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  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (centre right) is participating to a Skills Development class led by Mr Anil Gulati, (right) Unicef Communication Specialist for Madhya Pradesh, inside the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, is sitting in her family home in Chittawaliya village, rural Sehore. Ritu lives in the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel by her school, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Pupils are having breakfast in the early hours of the morning inside the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, is talking to other pupils during a Skills Development class in the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu lives in the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel by her school, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, is kicking a soccer ball in front of the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (centre) is praying in the early hours of the morning with other pupils in front of the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu lives in the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel by her school, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (second from left) is talking to her roommates inside their dorm in the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, is smiling to her teacher during a class on the roof of the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (top left near ball) is playing in a circle with other pupils in front of the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (centre) is playing Ball Relay with other pupils in front of the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (centre) is throwing a ball towards her classmates while playing Circle Dodgeball in front of the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (centre/right) is sitting with her father, Sanjay, 45, (left) her younger brother, Pawan, 11, and her older sister, Malti, 17, (right) insider their home in Chittawaliya village, rural Sehore,  Ritu lives in the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel by her school, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (left) is walking with her older sister, Malti, 17, (centre) and her younger sister, Shalu, 12, (right) on a road of her village, Chittawaliya, in rural Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India. Ritu lives in the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (front right) is praying in the early hours of the morning with other pupils and Sushila Chourasiya, 53, the assistant warden of the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (centre) is smiling while consuming a meal inside the MS Jamoniya Tank Schhol, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India. Ritu lives in the adjacent Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (fourth in the left line) is celebrating her team's victory in the game of Hurdle Race in front of the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (bottom left) is studying on her bed inside a dorm of the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (centre) is stretching in the early hours of the morning with other pupils in front of the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (centre) is playing the game of Kabaddi in front of the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (right) is holding the hand of her best friend, Aruna, 13, while standing inside the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, is sitting in her family home in Chittawaliya village, rural Sehore, while her mother Mohini, 37, is caressing her hair. Ritu lives in the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel by her school, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • A herder is walking with his animals on a rural road in front of the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (left) is participating to a Skills Development class focusing on drawing, in the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (left) is taking a pot of drinking water inside the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Two girls studying at the MS Jamoniya Tank Schhol, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, are preparing a welcoming Hindu 'rangoli' in the early hours of the morning, in front of the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (centre right) is participating to a Skills Development class focusing on sawing, led by Sushila Chourasiya, 53, the assistant warden of the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, is reading a text while standing in a classroom of the MS Jamoniya Tank Schhol, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India. Ritu lives in the adjacent Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Anita Suresh Kasbe,  41, (centre) the Unicef community facilitator is dancing and singing with the girls attending the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India. Here, Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, (left) she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_22.JPG
  • Yaroslav, 10, is going out with his mother Olga, 36, to use his UNICEF video-camera, near the provisional home where they live as internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_13.JPG
  • Yaroslav, 10, is checking his UNICEF video camera while inside the provisional home where he resides with his mother Olga, 36, as internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_12.JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, (centre) is praying before receiving a meal inside the MS Jamoniya Tank Schhol, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India. Ritu lives in the adjacent Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Ritu Gaur, 13, is Skipping Rope in front of the Jamoniya Tank Girls Hostel, near Sehore, Madhya Pradesh, India, where the Unicef India Sport For Development Project has started in 2012. Covering 313 state-run girls’ hostels and 207 mixed hostels in Madhya Pradesh, the project ensures that children from Scheduled Tribes (ST) and others amongst the poorest people in India, can easily access education and be introduced to sports. Field workers from Unicef also oversee their nutrition and monitor the overall conditions of each pupil.
    Unicef_Sport_For_Development_MP_Indi...JPG
  • Minakshee, 17, (right) one of Mahesh Pandit's older sisters is also a Unicef community facilitator, and she is now helping to run the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_28.JPG
  • Minakshee, 17, (right) one of Mahesh Pandit's older sisters is also a Unicef community facilitator and is helping to run the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_11.JPG
  • Yaroslav, 10, is using his UNICEF video-camera while visiting 'Ukrainian Frontiers', inside a community meeting place in support of internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_22.JPG
  • Yaroslav, 10, ready to go out and use his UNICEF video camera, is standing by the door of the provisional home where he resides with his mother Olga, 36, as internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_04.JPG
  • Yaroslav, 10, is using a UNICEF video camera near the provisional home where he resides with his mother Olga, 36, as internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_01.JPG
  • Anita Suresh Kasbe,  41, (left) the Unicef community facilitator is teaching to the girls - and others - attending the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_26.JPG
  • Anita Suresh Kasbe,  41, the Unicef community facilitator is teaching the girls attending the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_07.JPG
  • Yaroslav, 10, is filming with his UNICEF video camera near the provisional home where he resides with his mother Olga, 36, as internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_16.JPG
  • Yaroslav, 10, is out with his mother Olga, 36, to use his UNICEF video camera, near the provisional home where they live as internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_15.JPG
  • Yaroslav, 10, is going out with his mother Olga, 36, to use his UNICEF video camera, near the provisional home where they live as internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_14.JPG
  • Anita Suresh Kasbe,  41, the Unicef community facilitator is greeting the girls attending the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India. Here, Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, (behind the facilitator) she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_05.JPG
  • Mr Sarujit, 40, (left) project coordinator of the local charity Jago Foundation, whose Karate project is being sponsored by Unicef, is walking among children in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    32_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • People living in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India, are walking past the home of Tabasum Khatun, 14, one of the local girls trained with Karate skills by Unicef.
    06_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Veena Bandyopadhyay, a senior member of the Unicef team in Madhya Pradesh, India, is talking to Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri and to other villagers during a visit to their child reporter project in Hoshangabad, the village district. The project was launched in collaboration with Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_26.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is using a digital camera provided by the project to child reporters. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_16.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is in her home writing on a notebook provided by the project to the various child reporters. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_22.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is interviewing a young villager in her home. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_20.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is preparing herself for the day in her home. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_15.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is preparing herself for the day in her home. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_14.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is washing the dishes helped by her mother in their home. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_05.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is engaging in a meeting and discussion with the project teacher and other young members. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_24.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is engaging in a meeting and discussion with the project teacher and other young members. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_23.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is interviewing a young villager in his home. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_19.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is showing a picture shot with a digital camera provided by the project to child reporters to a woman living in the village. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_18.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is helping her younger brother Narendra Kumar, 9, preparing for school, in their home. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_10.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is eating with her younger brother Narendra Kumar, 9, in their home. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_08.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is bathing her younger brother Narendra Kumar, 9, in their home. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_06.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is serving tea to her brothers, Jitendra Kumar, 11 (right) and Narendra Kumar, 9. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_04.jpg
  • Villagers are reading the children's journal, compiled by Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, and other child reporters. The project was launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_25.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is photographing a young villager on her daily chores with a digital camera provided by the project to child reporters. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_17.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is taking care of the family buffalo in her home. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_13.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is collecting water on a village road. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_12.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is walking her younger brother Narendra Kumar, 9, to school. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_11.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is washing the dishes helped by her mother in their home. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_09.jpg
  • .Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is taking care of her younger brother Narendra Kumar, 9, in their home. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities. .
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_07.jpg
  • . Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is collecting water on a village road. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_02.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is sweeping her home's floor. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities. .
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_01.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is in her home writing on a notebook provided by the project to the various child reporters. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_21.jpg
  • Pooja, 14, a student from the village of Pathpuri, Hoshangabad, Madhya Pradesh, India, taking part to the children's journal, a project launched by Dalit Sangh, an NGO which has been working for the uplift of scheduled castes for the past 22 years, is making Chapatti, a typical Indian bread in her home. Dalit Sangh is working in collaboration with Unicef India to promote education and awareness within backward communities.
    Child_Reporter_MP_India_Alex_Masi_03.jpg
  • Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, (centre) is tidying up some clothes inside her house, before leaving to participate at the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family. Her eldest sister, Minal, 20, (right) came to visit her family, while their father Mahesh Kashinath Pandit, 42, (left) is talking to her.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_21.JPG
  • Marina Rassokha, 50, of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', is discussing some video settings with Yaroslav, 10, and his mother Olga, 36, inside a community meeting place in support of internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_21.JPG
  • Yaroslav, 10, is playing with a small photo/video-recording drone while inside the provisional home where he resides with his mother Olga, 36, as internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_02.JPG
  • Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, (right - next to the door) is participating to the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_25.JPG
  • Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, (centre) is participating to the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_24.JPG
  • Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, is walking around her modest home, before leaving to participate at the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_20.JPG
  • Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, (centre) is washing dishes in front of her home, before leaving to participate at the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_14.JPG
  • Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, (centre) is tidying up some clothes inside her house, before leaving to participate at the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family. Her eldest sister, Minal, 20, (right) came to visit her family, while their father Mahesh Kashinath Pandit, 42, (left) is talking to her.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_12.JPG
  • Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, (centre) is participating to the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_02.JPG
  • Marina Rassokha, 50, of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', is discussing some of the video she just reviewed with Yaroslav, 10, and his mother Olga, 36, inside a community meeting place in support of internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_19.JPG
  • Yaroslav, 10, is playing with some of the parachuted paper rockets he has built, while in the provisional home where he resides with his mother Olga, 36, as internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_10.JPG
  • Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, is completing her school homework before leaving to participate at the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_18.JPG
  • Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, (centre) is pouring some rice to be cooked for lunch before leaving to participate at the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_15.JPG
  • Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, (centre) is grabbing a pot to begin cooking lunch for her father, before leaving to participate at the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_13.JPG
  • Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, (centre) is walking towards the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_09.JPG
  • Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, (left) is participating to the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_06.JPG
  • Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, (centre) is sitting insider her home tiding her hair, just before attending the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_04.JPG
  • Using a computer, Marina Rassokha, 50, of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', is reviewing some video made by Yaroslav, 10, while inside a community meeting place in support of internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_20.JPG
  • With his mother Olga, 36, Yeroslav, 10, (left) is showing his photo/video-recording drone to a young friend, inside a community meeting place in support of internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_17.JPG
  • Yaroslav, 10, is playing with a small photo/video-recording drone while in the kitchen of the provisional home where he resides with his mother Olga, 36, as internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_11.JPG
  • Yaroslav, 10, is washing dishes in the kitchen of the provisional home where he resides with his mother Olga, 36, as internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_09.JPG
  • Yaroslav, 10, is playing with a remote-controlled car while sitting on the floor of the provisional home where he resides with his mother Olga, 36, as internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_08.JPG
  • Using a computer, Marina Rassokha, 50, (left) of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', is reviewing some video made by Yaroslav, 10, as his mother Olga, 36, is overlooking while inside a community meeting place in support of internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_07.JPG
  • Yaroslav, 10, is watching one of his YouTube videos, about how to put out a fire, while inside the provisional home where he resides with his mother Olga, 36, as internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_06.JPG
  • Yaroslav, 10, is using the computer next to his mother Olga, 36, inside the provisional home where they reside as internally displaced persons. (IDPs) Yeroslav is taking part to the UNICEF-sponsored One Minute Junior project for internally displaced persons (IDPs), carried out by the local NGO 'Ukrainian Frontiers' in the city of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest, in the east. The conflict between Ukrainian army and Russia-backed separatists nearby, in the Donbass region, have left more than 10000 dead since April 2014, including over 1000 since the shaky Minsk II ceasefire came into effect in February 2015. The approximate number of people displaced by the conflict is 1.4 million as of August 2015. Yeroslav’s mother, Olga, is also a participant to a different project of 'Ukrainian Frontiers', called 'Self-Employment', first as a beneficiary, and now as a paid hotline coordinator for people seeking jobs and formation courses.
    Ukraine_Unicef_Video_Feb2016_03.JPG
  • Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, is completing her school homework before leaving to participate at the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_19.JPG
  • Mayuri Mahesh Pandit, 13, (right) is peeling potatoes inside her house, before leaving to participate at the Unicef-run 'Deepshikha Prerika' project inside the Milind Nagar Pipeline Area, an urban slum on the outskirts of Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, where she resides with her family. Her father, Mahesh Kashinath Pandit, 42, (left) is helping her with the food preparation.
    UNICEF_Project_India_Mumbai_2013_17.JPG
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