding areas feature cafes, souvenir shops, tango dancers and other street performances aimed to attract tourists.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0246.jpg
  • A bus window reflects the view of Caminito street, in La Boca neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina.<br />
Caminito is a pedestrian street created in the late 1950s by local painter Benito Quinquela Martín and other artist friends to recreate a version of the old immigrant neighborhood of La Boca, using wood and corrugated zinc painted in bright colors. Today, Caminito and the surrounding areas feature cafes, souvenir shops, tango dancers and other street performances aimed to attract tourists.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0242.jpg
  • (From left to right) Sculptures of tango singer Carlos Gardel, Argentinean first lady Eva Perón and footballer Diego Maradona can be seen on a balcony of Caminito street, in La Boca neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina.<br />
Caminito is a pedestrian street created in the late 1950s by local painter Benito Quinquela Martín and other artist friends to recreate a version of the old immigrant neighborhood of La Boca, using wood and corrugated zinc painted in bright colors. Today, Caminito and the surrounding areas feature cafes, souvenir shops, tango dancers and other street performances aimed to attract tourists.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0241.jpg
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