Shelter Projects Photography Competition 2018
The submission period is now closed. Winners for each category have been published on the back cover of the 2017-2018 edition. Scroll down to see the pictures!
Category 1 - Long-term impacts of shelter
Karabo Ntisane, 18, stands in front of her home in Mafateng district, Lesotho. After her father passed away at a very young age and her mother left to find work, Karabo has had to become a parent to her two sisters too young. Lesotho Red Cross has helped roof her house, given her food and supported her with her school fees. This has allowed her to focus on her dreams.
Taken:
Monday, January 1, 2018
An older woman and younger children sit on a hill overlooking the camp’s shelters. Built quickly to provide protection from the weather, much of these makeshift structures still exist with some improvements, as Rohingya refugees still fear to return home. Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh.
Taken:
Wednesday, November 1, 2017
Young sisters stand in their makeshift shelter in a Rohingya displacement camp. They do not leave the shelter without parents or other guardians supervision and so are eager for improvements to be made to their shelter constructed from bamboo and plastic sheeting. Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh.
Taken:
Wednesday, November 1, 2017
Category 2 - Gender, diversity and inclusion
In 2017, Mohammadou, 53, returned to his home in Damasak, northeast Nigeria to find his home burnt down. He fled the Boko Haram crisis in November 2014. For three years, he lived in a refugee camp in Gamari, Niger. His disability prevented him from accessing humanitarian aid as a refugee. In 2018, NRC helped Mohammadou rebuid his home.
Taken:
Tuesday, May 1, 2018
No home was spared when Boko Haram captured Damasak in November 2014. With her husband killed during the attack, Hassana fled with her two children, becoming a refugee in Niger. Unhappy begging on the streets she chose to return home after three years. Hassana now lives in her rehabilitated home. NRC cleared the rubbles, replaced the thatch roof with metal sheets and installed new doors and windows.
Taken:
Tuesday, May 1, 2018
Baba Moses, 39, a refugee from Pabanga village, Central Equatorial State, South Sudan. He arrived in Bidibidi Refugee Settlement, Uganda, on 8th November 2016. Baba was selected by CRS to receive support including a house construction because of disabilities (mental disorder and leg paralysis) that could not enable him to support himself.
Taken:
Sunday, April 1, 2018
Category 3 - Environment and local building cultures
The families in the shelter have garbage dumps for recycling and waste. In the background the volcano of fire that erupted on June 3, 2018 causing the displacement of more than 4,700 people from their homes. Ensuring the welfare of the sheltered does not have to go against the environment.
Taken:
Saturday, December 1, 2018
A local labourer constructs a temporary shelter to house new arrivals who have recently crossed the border into Bangladesh from Myanmar. The shelter will provide a shade for people while they for their starter shelter kits and will provide a place to sleep, as needed.
Taken:
Wednesday, November 1, 2017
After the devastated earthquake 2015, many people has been displaced from there area of origin and some of the IDPs settled in their old place after getting support from government and other international partners. Locals have started their livelihood by building houses for shelter.
Taken:
Tuesday, December 25, 2018
Category 4 - Security of tenure
New Rohingya refugee arrivals are guided by IOM staff while carrying their shelter kits to new areas of the camp which are less crowded. With such a large amount of people arriving in such a short time, the Bangladesh Government temporarily gave land from a forest nature reserve for the displaced communities to live on.
Taken:
Wednesday, November 1, 2017
A Rohingya refugee woman and her young son wait for their details to be taken following their arrival to one of the largest refugee camps in the world. After that, the family with others will be guided to less-crowded areas of the camp which have been agreed upon with the Bangladesh Government since they had temporarily given land from a natural reserve for shelters to be build upon.
Taken:
Wednesday, November 1, 2017