Featured here is a selection of images on Uganda.
A displaced Ugandan child takes shelter
from the rain at Olwal camp March 20,
2005 in northern Uganda where some 1.4
million people have been forced from
their homes. The United States is to
contribute $27 million to the UN Food
and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) for
food aid in northern Uganda, Tony Hall,
the U.S. ambassador to FAO, said on
Monday. REUTERS/Radu
Sigheti
REF: GUL04D
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Ugandan children observe medical
procedures at a paediatric section of
Gulu hospital in northern Uganda March
22, 2005. Uganda has been singled out as
the most underreported humanitarian
crisis, say Doctors Without Borders
about the country where a bloody 19-year
civil conflict rages on in the north and
more than a million and half people have
been displaced by rebel attacks and
thousands of children live under
constant threat of being kidnapped.
REUTERS/Radu
Sigheti
REF: GUL09DR
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A "night commuter" holds his belonggings
as he waits to go to his dormitory
improvised in tents or empty rooms at
Noe's Arch in Gulu, northern Uganda
March 21, 2005. Rural children who live
in the rural danger zone are called "
night commuters" because they take
refuge at night in the relative safety
of cities to escape abduction by the
cult-like Lord’s Resistance Army,
which has waged a bloody 19-year
insurgency. Eighty percent of its troops
are estimated to be children. REUTERS/
Radu
Sigheti
REF: GUL12D.
%method>
A child holds on to his mother at a
paediatric section of Gulu hospital in
northern Uganda March 22, 2005. Uganda
has been singled out as the most
underreported humanitarian crisis, say
Doctors Without Borders about the
country where a bloody 19-year civil
conflict rages on in the north and more
than a million and half people have been
displaced by rebel attacks and thousands
of children live under constant threat
of being kidnapped. REUTERS/Radu
Sigheti
REF: GUL08D
%method>
Internally displaced women walk in the
rain for food distribution at Olwal camp
March 21, 2005 in northern Uganda where
some 1.4 million people have been forced
from their homes. The United States is
to contribute $27 million to the UN Food
and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) for
food aid in northern Uganda, Tony Hall,
the U.S. ambassador to FAO, said on
Monday. REUTERS/Radu
Sigheti
REF: GUL01D
%method>
A woman carries casawa on her head at
the internally displaced people camp at
Awoo in northern Uganda March 22, 2005.
Uganda has been singled out as the most
underreported humanitarian crisis, say
Doctors Without Borders about the
country where a bloody 19-year civil
conflict rages on in the north and more
than a million and half people have been
displaced by rebel attacks and thousands
of children live under constant threat
of being kidnapped. REUTERS/Radu
Sigheti
REF: GUL07D
%method>
Girls "night commuters" wait to go to
their dormitory improvised in tents or
empty rooms at Noe's Arch in Gulu,
northern Uganda March 21, 2005. Rural
children who live in the rural danger
zone are called "night commuters"
because they take refuge at night in the
relative safety of cities to escape
abduction by the cult-like Lord’s
Resistance Army, which has waged a
bloody 19-year insurgency. Eighty
percent of its troops are estimated to
be children. REUTERS/Radu
Sigheti
REF: GUL12D
%method>
"Night commuters" prepare to sleep on
the floor of a dormitory improvised in a
tent at Noe's Arch in Gulu, northern
Uganda March 21, 2005. Rural children
who live in the rural danger zone are
called "night commuters" because they
take refuge at night in the relative
safety of cities to escape abduction by
the cult-like Lord’s Resistance
Army, which has waged a bloody 19-year
insurgency. Eighty percent of its troops
are estimated to be children. REUTERS/
Radu
Sigheti
REF: GUL17D
%method>
A child cries as a nurse measures his
weight at the paediatric section of Gulu
hospital in northern Uganda March 22,
2005. Uganda has been singled out as the
most underreported humanitarian crisis,
say Doctors Without Borders about the
country where a bloody 19-year civil
conflict rages on in the north and more
than a million and half people have been
displaced by rebel attacks and thousands
of children live under constant threat
of being kidnapped. REUTERS/Radu
Sigheti
REF: GUL11D
%method>
A internally displaced Ugandan mother
carries bags with beans, maize and
cabbage seeds received from the Ugandan
Red Cross at Aromo camp near Lira in
northern Uganda March 29, 2005. Nineteen
years of fighting between the government
and guerrillas from the cult-like Lord's
Resistance Army (LRA) have uprooted 1.6
million people in the north. REUTERS/
Hudson
Apunyo
REF: NAI03D
%method>
"Night commuter" girls prepare to sleep
in a dormitory improvised at Noe's Arch
in Gulu, northern Uganda March 21, 2005.
Rural children who live in the rural
danger zone are called "night commuters"
because they take refuge at night in the
relative safety of cities to escape
abduction by the cult-like Lord’s
Resistance Army, which has waged a
bloody 19-year insurgency. Eighty
percent of its troops are estimated to
be children. REUTERS/Radu
Sigheti
REF: GUL14D
%method>
A displaced Ugandan woman covers herself
with an empty bag as she waits in the
rain for food distribution at Olwal camp
in northern Uganda March 21, 2005.
Ugandan rebels have killed, kidnapped
and mutilated dozens of civilians in the
north, where the rainy season is
bringing fears of fresh atrocities, aid
workers and residents said. Nineteen
years of fighting between the government
and guerrillas from the cult-like Lord's
Resistance Army (LRA) have uprooted 1.6
million people in the north. Since the
failure of talks in December, one of the
world's most neglected conflicts appears
to be intensifying. Picture taken March
21, 2005. REUTERS/Radu
Sigheti
REF: NAI06D
%method>
Internally displaced Ugandans receive
beans, maize and cabbage seeds from the
Ugandan Red Cross at Aromo camp near
Lira in northern Uganda March 29, 2005.
Nineteen years of fighting between the
government and guerrillas from the cult-
like Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) have
uprooted 1.6 million people in the north.
REUTERS/Hudson
Apunyo
REF: NAI02D
%method>
A "night commuter" girl lifts her hand
to receive a blanket in a dormitory
improvised at Noe's Arch in Gulu,
northern Uganda March 21, 2005. Rural
children who live in the rural danger
zone are called "night commuters"
because they take refuge at night in the
relative safety of cities to escape
abduction by the cult-like Lord’s
Resistance Army, which has waged a
bloody 19-year insurgency. Eighty
percent of its troops are estimated to
be children. REUTERS/Radu
Sigheti
REF: GUL13D
%method>
"Night commuters" prepare to sleep in a
dormitory improvised in a tent at Noe's
Arch in Gulu, northern Uganda March 21,
2005. Rural children who live in the
rural danger zone are called "night
commuters" because they take refuge at
night in the relative safety of cities
to escape abduction by the cult-like
Lord’s Resistance Army, which has
waged a bloody 19-year insurgency.
Eighty percent of its troops are
estimated to be children. REUTERS/Radu
Sigheti
REF: GUL16D
%method>
A displaced Ugandan child takes shelter
from the rain at Olwal camp March 21,
2005 in northern Uganda where some 1.4
million people have been forced from
their homes. The United States is to
contribute $27 million to the UN Food
and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) for
food aid in northern Uganda, Tony Hall,
the U.S. ambassador to FAO, said on
Monday. REUTERS/Radu
Sigheti
REF: GUL06D
%method>



