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DUK10033623_006
NEWS - New York: Sudanesische Aktivisten fordern Intervention von UNO
August 11, 2016 - New York, NY, United States - South Sudanese demonstrators hold signs while rallying in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza. On the same day that the United Nations Security Council held closed-door consultations on the ongoing conflict in South Sudan and in anticipation that the Council will renew the mandate for its peacekeeping mission there during its meeting on Friday, August 12; several dozen South Sudanese activists, including key North American representatives from the Sudanese People's Liberation Movement in Opposition (SPLM-IO), rallied in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza across from UN Headquarters in New York City to demand immediate intervention by the organization (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10033623_005
NEWS - New York: Sudanesische Aktivisten fordern Intervention von UNO
August 11, 2016 - New York, NY, United States - South Sudanese demonstrators hold signs while rallying in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza. On the same day that the United Nations Security Council held closed-door consultations on the ongoing conflict in South Sudan and in anticipation that the Council will renew the mandate for its peacekeeping mission there during its meeting on Friday, August 12; several dozen South Sudanese activists, including key North American representatives from the Sudanese People's Liberation Movement in Opposition (SPLM-IO), rallied in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza across from UN Headquarters in New York City to demand immediate intervention by the organization (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10033623_004
NEWS - New York: Sudanesische Aktivisten fordern Intervention von UNO
August 11, 2016 - New York, NY, United States - South Sudanese demonstrators hold signs while rallying in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza. On the same day that the United Nations Security Council held closed-door consultations on the ongoing conflict in South Sudan and in anticipation that the Council will renew the mandate for its peacekeeping mission there during its meeting on Friday, August 12; several dozen South Sudanese activists, including key North American representatives from the Sudanese People's Liberation Movement in Opposition (SPLM-IO), rallied in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza across from UN Headquarters in New York City to demand immediate intervention by the organization (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10033623_003
NEWS - New York: Sudanesische Aktivisten fordern Intervention von UNO
August 11, 2016 - New York, NY, United States - South Sudanese demonstrators hold signs while rallying in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza. On the same day that the United Nations Security Council held closed-door consultations on the ongoing conflict in South Sudan and in anticipation that the Council will renew the mandate for its peacekeeping mission there during its meeting on Friday, August 12; several dozen South Sudanese activists, including key North American representatives from the Sudanese People's Liberation Movement in Opposition (SPLM-IO), rallied in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza across from UN Headquarters in New York City to demand immediate intervention by the organization (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10033623_002
NEWS - New York: Sudanesische Aktivisten fordern Intervention von UNO
August 11, 2016 - New York, NY, United States - Pagan Amum (center), former Secretary General of the ruling Sudan Peoples Liberation Movement (SPLM) and now leader of the SPLM-Former Detainees faction, poses for a photo with Miyong Kuon (left) and Reath Muoch (right). On the same day that the United Nations Security Council held closed-door consultations on the ongoing conflict in South Sudan and in anticipation that the Council will renew the mandate for its peacekeeping mission there during its meeting on Friday, August 12; several dozen South Sudanese activists, including key North American representatives from the Sudanese People's Liberation Movement in Opposition (SPLM-IO), rallied in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza across from UN Headquarters in New York City to demand immediate intervention by the organization (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10033623_001
NEWS - New York: Sudanesische Aktivisten fordern Intervention von UNO
August 11, 2016 - New York, NY, United States - South Sudanese demonstrators hold signs while rallying in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza. On the same day that the United Nations Security Council held closed-door consultations on the ongoing conflict in South Sudan and in anticipation that the Council will renew the mandate for its peacekeeping mission there during its meeting on Friday, August 12; several dozen South Sudanese activists, including key North American representatives from the Sudanese People's Liberation Movement in Opposition (SPLM-IO), rallied in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza across from UN Headquarters in New York City to demand immediate intervention by the organization (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_69193139_POL
Action Against Hunger-South Sudan
1/18/2015 - , , South Sudan: Image . 18/01/2015. Internally Displaced Person Nyibel Deng Akol 18 months, suffering from malnutrition after fleeing the Unity State, South Sudan, with her mother, is cared for in a Stabilization Centre run by Action Against Hunger/ACF International, in Malualkon, South Sudan. Nyibel father was killed in the fighting by the rebels.
The first three months of 2015 are critical for South SudanÕs conflict-affected population. The worldÕs youngest nation narrowly avoided famine in 2014 but as the dry season sets in an upscale in violence is expected, bringing with it more mass displacement.
Without urgent humanitarian assistance at scale, 2.5 million people are expected to face a food crisis / emergency between now and March. Food stocks are depleted, markets canÕt function properly. What is available costs more because of demand, but people arenÕt earning because many have had to flee their land/livestock etc with little to no money.
Famine remains a serious threat. Action Against Hunger is a leading international organisation that specialises in treating the most deadly form of malnutrition in young children. The charity is trying to save as many young lives as possible. WeÕll be documenting life in these camps, the food crisis people are facing, and the organisationÕs fight to stop children dying.
(Andrew Parsons / i-Images / Polaris) ///
Action Against Hunger-South Sudan
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_69193153_POL
Action Against Hunger-South Sudan
1/18/2015 - , , South Sudan: Image . 18/01/2015. Internally Displaced Person 2 year old Peter Kom Garang with his mother Nyirou Maluil, Peter is suffering from malnutrition and is being cared for in a Stabilization Centre run by Action Against Hunger, in Malualkon, South Sudan, after fleeing the fighting in Unity State.
The first three months of 2015 are critical for South Sudan?s conflict-affected population. The world?s youngest nation narrowly avoided famine in 2014 but as the dry season sets in an upscale in violence is expected, bringing with it more mass displacement.
Without urgent humanitarian assistance at scale, 2.5 million people are expected to face a food crisis / emergency between now and March. Food stocks are depleted, markets can?t function properly. What is available costs more because of demand, but people aren?t earning because many have had to flee their land/livestock etc with little to no money.
Famine remains a serious threat. Action Against Hunger is a leading international organisation that specialises in treating the most deadly form of malnutrition in young children. The charity is trying to save as many young lives as possible. We?ll be documenting life in these camps, the food crisis people are facing, and the organisation?s fight to stop children dying.
(Andrew Parsons / i-Images / Polaris) ///
Action Against Hunger-South Sudan
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_69193150_POL
Action Against Hunger-South Sudan
1/18/2015 - , , South Sudan: Image . 18/01/2015. Internally Displaced Person 2 year old Peter Kom Garang with his mother Nyirou Maluil, Peter is suffering from malnutrition and is being cared for in a Stabilization Centre run by Action Against Hunger, in Malualkon, South Sudan, after fleeing the fighting in Unity State.
The first three months of 2015 are critical for South Sudan?s conflict-affected population. The world?s youngest nation narrowly avoided famine in 2014 but as the dry season sets in an upscale in violence is expected, bringing with it more mass displacement.
Without urgent humanitarian assistance at scale, 2.5 million people are expected to face a food crisis / emergency between now and March. Food stocks are depleted, markets can?t function properly. What is available costs more because of demand, but people aren?t earning because many have had to flee their land/livestock etc with little to no money.
Famine remains a serious threat. Action Against Hunger is a leading international organisation that specialises in treating the most deadly form of malnutrition in young children. The charity is trying to save as many young lives as possible. We?ll be documenting life in these camps, the food crisis people are facing, and the organisation?s fight to stop children dying.
(Andrew Parsons / i-Images / Polaris) ///
Action Against Hunger-South Sudan
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_69193138_POL
Action Against Hunger-South Sudan
1/17/2015 - , , South Sudan: Image . 17/01/2015. Action Against Hunger/ACF International, South Sudan. Abuk Kuot with her son Garang 3, Aweil Stabilization Centre, South Sudan, Garang is being treated for malnutrition and malaria, The clinic is run by Action Against Hunger. The first three months of 2015 are critical for South SudanÕs conflict-affected population. The worldÕs youngest nation narrowly avoided famine in 2014 but as the dry season sets in an upscale in violence is expected, bringing with it more mass displacement.
Without urgent humanitarian assistance at scale, 2.5 million people are expected to face a food crisis / emergency between now and March. Food stocks are depleted, markets canÕt function properly. What is available costs more because of demand, but people arenÕt earning because many have had to flee their land/livestock etc with little to no money.
Famine remains a serious threat. Action Against Hunger is a leading international organisation that specialises in treating the most deadly form of malnutrition in young children. The charity is trying to save as many young lives as possible. WeÕll be documenting life in these camps, the food crisis people are facing, and the organisationÕs fight to stop children dying. (Andrew Parsons / i-Images / Polaris) for Action Against Hunger ///
Action Against Hunger-South Sudan
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_69193140_POL
Action Against Hunger-South Sudan
1/17/2015 - , , South Sudan: Image . 17/01/2015. Action Against Hunger/ACF International, South Sudan. Avpai Agongi with her 3 year old son Akur Akuer lie on a bed in the Action Against Hunger Aweil Stabilization Centre, South Sudan, her son is being treated for malnutrition. The first three months of 2015 are critical for South SudanÕs conflict-affected population. The worldÕs youngest nation narrowly avoided famine in 2014 but as the dry season sets in an upscale in violence is expected, bringing with it more mass displacement.
Without urgent humanitarian assistance at scale, 2.5 million people are expected to face a food crisis / emergency between now and March. Food stocks are depleted, markets canÕt function properly. What is available costs more because of demand, but people arenÕt earning because many have had to flee their land/livestock etc with little to no money.
Famine remains a serious threat. Action Against Hunger is a leading international organisation that specialises in treating the most deadly form of malnutrition in young children. The charity is trying to save as many young lives as possible. WeÕll be documenting life in these camps, the food crisis people are facing, and the organisationÕs fight to stop children dying. (Andrew Parsons / i-Images / Polaris) for Action Against Hunger ///
Action Against Hunger-South Sudan
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_163075052_EYE
From garrison town to goldrush city: life in Africa's youngest capital
Twenty years ago, Juba, in South Sudan, was a small army settlement. Now, oil money and immigration have turned it into a precarious boomtown - but for many life has never been tougher.
Since April, when war broke out in neighbouring Sudan, more than 6,000 of the country's refugees have arrived in Juba. Most ended up at Gorom, south-west of the city, a camp created years ago to host Ethiopian refugees. Here, food is scarce. Refugees share the little humanitarian assistance they get with some support from the Sudanese community in Juba. The lack of aid has already driven some young people back to Sudan, or even to Libya.
In many ways, Juba tells the story of South Sudan. The country broke away from Sudan in July 2011, after a period of autonomy that started at the end of the second Sudanese civil war (1983-2005). By then, Juba was a small garrison town of the Sudan armed forces (SAF) that had been surrounded for years by the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) rebels, led by John Garang.
The soon-to-be youngest capital city in the world became the centre of a new "goldrush". With oil money flowing into the coffers of a nation that needed to be built from scratch, and the financial backing of western donors, Juba attracted a large influx of well paid humanitarian workers and diplomats, traders, investors and jobseekers from neighbouring Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia and Somalia. They flocked into Juba to claim their share of this new market for imported food and goods, but also for lucrative contracts in services and infrastructure.
From left, President Salva Kiir, Kenyan politician Raila Odinga and vice-presidents Riek Machar and Taban Deng Gai, at the inauguration of the Freedom Bridge in Juba in May 2022
** MORE IMAGES AVAILABLE ON REQUEST **
© Florence Miettaux / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163075049_EYE
From garrison town to goldrush city: life in Africa's youngest capital
Twenty years ago, Juba, in South Sudan, was a small army settlement. Now, oil money and immigration have turned it into a precarious boomtown - but for many life has never been tougher.
Since April, when war broke out in neighbouring Sudan, more than 6,000 of the country's refugees have arrived in Juba. Most ended up at Gorom, south-west of the city, a camp created years ago to host Ethiopian refugees. Here, food is scarce. Refugees share the little humanitarian assistance they get with some support from the Sudanese community in Juba. The lack of aid has already driven some young people back to Sudan, or even to Libya.
In many ways, Juba tells the story of South Sudan. The country broke away from Sudan in July 2011, after a period of autonomy that started at the end of the second Sudanese civil war (1983-2005). By then, Juba was a small garrison town of the Sudan armed forces (SAF) that had been surrounded for years by the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) rebels, led by John Garang.
The soon-to-be youngest capital city in the world became the centre of a new "goldrush". With oil money flowing into the coffers of a nation that needed to be built from scratch, and the financial backing of western donors, Juba attracted a large influx of well paid humanitarian workers and diplomats, traders, investors and jobseekers from neighbouring Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia and Somalia. They flocked into Juba to claim their share of this new market for imported food and goods, but also for lucrative contracts in services and infrastructure.
Women of the fish market in Sherikat district, Juba, South Sudan, 3 August 2023
** MORE IMAGES AVAILABLE ON REQUEST **
© Florence Miettaux / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163075038_EYE
From garrison town to goldrush city: life in Africa's youngest capital
Twenty years ago, Juba, in South Sudan, was a small army settlement. Now, oil money and immigration have turned it into a precarious boomtown - but for many life has never been tougher.
Since April, when war broke out in neighbouring Sudan, more than 6,000 of the country's refugees have arrived in Juba. Most ended up at Gorom, south-west of the city, a camp created years ago to host Ethiopian refugees. Here, food is scarce. Refugees share the little humanitarian assistance they get with some support from the Sudanese community in Juba. The lack of aid has already driven some young people back to Sudan, or even to Libya.
In many ways, Juba tells the story of South Sudan. The country broke away from Sudan in July 2011, after a period of autonomy that started at the end of the second Sudanese civil war (1983-2005). By then, Juba was a small garrison town of the Sudan armed forces (SAF) that had been surrounded for years by the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) rebels, led by John Garang.
The soon-to-be youngest capital city in the world became the centre of a new "goldrush". With oil money flowing into the coffers of a nation that needed to be built from scratch, and the financial backing of western donors, Juba attracted a large influx of well paid humanitarian workers and diplomats, traders, investors and jobseekers from neighbouring Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia and Somalia. They flocked into Juba to claim their share of this new market for imported food and goods, but also for lucrative contracts in services and infrastructure.
Kideng Mary, 19, tea lady in Hai Koweit district, Juba, South Sudan, 3 August 2023
** MORE IMAGES AVAILABLE ON REQUEST **
© Florence Miettaux / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.