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  • Makol, a worker at the Loreto schools in Maker Kuei, Rumbek, South Sudan, unloads food that forms part of the workers' compensation.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-C208.jpg
  • Aliric Chol, a worker at the Loreto schools in Maker Kuei, Rumbek, South Sudan, unloads food that forms part of the workers' compensation.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-C211.jpg
  • Makol, a worker at the Loreto schools in Maker Kuei, Rumbek, South Sudan, unloads food that forms part of the workers' compensation.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-C210.jpg
  • A man deep frying crackers in a small business in Madurai, a city in Tamil Nadu state in southern India.
    india-2010-jeffrey-G039.jpg
  • A woman deep frying crackers in a small business in Madurai, a city in Tamil Nadu state in southern India.
    india-2010-jeffrey-women-078.jpg
  • Staff of the Loreto schools in Maker Kuei, Rumbek, South Sudan, unload food that forms part of their compensation.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-C207.jpg
  • Staff of the Loreto schools in Maker Kuei, Rumbek, South Sudan, unload food that forms part of their compensation.
    south-sudan-2021-jeffrey-rumbek-C206.jpg
  • People deep frying crackers in a small business in Madurai, a city in Tamil Nadu state in southern India.
    india-2010-jeffrey-G038.jpg
  • Vijaya runs a business manufacturing crackers in which she employs her husband, two sons and a brother. She lives in Madurai, a city in Tamil Nadu state in southern India.
    india-2010-jeffrey-women-079.jpg
  • Vabrah Weekie, 54, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-6...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-6...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-6...jpg
  • Alice Sampea, 32, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-6...jpg
  • Women working on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia where several dozen women are farming cassava. The income-generating project is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Alice Sampea, 32, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women. Behind her is Martha Francis, 53.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Helena B. Mensahn, 37, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Beatrice Sawyedeh, 57, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Marion Zenneh, 23, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Marion Zenneh, 23, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Alice Sampea, 32, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Alice Sampea, 32, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Alice Sampea, 32, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Patience Gonwoe, 19, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Patience Gonwoe, 19, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-3...jpg
  • Beatrice Sawyedeh, 57, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-3...jpg
  • Vivian H. Woah, 30, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-3...jpg
  • Vivian H. Woah, 30, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-3...jpg
  • Felicia Davis, 24, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-3...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-2...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-2...jpg
  • Patience Gonwoe (right), 19, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-2...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-2...jpg
  • Patience Gonwoe, 19, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-2...jpg
  • Vivian H. Woah, 30, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-2...jpg
  • Helena B. Mensahn, 37, and other women prepare the ground for planting on a six-acre farm where several dozen women are farming cassava in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-2...jpg
  • Helena B. Mensahn, 37, and other women prepare the ground for planting on a six-acre farm where several dozen women are farming cassava in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-2...jpg
  • Helena B. Mensahn (left), 37, and other women prepare the ground for planting on a six-acre farm where several dozen women are farming cassava in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-2...jpg
  • Women working on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia where several dozen women are farming cassava. The income-generating project is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-1...jpg
  • Helena B. Mensahn, 37, and other women prepare the ground for planting on a six-acre farm where several dozen women are farming cassava in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-1...jpg
  • Patience Gonwoe, 19, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-1...jpg
  • Vabrah Weekie, 54, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-1...jpg
  • Helena B. Mensahn, 37, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-1...jpg
  • Vabrah Weekie, 54, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-1...jpg
  • Vabrah Weekie (right), 54, and Martha Francis, 53, work with several other women on a six-acre farm where they are growing cassava near Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-1...jpg
  • Patience Gonwoe (left), 19, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-1...jpg
  • Helena B. Mensahn, 37, and other women prepare the ground for planting on a six-acre farm where several dozen women are farming cassava in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-0...jpg
  • Twelve-year old Sara Altaie checks messages on her mobile phone in her family's room in a refugee shelter in Vienna, Austria. While the application of her family for asylum is being considered, the Iraqi family lives in this temporary shelter constructed in a branch of the Erste Bank. <br />
<br />
The shelter is coordinated by Johanniter-Unfall-Hilfe Österreich, a member of the Diakonie network in Austria, which is a member of the ACT Alliance. Some 85 refugees currently live in the former bank, and several bank employees volunteer to assist the refugees sheltered there.
    austria_2015_jeffrey_vienna_bank_12.JPG
  • Twelve-year old Sara Altaie checks messages on her mobile phone in her family's room in a refugee shelter in Vienna, Austria. While the application of her family for asylum is being considered, the Iraqi family lives in this temporary shelter constructed in a branch of the Erste Bank. <br />
<br />
The shelter is coordinated by Johanniter-Unfall-Hilfe Österreich, a member of the Diakonie network in Austria, which is a member of the ACT Alliance. Some 85 refugees currently live in the former bank, and several bank employees volunteer to assist the refugees sheltered there.
    austria_2015_jeffrey_vienna_bank_11.JPG
  • Qotaiba Altaie and his wife Aseel Almash Hadanie pose with their three daughters--Sara 12, Mrwa 11, and Lames 6--in their room in a refugee shelter in Vienna, Austria. While their applications for asylum are being considered, the Iraqi family lives in this temporary shelter constructed in a branch of the Erste Bank. <br />
<br />
The shelter is coordinated by Johanniter-Unfall-Hilfe Österreich, a member of the Diakonie network in Austria, which is a member of the ACT Alliance. Some 85 refugees currently live in the former bank, and several bank employees volunteer to assist the refugees sheltered there.
    austria_2015_jeffrey_vienna_bank_10.JPG
  • Qotaiba Altaie and his wife Aseel Almash Hadanie pose with their three daughters--Sara 12, Mrwa 11, and Lames 6--in their room in a refugee shelter in Vienna, Austria. While their applications for asylum are being considered, the Iraqi family lives in this temporary shelter constructed in a branch of the Erste Bank. <br />
<br />
The shelter is coordinated by Johanniter-Unfall-Hilfe Österreich, a member of the Diakonie network in Austria, which is a member of the ACT Alliance. Some 85 refugees currently live in the former bank, and several bank employees volunteer to assist the refugees sheltered there.
    austria_2015_jeffrey_vienna_bank_09.JPG
  • Itemad Al-Asadi poses with three of her sons in their room in a refugee shelter in Vienna, Austria. While their applications for asylum are being considered, the Iraqi family lives in this temporary shelter constructed in a branch of the Erste Bank. The shelter is coordinated by Johanniter-Unfall-Hilfe Österreich, a member of the Diakonie network in Austria, which is a member of the ACT Alliance. Some 85 refugees currently live in the former bank, and several bank employees volunteer to assist the refugees sheltered there.
    austria_2015_jeffrey_vienna_bank_08.JPG
  • Muhaned Alkaza'ale and his wife Lemia pose with their three children--Abdulah 17, Ali 15, and Mariam 14--in their room in a refugee shelter in Vienna, Austria. While their applications for asylum are being considered, the Iraqi family lives in this temporary shelter constructed in a branch of the Erste Bank. <br />
<br />
"No one can live in Iraq any longer," said Mr. Alkaza'ale, a native of Baghdad. "There are too many problems. There are bombs and killings, and now Daesh says you have to fight for them or they will kill you." [Daesh is generally referred to as ISIS in the west.]<br />
<br />
The shelter is coordinated by Johanniter-Unfall-Hilfe Österreich, a member of the Diakonie network in Austria, which is a member of the ACT Alliance. Some 85 refugees currently live in the former bank, and several bank employees volunteer to assist the refugees sheltered there.
    austria_2015_jeffrey_vienna_bank_07.JPG
  • Samar and her two daughters, Dania, 11, and Maria, 2, pose inside their room in a refugee shelter in Vienna, Austria. While their applications for asylum are being considered, the Iraqi family lives in this temporary shelter constructed in a branch of the Erste Bank. The shelter is coordinated by Johanniter-Unfall-Hilfe Österreich, a member of the Diakonie network in Austria, which is a member of the ACT Alliance. Some 85 refugees currently live in the former bank, and several bank employees volunteer to assist the refugees sheltered there.
    austria_2015_jeffrey_vienna_bank_05.JPG
  • Samar and her two daughters, Dania, 11, and Maria, 2, sit inside their room in a refugee shelter in Vienna, Austria. While their applications for asylum are being considered, the Iraqi family lives in this temporary shelter constructed in a branch of the Erste Bank. The shelter is coordinated by Johanniter-Unfall-Hilfe Österreich, a member of the Diakonie network in Austria, which is a member of the ACT Alliance. Some 85 refugees currently live in the former bank, and several bank employees volunteer to assist the refugees sheltered there.
    austria_2015_jeffrey_vienna_bank_06.JPG
  • Alahmed Falah and his wife Alajrabe Rusol, along with their daughters Noor (left), 4, and Retaj, 3, pose in their room inside a refugee shelter in Vienna, Austria. While their applications for asylum are being considered, the Iraqi family lives in this temporary shelter constructed in a branch of the Erste Bank. The shelter is coordinated by Johanniter-Unfall-Hilfe Österreich, a member of the Diakonie network in Austria, which is a member of the ACT Alliance. Some 85 refugees currently live in the former bank, and several bank employees volunteer to assist the refugees sheltered there.
    austria_2015_jeffrey_vienna_bank_02.JPG
  • Alahmed Falah and his wife Alajrabe Rusol, along with their daughters Noor (left), 4, and Retaj, 3, pose in their room inside a refugee shelter in Vienna, Austria. While their applications for asylum are being considered, the Iraqi family lives in this temporary shelter constructed in a branch of the Erste Bank. The shelter is coordinated by Johanniter-Unfall-Hilfe Österreich, a member of the Diakonie network in Austria, which is a member of the ACT Alliance. Some 85 refugees currently live in the former bank, and several bank employees volunteer to assist the refugees sheltered there.
    austria_2015_jeffrey_vienna_bank_01.JPG
  • President Juan Orlando Hernandez addressed a small rally of supporters in Tegucigalpa. The opposition accuses the government of bussing in their own employees under threat of termination of employment to make a show at events like this. Also, it has been shown that others are bussed in and paid 50 Lempiras and given a mustard sandwich for such events. Consequently, opposition have come to call the supposed supporters of Juan Orlando Hernandez as 'cinquentapeseros' and 'mostazeros' referring to the payment they take.<br />
<br />
Here, the President speak to the crowd on an improvised stage of a rubbish truck.
    Honduras_Hawkey_20190622_825.jpg
  • President Juan Orlando Hernandez addressed a small rally of supporters in Tegucigalpa. The opposition accuses the government of bussing in their own employees under threat of termination of employment to make a show at events like this. Also, it has been shown that others are bussed in and paid 50 Lempiras and given a mustard sandwich for such events. Consequently, opposition have come to call the supposed supporters of Juan Orlando Hernandez as 'cinquentapeseros' and 'mostazeros' referring to the payment they take.<br />
<br />
Here, the President speak to the crowd on an improvised stage of a rubbish truck.
    Honduras_Hawkey_20190622_630.jpg
  • President Juan Orlando Hernandez addressed a small rally of supporters in Tegucigalpa. The opposition accuses the government of bussing in their own employees under threat of termination of employment to make a show at events like this. Also, it has been shown that others are bussed in and paid 50 Lempiras and given a mustard sandwich for such events. Consequently, opposition have come to call the supposed supporters of Juan Orlando Hernandez as 'cinquentapeseros' and 'mostazeros' referring to the payment they take.
    Honduras_Hawkey_20190622_465-2.jpg
  • President Juan Orlando Hernandez addressed a small rally of supporters in Tegucigalpa. The opposition accuses the government of bussing in their own employees under threat of termination of employment to make a show at events like this. Also, it has been shown that others are bussed in and paid 50 Lempiras and given a mustard sandwich for such events. Consequently, opposition have come to call the supposed supporters of Juan Orlando Hernandez as 'cinquentapeseros' and 'mostazeros' referring to the payment they take.<br />
<br />
Here, the President speak to the crowd on an improvised stage of a rubbish truck.
    Honduras_Hawkey_20190622_492.jpg
  • At the peak of the Ebola outbreak in Guinea, the Nongo Ebola treatment centre had so many patients arriving at its gates that people were left to die on the gravel outside. <br />
“One night, 28 people died here. I still have nightmares, I saw too many dead people,” said Dr Mohammed Keita, manager of the centre where he was in charge of 250 employees.  <br />
The former Ebola treatment centre appears abandoned. Boot stands and shelves once filled with protective gear and chlorine spray backpacks lie empty.  <br />
Keita tells how one night a pregnant woman came in to the centre. She was already bleeding and very ill. It was too late to save her. She gave birth to a baby girl before she died. <br />
“That little baby was blessed by God,” he said, pointing to a photo of the child taped to the wall where patient records and lists of staff mark the wall. <br />
She tested positive for Ebola and we were prepared to lose her as well. Then, a few days later, she tested negative for the disease. We all looked after her here, naming her Nubia after one of the health workers who worked at the centre.<br />
Since the Ebola outbreak ended, the treatment centre is now caring for people with other infectious diseases including measles, yellow fever and other diseases with potential to cause epidemics.
    Guinea_Hawkey_Ebola_WHO_20170503_422.jpg
  • At the peak of the Ebola outbreak in Guinea, the Nongo Ebola treatment centre had so many patients arriving at its gates that people were left to die on the gravel outside. <br />
“One night, 28 people died here. I still have nightmares, I saw too many dead people,” said Dr Mohammed Keita, manager of the centre where he was in charge of 250 employees.  <br />
The former Ebola treatment centre appears abandoned. Boot stands and shelves once filled with protective gear and chlorine spray backpacks lie empty.  <br />
Keita tells how one night a pregnant woman came in to the centre. She was already bleeding and very ill. It was too late to save her. She gave birth to a baby girl before she died. <br />
<br />
“That little baby was blessed by God,” he said, pointing to a photo of the child taped to the wall where patient records and lists of staff mark the wall. <br />
<br />
She tested positive for Ebola and we were prepared to lose her as well. Then, a few days later, she tested negative for the disease. We all looked after her here, naming her Nubia after one of the health workers who worked at the centre.<br />
Since the Ebola outbreak ended, the treatment centre is now caring for people with other infectious diseases including measles, yellow fever and other diseases with potential to cause epidemics.
    Guinea_Hawkey_Ebola_WHO_20170503_376.jpg
  • Chhandrasekar (right) stands with his employees in a motorcycle repair shop he owns in Ottiyambakkam, a village in the state of Tamil Nadu in southern India..
    india-2010-jeffrey-G076.jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-6...jpg
  • Women working on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia where several dozen women are farming cassava. The income-generating project is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-6...jpg
  • A woman prepares the ground for planting on a six-acre farm where several dozen women are farming cassava in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Marion Zenneh, 23, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Vabrah Weekie, 54, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Vabrah Weekie, 54, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Patience Gonwoe, 19, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Patience Gonwoe, 19, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Patience Gonwoe, 19, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-3...jpg
  • Patience Gonwoe, 19, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-3...jpg
  • Beatrice Sawyedeh, 57, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-3...jpg
  • Felicia Davis, 24, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-3...jpg
  • Esther Davis, 45, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-3...jpg
  • Helena B. Mensahn, 37, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-2...jpg
  • Patience Gonwoe, 19, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-1...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, prepares the ground for planting on a six-acre farm where several dozen women are farming cassava in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-1...jpg
  • Patience Gonwoe, 19, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-0...jpg
  • Vivian H. Woah (left), 30, and Martha Francis, 53, prepare the ground for planting on a six-acre farm where several dozen women are farming cassava in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-0...jpg
  • Women prepare the ground for planting on a six-acre farm where several dozen women are farming cassava in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-0...jpg
  • Access to the Guarani's traditional land has been cut off by the Spanish company Repsol, which is extracting natural gas from the Bolivian jungle and sending it to Brasil. Many local indigenous are outraged by the loss of their land and what they claim are violations of their rights and culture by Repsol employees.
    bolivia-2007-jeffrey-chaco-06.jpg
  • Samar helps her daughter Maria, 2, get dressed inside their room in a refugee shelter in Vienna, Austria. While their applications for asylum are being considered, the Iraqi family lives in this temporary shelter constructed in a branch of the Erste Bank. The shelter is coordinated by Johanniter-Unfall-Hilfe Österreich, a member of the Diakonie network in Austria, which is a member of the ACT Alliance. Some 85 refugees currently live in the former bank, and several bank employees volunteer to assist the refugees sheltered there.
    austria_2015_jeffrey_vienna_bank_04.JPG
  • Samar changes her 2-year old daughter Maria's diaper inside their room in a refugee shelter in Vienna, Austria. While their applications for asylum are being considered, the Iraqi family lives in this temporary shelter constructed in a branch of the Erste Bank. The shelter is coordinated by Johanniter-Unfall-Hilfe Österreich, a member of the Diakonie network in Austria, which is a member of the ACT Alliance. Some 85 refugees currently live in the former bank, and several bank employees volunteer to assist the refugees sheltered there.
    austria_2015_jeffrey_vienna_bank_03.JPG
  • President Juan Orlando Hernandez addressed a small rally of supporters in Tegucigalpa. The opposition accuses the government of bussing in their own employees under threat of termination of employment to make a show at events like this. Also, it has been shown that others are bussed in and paid 50 Lempiras and given a mustard sandwich for such events. Consequently, opposition have come to call the supposed supporters of Juan Orlando Hernandez as 'cinquentapeseros' and 'mostazeros' referring to the payment they take.<br />
<br />
Here, the President speak to the crowd on an improvised stage of a rubbish truck.
    Honduras_Hawkey_20190622_799.jpg
  • President Juan Orlando Hernandez addressed a small rally of supporters in Tegucigalpa. The opposition accuses the government of bussing in their own employees under threat of termination of employment to make a show at events like this. Also, it has been shown that others are bussed in and paid 50 Lempiras and given a mustard sandwich for such events. Consequently, opposition have come to call the supposed supporters of Juan Orlando Hernandez as 'cinquentapeseros' and 'mostazeros' referring to the payment they take.
    Honduras_Hawkey_20190622_500-2.jpg
  • A box with child-sized body bags at the Nongo Ebola Treatment Centre, Conakry, Guinea. <br />
<br />
At the peak of the Ebola outbreak in Guinea, the Nongo Ebola treatment centre had so many patients arriving at its gates that people were left to die on the gravel outside. <br />
“One night, 28 people died here. I still have nightmares, I saw too many dead people,” said Dr Mohammed Keita, manager of the centre where he was in charge of 250 employees.  <br />
The former Ebola treatment centre appears abandoned. Boot stands and shelves once filled with protective gear and chlorine spray backpacks lie empty.  <br />
<br />
Keita tells how one night a pregnant woman came in to the centre. She was already bleeding and very ill. It was too late to save her. She gave birth to a baby girl before she died. <br />
“That little baby was blessed by God,” he said, pointing to a photo of the child taped to the wall where patient records and lists of staff mark the wall. <br />
<br />
She tested positive for Ebola and we were prepared to lose her as well. Then, a few days later, she tested negative for the disease. We all looked after her here, naming her Nubia after one of the health workers who worked at the centre.<br />
<br />
Since the Ebola outbreak ended, the treatment centre is now caring for people with other infectious diseases including measles, yellow fever and other diseases with potential to cause epidemics.
    Guinea_Hawkey_Ebola_WHO_20170503_384.jpg