"Hope and Resilience", Photo Exhibit from all actors across the Sahel
While the people in the Sahel are highly resilient, ever more frequent crisis have undermined their coping capacities to manage shocks.
The Photo Exhibition "Hope and Resilience" advocates for a more integrated humanitarian and development response to emergencies that goes beyond immediate life-saving and help build peoples´ resilience. The 18 photos have been taken by different actors working in the Sahel
Mali refugees take part in a traditional sword dance in the Ferrerio camp on the Mali-Burkina
Faso border. Even under the stressful conditions of living in a refugee
camp, the group gathers to watch the dancers perform. CREDIT: CRS
Seidou Sy Fame works long
hours in the community garden to tend crops threatened by drought. The
villagers living in Ganki are struggling to get by due to lack of rain
and rising food prices. CREDIT: Intermon Oxfam
Zenaib Daoud, age 25, lives in
Kassira village in the Guéra region of Chad. She is pictured carrying home food from Oxfam´s distribution. Each family receives 34
kilos of maize, 4-5 kilos of beans, 2.25 litres of oil and 0.37 grams of
salt. CREDIT: Intermon Oxfam
Participants in a Save
the Children garden program at the Integrated health Centre in Aguie in
the Tessaoua region of Niger. CREDIT: Nyani Quarmyne/Save the Children
Burkina Faso / Damba refugee camp / Sixty-two years old Raichatou rests in her shelter while her grandsons and thirty-years-old
daughter play around. She left her village by foot in February with 13
members of her family. Raichatou now feels safe in Burkina Faso and do
not want to return to Mali unless peace prevails again. CREDIT: UNHCR / H. Caux
Beneficiary of Save the Children´s food security program. Zinder, Niger. Save the Children plans to reach 660,000 people in 2012, 10% of the affected population, with an integrated multi-sectoral response – with the aim of preventing and responding early to the food crisis. CREDIT: Alberto Rojas/Save the Children
Soueba Garba and Abou Abdou listen as community outreach volunteer Karima Mani, 25, uses a flipbook to give them information
about child nutrition during a home visit in the village of Moule Sofoua, Niger, March 22, 2012. Preventive interventions are being promoted to reduce the prevalence of malnutrition
and build resiliency so that families are better positioned to
withstand the burden of food and nutrition crisis now and in the future.
Credit: UNICEF Niger/2012/Asselin
Danaya Diarra is growing and
selling vegetables from a WV vegetable garden. Life was difficult, battling to provide for her family and
now the food crisis is making matters worse. But life has improved since WV
taught Diango vegetable production
CREDIT: Worldvision
Children are playing in the Mopti area beside a ECHO supported nutritional center. One of the extreme consequences of lost resilience and sliding into extreme poverty is malnutrition. In rural areas in the Sahel, chronic malnutrition easily reach 50% of the children, with irreversible consequences on their growth and development. Credit ECHO/Claire Barrault
Poor farmers are watering
their gardening with calabash. Improving access to small scale
irrigation increases production at household level and diversify source
of income. It increases resilience for the poorest. Credit ECHO/ Claire
Barrault
Women returning home with bags of improved millet and green bean seeds at an FAO distribution center in Niger. Protecting and reconstructing capacities is one of the key activities to build resilience, ensuring continued food production.CREDIT: Issouf Sanogo/ FAO
Abalak, Niger- FAO provides emergency assistance to small herders affected by the crisis to protect surviving livestock thus securing their livelihood assets. This is the first step to safeguard and strengthen their resilience CREDIT: Issouf Sanogo/ FAO
Forty-year-old Zerga and
her family have lived in Djabal refugee camp in Eastern Chad for the
last six years. Her youngest son was born in the camp, but she hopes
that one day they can go home to their native Darfur and she can show
him where he comes from. CREDIT: Pierre Peron, OCHA
This old woman is an
internally displaced person in Koloma, a camp in Eastern Chad for people
who fled violent attacks from the Sudanese Janjaweed militia. Like many
other displaced people, she isn't just a victim or a beneficiary of assistance. To help her grand-daughter and her family survive, she spends her afternoons breaking rocks to make gravel, which sells at $3 a bag. CREDIT:Pierre Peron, OCHA
A tree provides shelter from
the beating sun during a meeting between UN staff and returnees in
Borota, Eastern Chad. After a return to relative stability and peace in
the area, people left the camps for internally displaced people to come
home and rebuild their lives. This community now has less access to
clean water, healthcare, and education than they did in the camps, but here they have their fields. CREDIT: Pierre Peron, OCHA
A child waits with his bowl
for millet outside the cereal bank in Niger. The millet is ground into
porridge once daily, which is the only meal for most families in
Tillaberi. Nevertheless, she has hope, goes to school and sees a future for herself CREDIT: Plan International
A teacher and students in a
classroom, Tillabéri, Niger. Classrooms are quiet these days as many
children have dropped out of school to help gather firewood and dung for
fuel, or have simply migrated to other places in search of food.
CREDIT: Plan International
In Niger, WFP Food for Work projects are helping affected communities to build a hunger-free future. Under WFP’s Food for Work programme, food is provided to participants in community-based activities in order to build resilience against future droughts. CREDIT:WFP
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