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Jean Chung

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32 images Created 20 Aug 2018

Water Crisis in the World 2005~2015

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  • Afghan women walk with their water jars and containers on their heads in Gardez, Paktia Province, Afghanistan on Friday, March 30, 2007. In Afghanistan, a land-locked country with decades of war and armed conflict, access to an improved water source is among the lowest in the world. According to a National Risk and Vulnerability Survey, only 42% of rural dwellers had access to an improved water source as of 2010. About three quarters of Afghans live in rural areas. In urban areas, an estimated 78% had access to an improved water source. Access to an improved water source does not mean that the water is safe to drink.
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  • A house girl fetch the rain water dropped from the roof in Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo.
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  • Boys play around the central water pipe in Bishkek, Kyrgizstan.
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  • A girl reaches out to a water faucet in a village in Bishkek, Kyrgizstan.
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  • Villagers fetch water in Kabul, Afghanistan.
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  • A boy fetches water from a water pump in Kabul, Afghanistan.
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  • Boys fetch water in Kabul, Afghanistan.
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  • A man fetches water in Kabul, Afghanistan.
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  • A boy walks on a water pipe while rolling a hoop in Lac Vert IDP camp.
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  • Internally displaced people Kibati and Mujoga pass on the water container on the truck which the government's refugee agency had arranged to return them back to their villages from Mugunga I IDP camp.
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  • Children go up and down the lava-filled hill carrying water containers in Himbi neighborhood of Goma.
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  • Villagers play around the water stand, Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo.
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  • A girl stands next to broken the water stand, Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo.
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  • A water stand in an IDP camp, Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo.
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  • Children fetch water from the pump located in ICDI office in PK 11, Bangui.
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  • A woman pulls a rope to fetch the water from a traditional well in the suburb of Bangui, Central African Republic.
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  • Soldiers from former Seleka rebels, who took over the former presidential guard's training camp in Bossembele, help the ICDI mechanical team repair the broken water pump. After the ICDI mechanical team had fixed the broken water pump, the soldiers, both in and without uniforms, feel for the water for the first time since March, 2013.
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  • Residents fetch water from a faucet that was installed by the city government in Bangui. Neighbors pay 15 CFA (about three US cents) per gallon of water, and a family of four or five could spend between 100 to 500 CFA (about 20 cents to 1 US Dollar) a day on water depending on the quantity and the availability of the free, ground water. The faucets are run by the Societe Centralfricaine des Eaux, a government agency.
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  • Children pay fee to the clerk at a water fountain in Bangui. The water costs 15 CFA (about three US cents) per gallon of water, and a family of four or five could spend between 100 to 500 CFA (about 20 cents to 1 US Dollar) a day on water depending on the quantity and the availability of the free, ground water. These fountains are run by the Societe Centralfricaine des Eaux, a government agency.
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  • A boy sells water in plastic bags in Bangui, Central African Republic.
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  • A girl carries a water bucket in a village near Bangui, Central African Republic.
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  • Children fetch water from the water stands inside Mugunga III IDP camp, which is managed and engineered by Yme Grands Lacs with a support of Oxfam UK.
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  • A boy sits on a broken water stand in the outskirt of Goma.
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  • Women fetch water from the water stands inside Mugunga III IDP camp, which is managed and engineered by Yme Grands Lacs with a support of Oxfam UK.
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  • A boy fetches water directly from the Kivu Lake. If the residents come to the lake and fetch the water, they do not pay for the water and a worker from Solidarite will inject a dose of chlorine.
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  • Residents lined up their water containers to the water stand in Katoyi, the outskirt of Goma. The water stands did not provide water for three days as the main pipe that runs from the Munigi reservoir to the neighborhoods of Majengo and Katoyi. People would walk to the Kivu Lake for one hour or bought water from the water sellers for 200 Congolese Franc per 20 Liters.
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  • A girl secures the family's water containers with a piece of cloth as other residents also lined up their containers <br />
to the water stand in Majengo, the outskirt of Goma. The water stands did not provide water for three days as the main pipe that runs from the Munigi reservoir to the neighborhoods of Majengo and Katoyi. People would walk to the Kivu Lake for one hour or bought water from the water sellers for 200 Congolese Franc per 20 Liters.
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  • Child resorts to a few drops of water from a water stand inside Mugunga I IDP camp, where the water supply had stopped from the morning until the afternoon that day.
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  • A boy drinks water as other children and woman fetch water from the water stand inside Mugunga III IDP camp.
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  • A girl readies to carry a water container in which she fetched the water from the city-run water stand next to the Kivu Lake.
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  • A "water seller" pushes his bicycle to sell waters to the residents in Katoyi who did not have access to water for three days due to the malfunction of the water pipe. The water sellers fetch water from the Kivu Lake for free, then push their bicycles to neighborhoods where water stands were broken or have no access for 200 Congolese Franc per 20 Liters of water container.
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  • An IDP woman sprays water on a hot soil in Bangui, Central African Republic.
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