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Photo Essays

 

Rachel Palmer / Save the Children
Desperate Food Crisis Threatens Lives in Niger

Niger’s population is desperately short of food and it is children who are bearing the brunt

Rebecca Janes / Save the Children
Baby Tents Support Quake's Youngest Survivors

Save the Children is helping the youngest survivors of Haiti's earthquake

CFS. (Copyright: Laurent Duvilier / Save the Children)
Haitian Children Go Back to School

Save the Children has helped children get back to school after the earthquake in Haiti

CFS. (Copyright: Antonio Bolfo/ Getty for Save the Children)
Education in Emergencies

Save the Children is helping children in Haiti to start or restart school after the earthquake that struck the country in January 12.

Servelo. (Copyright: Robert King / Polaris)
Keeping Children Healthy

Save the Children is actively working to keep Haitian Children healthy after the earthquake that struck the country in January 12.

Shahida. (Copyright: Louise Dyring, International Save the Children Alliance)
Reducing Risks, Saving Lives

Disaster Risk Reduction is the cornerstone of adaptation to our changing climate. Save the Children pioneers child-centred DRR.

20th Anniversary of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child

On November 20, 1989 the United Nations General Assembly adopted the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC). The UNCRC forms the basis of all Save the Children’s work around the world.

Children are the most vulnerable in any emergency

Typhoon Ketsana hit the Philippines on 26 September affecting more than 4 million people. Today more than 200 000 children are in need of support

Save the Children providing a sense of security

While floodwaters caused by Typhoon Ketsana are receding from some areas, many communities in the Metro Manila region remain submerged and isolated.

Communities uprooted by Typhoon Ketsana

While floodwaters caused by Typhoon Ketsana are receding from some areas, many communities in the Metro Manila region remain submerged and isolated.

The Storm Over Vietnam

Save the Children is responding with immediate life saving needs to those families and children affected by Typhoon Ketsana in Vietnam.

Everychild, Everywhere has the Right to an Education

On 18 March, 2009 Save the Children will be participating in a major United Nations General Assembly Debate on education in emergencies.

Save the Children's Commitment to Education in Emergencies

Save the Children is committed to ensuring that a child’s right to education is ensured, even in the most difficult situations.

Zimbabwe: Fleeing to escape desperation

Thousands of children and adults are fleeing Zimbabwe in search a better life in South Africa

Crisis in Gaza
"All wars, just or unjust, are waged against the child." Eglantyne Jebb

Save the Children is calling for a peaceful solution to the current crisis that endangers the lives of nearly every child in Gaza, and the lives of Israeli children in areas subject to attacks.

Girl in Beni, DRC, shows her peace dove
War and Peace: perceptions from children in the Democratic Republic of Congo

As international mediators continue to seek an end to the fighting in the DRC, children in a school in Beni district of northeastern DRC presented to us their paper doves, showing their perceptions of war and their hopes for peace.

fighting intensifies
Save the Children forced to evacuate as fighting intensifies in DRC

With tens of thousands of people on the move in an atmosphere of terror and chaos, many children have become separated from their families and are at risk from armed men on the road

Family Tracing and Reunification
Myanmar 6 Months On: Family Tracing and Reunification

Cyclone Nargis struck Myanmar on the 2 - 3 May 2008. The scale of human loss and suffering was vast. 2.4 million people were severely affected and nearly 140,000 died or are still missing, among which an estimated 55% were children.

It will take more than food to fight this hunger crisis
It will take more than food to fight this hunger crisis

On World Food Day, Save the Children is warning that hundreds of millions of the world’s poorest children, already suffering from severe malnutrition, could face an even bleaker future as developing nations grapple with food, fuel and financial crises – all at the same time.

Min Min
Education offers children like Min Min hope for the future

Min Min, 6, lives in a village surrounded by rice fields and huge trees, his home was destroyed when Cyclone Nagris tore through Myanmar in May this year. Now three months on we return to Min Min we can see how returning to school is helping Min Min overcome the experience of the storm

Livelihoods devastated by Cylone Nagris
Helping families to recover after Cyclone Nagris

Restoring people’s livelihoods after an emergency is essential. It helps to prevent malnutrition, supports the longer term recovery of families and communities, and improves communities’ resilience in the face of future disasters.

Ethiopia Food Crisis. Ethiopia food crisis photo essay (Copyright: Kelley Lynch, International Save the Children Alliance)
Food Crisis in Ethiopia: Children's lives are at risk

A combination of drought and escalating food prices has left 4.6 million people urgently in need of food in Ethiopia. Around 759,000 of these are children under the age of five, a group which is particularly vulnerable to effects of malnutrition such as weight loss and disease.

world refugee day index. world refugee day photoessay index (Copyright: Colin Crowley, International Save the Children Alliance)
Life in Buhimba Camp in Eastern Congo

Welcome to Buhimba camp in Eastern Congo. This camp is the size of a small town. Of the 1.3 million people internally displaced in the country, nearly 12,000 live here. Most fled their homes miles away to come here to safety, but there is still violence and insecurity affecting children's lives.

Continuing support for Bangladesh
Continuing to support the recovery of children affected by Cyclone Sidr

Six months on, we take a look at how children and their families are rebuilding their lives after Cyclone Sidr.

Kenya 8. Kenya photoessay thumbnail (Copyright: Jon Bugge, International Save the Children Alliance)
Thousands of Children at Risk as Kenyan Violence Spreads

Violence continues to affect Kenya's capital, Nairobi, and many towns in the Rift Valley. Save the Children is extremely concerned about the impact of the ongoing fighting on children. It is estimated that at least 150,000 children have been forced to leave their homes.

Moazmbique small. Flooding in Mozambique (Copyright: Grant Lee Neuenberg, Reuters)
Thousands Flee Mozambique Floods

Heavy rains in Zambia, Zimbabwe and Mozambique have caused severe flooding in Mozambique. The flooding has already forced thousands of people in the Zambezi Basin to leave their homes and seek refuge in resettlement camps. More than 30,000 of the displaced are children.

Moazmbique small. Flooding in Mozambique (Copyright: Grant Lee Neuenberg, Reuters)
Flooding in Mozambique

Devastating floods in Mozambique are forcing thousands of families to leave their homes to look for refuge in emergency camps. Save the Children is working closely with local authorities to help all internally displaced victims of the flooding, and to keep the lives of children as normal and as safe as possible.

Photo 6. A morning with young student campaigners in Viet Nam (Copyright: Jack Picone, )
A morning with young student campaigners in Viet Nam

Save the Children's Pariphan Uawithya spends a morning with children at Bo De Primary School in Hanoi, observing their campaign to stop violence against children.

Tsunami - 3 years on. Mahzan, Indonesia (Copyright: Save the Children, International Save the Children Alliance)
Three years on from the Tsunami: Children's road to recovery

Millions of children’s lives were changed by the 2004 earthquake and tsunami. Many thousands of children lost their lives and many surviving children lost one or both parents. Here, parents and children who survived tell their own personal stories.

Madona from Iraq
Madona: A young girl's journey from Iraq to Jordan

Madona, 11, and her parents will soon celebrate the holidays in Jordan, where they were forced to flee from Iraq as a result of violence and repeated threats in their native country. Hear Madona's story and see how education is helping her rewrite her future.

Arriving in Bangladesh
Aid worker diary: Assisting thousands of children affected by Cyclone Sidr

Children in Bangladesh are still at risk after Cyclone Sidr. Save the Children is on the ground working against the clock to get supplies to hundreds of thousands of children and their families. This photo essay shows our work through the eyes of one of our aid workers.

UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
Bangladesh Emergency: Cyclone Sidr

Children in Bangladesh need urgent help after surviving the worst cyclone to hit the country in the past decade. Save the Children has launched an emergency appeal to help families rebuild their lives after their homes and crops were destroyed by Cyclone Sidr.

UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
UN Convention on the Rights of the Child

In 1989 the UN adopted the Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC), outlining the rights and responsibilities of every child and person under the age of 18. See how Save the Children is making children's rights a reality for millions of children around the world.

Rewrite the Future: One Year On
Rewrite the Future: One Year On

One year into our global campaign, we have improved education for 3.4 million children and begun a change for millions more. See the results.

Reuters/Stringer courtesy of alertnet.org
Youth Participation: Agents of Change

On the 12th August we celebrated International Youth Day -- a perfect opportunity to recognise the potential of youth and to celebrate their achievements. This picture gallery is dedicated to young people who have become agents of change.

Reuters/Stringer courtesy of alertnet.org
South Asia Floods

August 2007: 30 million people have been displaced by the floods in areas of India, Bangladesh, Nepal and Pakistan. Families have lost homes, livestock, crops, livelihoods and food supplies, making day-to-day life a struggle and putting tens of thousands of children at risk. (Photo credit: Reuters/Stringer, courtesy of alertnet.org)

Pricilla, 14, dresses her sister, 4. Since they lost both their parents Pricilla does most of the cooking and cleaning, as well as paying for school fees that she struggles to afford. A Save the Children Child Care Forum volunteer referred Pricilla to a social worker who has helping her claim a child welfare grant. Photo: Paul Weinberg/Panos
How we are helping the 13.2 million HIV/AIDS orphans

Every day 1,400 children die from an AIDS-related illness and another 1,800 are newly infected with HIV. Of the 39.5 million people living with HIV and AIDS, 2.3 million are children

An entire generation has lost out on education because of the 20-year conflict in Northern Uganda. Save the Children is pressing Uganda to reverse its educational decline and seeks to secure a quality education for 8 million children in similar situations. (Photo Credit: Anna Kari/Save the Children)
Opening Doors: Looking back at 2006

For over 85 years Save the Children has worked to give children the best possible start in life. Ensuring they have adequate food, shelter, healthcare and education, and are free from violence, abuse and exploitation. These are our key successes and achievements in 2006.