Suzanne Lee Photographer

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  • Shugufta, 29, and her husband, goes about their daily lives in their temporary shelter in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0343.jpg
  • Roads and homes wait to be repaired after the devastating floods that decimated Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0257.jpg
  • General views of the mountains and dead trees killed by the month-long floods on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 25th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0652.jpg
  • (Alison Griffin to fill in names) (girl's name) and her siblings talk to Save the Children team members about their losses and the devastation for the floods in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 25th March 2015. Since the flood, she has been widowed, and is left with four young children and no home. Her family now lives in a temporary shelter built using the emergency shelter kit, and continues their recovery with the help of relief kits such as education kit, food basket, hygiene kit and non-food items from Save the Children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0572.jpg
  • (Alison Griffin to fill in names) (mother's name), (girl's name) and her siblings talk to Save the Children team members about their losses and the devastation for the floods in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 25th March 2015. Since the flood, she has been widowed, and is left with four young children and no home. Her family now lives in a temporary shelter built using the emergency shelter kit, and continues their recovery with the help of relief kits such as education kit, food basket, hygiene kit and non-food items from Save the Children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0580.jpg
  • (Alison Griffin to fill in names) (girl's name) and her siblings talk to Save the Children team members about their losses and the devastation for the floods in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 25th March 2015. Since the flood, she has been widowed, and is left with four young children and no home. Her family now lives in a temporary shelter built using the emergency shelter kit, and continues their recovery with the help of relief kits such as education kit, food basket, hygiene kit and non-food items from Save the Children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0577.jpg
  • General views of destroyed properties and dead trees on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 25th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0489.jpg
  • Village men rummage through the rubble of their destroyed properties in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 25th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0508.jpg
  • A sand bank is built on the banks of the river as a broken bridge is seen in Srinagar, the capital of Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 25th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0485.jpg
  • Roads and homes wait to be repaired after the devastating floods that decimated Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0470.jpg
  • Roads and homes wait to be repaired after the devastating floods that decimated Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0466.jpg
  • (L-R) Shugufta's husband carrying their son Zainab, 10 months, Igra, 8, Shugufta, 29, carrying Azra, 5, and Muzamil, 6, as the family poses for a portrait in front of their collapsed house in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0459.jpg
  • Shugufta, 29, tries to clean up her collapsed house as her husband carries their son Zainab, 10 months, while their other children Muzamil, 6, Azra, 5, and Igra, 8, play in front of their temporary shelter in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0430.jpg
  • Shugufta, 29, tries to clean up her collapsed house as her husband carries their son Zainab, 10 months, while their other children Muzamil, 6, Azra, 5, and Igra, 8, play in front of their temporary shelter in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0412.jpg
  • Azra, 5, and Igra, 8, gets ready for a nap in their temporary shelter in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0349.jpg
  • Shugufta, 29 and her husband, goes about their daily lives in their temporary shelter in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0356.jpg
  • Abdul Ahad Ganai and his family stand in front of their collapsed house in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Abdul Ahad Ganai and his family with 5 children was lucky to escape with their lives despite half of his family home collapsing. Save the Children supported the family with emergency shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, education kits and food baskets. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0302.jpg
  • Roads and homes wait to be repaired after the devastating floods that decimated Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0267.jpg
  • Muskaan, 6, holds a small solar lamp from the education kit in her collapsed house in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Muskaan's house was destroyed in the floods forcing her family to move in with relatives. Save the Children supported the family with kitchen items, hygiene kits, food baskets, blankets, a solar powered lamp and education kits for the children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0235.jpg
  • Tasfiya, 16, closes the door as Muskaan, 6, puts on her education kit school bag as she exits her collapsed house in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. The family house was destroyed in the floods forcing them to move in with relatives. Save the Children supported the family with kitchen items, hygiene kits, food baskets, blankets, a solar powered lamp and education kits for the children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0246.jpg
  • (L-R: Muskaan, 6, Hafiza, 10, Amina, 38, Kheshboo, 3 and Tasfiya, 16.) Amina, stands for a portrait with her children in their collapsed house in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Amina's house was destroyed in the floods forcing her to move in with relatives. Save the Children supported them with kitchen items, hygiene kits, food baskets, blankets, a solar powered lamp and education kits for the children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0223.jpg
  • Insha Majid, 12, holds a sign with the message "I was afraid when water came in my house" in her house, in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. The floods happened at night when the banks of the Jhelum river broke, forcing flood-affected families to scramble for higher ground. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0177.jpg
  • Apsa Darifa, 10, holds up a sign with the message " I escaped in a boat", next to her house which was flooded in September in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Apsa had to flee her house in a boat when the floods came. She had no time to take any of her belongings. Save the Children supported her with an education kit to replace the school books she had lost. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0106.jpg
  • Intermittent rain and flood waters continue to water-log many of the villages devastated by floods and landslides last September, as seen here in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Flattened agriculture fields have left many villagers without livelihoods and in debt. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0135.jpg
  • Apsa Darifa, 10, next to her house which was flooded in September in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Apsa had to flee her house in a boat when the floods came. She had no time to take any of her belongings. Save the Children supported her with an education kit to replace the school books she had lost. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0111.jpg
  • Apsa Darifa, 10, holds up a sign with the message " I escaped in a boat", next to her house which was flooded in September in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Apsa had to flee her house in a boat when the floods came. She had no time to take any of her belongings. Save the Children supported her with an education kit to replace the school books she had lost. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0098.jpg
  • The Child-Friendly Space set up by Save the Children in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Save the Children has set up Child-Friendly Spaces (CFS) in many of the affected villages, providing a tented area where children can take emotional shelter and receive psychological first aid as well as continue their education as their homes and schools are being rebuild. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0077.jpg
  • Writings on the inside of the tent wall of the Child-Friendly Space in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Save the Children has set up Child-Friendly Spaces (CFS) in many of the affected villages, providing a tented area where children can take emotional shelter and receive psychological first aid as well as continue their education as their homes and schools are being rebuild. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0062.jpg
  • Writings on the inside of the tent wall of the Child-Friendly Space in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Save the Children has set up Child-Friendly Spaces (CFS) in many of the affected villages, providing a tented area where children can take emotional shelter and receive psychological first aid as well as continue their education as their homes and schools are being rebuild. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0063.jpg
  • Children from flood affected families play and study in the Child-Friendly Space in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Save the Children has set up Child-Friendly Spaces (CFS) in many of the affected villages, providing a tented area where children can take emotional shelter and receive psychological first aid as well as continue their education as their homes and schools are being rebuild. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0029.jpg
  • Maroofa Rashid, 10, whose family was affected by the floods, holds up a sign with the message "I can play here in the Child-Friendly Space" in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Save the Children has set up Child-Friendly Spaces (CFS) in many of the affected villages, providing a tented area where children can take emotional shelter and receive psychological first aid as well as continue their education as their homes and schools are being rebuild. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0013.jpg
  • Journalist Suryatapa Bhattacharya reports in remote Lodha Basti, Manana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012.  Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...jpg
  • Sundar (center, in black), 8-9 years, sits amongst other rag-picker's children in class in the Nai Duniya activity center in remote Lodha Basti, Manana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. Sundar walks 1.5km to and from her rag-picking work each day. Most of these children are rag-pickers themselves. They are now able to go to school from 8-12 in the morning, and study again at the activity center after work at 4pm. A new program to encourage the rag-picker's children to attend school is underway, to keep them from becoming the next generation of rag-pickers in cities. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Mamta (standing, in pink), age unknown, leads the class in learning basic numerics in the Nai Duniya activity center in remote Lodha Basti, Manana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. Most of these children work as rag-pickers. They go to school from 8-12 in the morning, and study again at the activity center after work at 4pm. A new program to encourage the rag-picker's children to attend school is underway, to keep them from becoming the next generation of rag-pickers in cities. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Mamta (standing, in pink), age unknown, leads the class in learning basic numerics in the Nai Duniya activity center in remote Lodha Basti, Manana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. Most of these children work as rag-pickers. They go to school from 8-12 in the morning, and study again at the activity center after work at 4pm. A new program to encourage the rag-picker's children to attend school is underway, to keep them from becoming the next generation of rag-pickers in cities. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Activity center teacher Shiksha Sharma (standing, center) has been teaching the rag-picker's children for 3 months in the Nai Duniya activity center in remote Lodha Basti, Manana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. Most of these children are rag-pickers themselves. They are now able to go to school from 8-12 in the morning, and study again at the activity center after work at 4pm. A new program to encourage the rag-picker's children to attend school is underway, to keep them from becoming the next generation of rag-pickers in cities. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Chandrawati (standing, in black), age unknown, leads the class in learning basic numerics in the Nai Duniya activity center in remote Lodha Basti, Manana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. Most of these children work as rag-pickers. They go to school from 8-12 in the morning, and study again at the activity center after work at 4pm. A new program to encourage the rag-picker's children to attend school is underway, to keep them from becoming the next generation of rag-pickers in cities. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Chandrawati (center, in black), age unknown, sits on the floor amongst other rag-picker's children as they learn basic numerics in the Nai Duniya activity center in remote Lodha Basti, Manana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. Most of these children work as rag-pickers. They go to school from 8-12 in the morning, and study again at the activity center after work at 4pm. A new program to encourage the rag-picker's children to attend school is underway, to keep them from becoming the next generation of rag-pickers in cities. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Chandrawati (center, in black), age unknown, sits on the floor amongst other rag-picker's children as they learn basic numerics in the Nai Duniya activity center in remote Lodha Basti, Manana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. Most of these children work as rag-pickers. They go to school from 8-12 in the morning, and study again at the activity center after work at 4pm. A new program to encourage the rag-picker's children to attend school is underway, to keep them from becoming the next generation of rag-pickers in cities. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Snake charmer Baba Prakash Nath (center, in red & white), 35, sits in a temporary camp of travelling snake charmers from Rajasthan who have pitched camp in remote Lodha Basti, Manana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. "The government banned our trade but didn't give us any alternative options of livelihood," says Baba Prakash Nath. India's traditional snake charmer communities suffer from a loss of livelihood because of stringent wildlife laws and  are forced to resort to begging or working as daily wage labourers. A new program to encourage the snake charmer's children to attend school is underway, to keep them from becoming daily-wage child labourers or joining their parents in scavenging and begging in cities. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Manju Devi, 15, sits in the compounds of her home in Naraina gaon, Titana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. Her late father was a snake charmer and her mother has gone through multiple operations to remove a tumor, so she had to drop out of school to look after her siblings and to contribute to the household income by working as a brick carrier from 8am to 5pm in construction sites for INR 25 (USD 0.45)per day. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Manju Devi, 15, sits in the compounds of her home in Naraina gaon, Titana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. Her late father was a snake charmer and her mother has gone through multiple operations to remove a tumor, so she had to drop out of school to look after her siblings and to contribute to the household income by working as a brick carrier from 8am to 5pm in construction sites for INR 25 (USD 0.45)per day. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Manju Devi, 15, sits in the compounds of her home in Naraina gaon, Titana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. Her late father was a snake charmer and her mother has gone through multiple operations to remove a tumor, so she had to drop out of school to look after her siblings and to contribute to the household income by working as a brick carrier from 8am to 5pm in construction sites for INR 25 (USD 0.45)per day. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Manju Devi, 15, sits in the compounds of her home in Naraina gaon, Titana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. Her late father was a snake charmer and her mother has gone through multiple operations to remove a tumor, so she had to drop out of school to look after her siblings and to contribute to the household income by working as a brick carrier from 8am to 5pm in construction sites for INR 25 (USD 0.45)per day. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Vicky Nath, 11, sits amongst other snake charmer's children in Naraina gaon, Titana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. Vicky dropped out of school for 2 years to work as a domestic help daily-wage labourer but was re-enrolled last year as part of the Nai Duniya program and is in Class 4 now. India's snake charmer communities suffer from a loss of livelihood because of stringent wildlife laws and are forced to resort to begging or working as daily wage labourers. A new program to encourage the snake charmer's children to attend school is underway, to keep them from becoming daily-wage child labourers or joining their parents in scavenging and begging in cities. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Vicky Nath, 11, sits amongst other snake charmer's children in Naraina gaon, Titana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. Vicky dropped out of school for 2 years to work as a domestic help daily-wage labourer but was re-enrolled last year as part of the Nai Duniya program and is in Class 4 now. India's snake charmer communities suffer from a loss of livelihood because of stringent wildlife laws and are forced to resort to begging or working as daily wage labourers. A new program to encourage the snake charmer's children to attend school is underway, to keep them from becoming daily-wage child labourers or joining their parents in scavenging and begging in cities. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Sanjay Kumar, 22, a former snake charmer, holds his snake charming musical instruments, that he now uses in cultural performances (without the snakes), at his home in Naraina gaon, Titana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. "Only during elections does the government pay attention to us," he says. India's snake charmer communities suffer from a loss of livelihood because of stringent wildlife laws and are forced to resort to begging or working as daily wage labourers. A new program to encourage the snake charmer's children to attend school is underway, to keep them from becoming daily-wage child labourers or joining their parents in scavenging and begging in cities. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Sanjay Kumar, 22, a former snake charmer, talks of being a cultural musician at his home in Naraina gaon, Titana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. "Only during elections does the government pay attention to us," he says. India's snake charmer communities suffer from a loss of livelihood because of stringent wildlife laws and are forced to resort to begging or working as daily wage labourers. A new program to encourage the snake charmer's children to attend school is underway, to keep them from becoming daily-wage child labourers or joining their parents in scavenging and begging in cities. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • Kusum Devi (center, in red), 10, sits amongst other snake charmer's children in Naraina gaon, Titana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012.  Kusum walks to and from her school daily, one kilometer away from her village. When she is not schooling, she takes care of her family and their livestock. India's snake charmer communities suffer from a loss of livelihood because of stringent wildlife laws and are forced to resort to begging or working as daily wage labourers. A new program to encourage the snake charmer's children to attend school is underway, to keep them from becoming daily-wage child labourers or joining their parents in scavenging and begging in cities. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • General views of destroyed properties in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 25th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0649.jpg
  • (Alison Griffin to fill in names) (Name) holds the solar lamp as her children hold other emergency kit items inside their temporary shelter in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, as seen here on 25th March 2015. Since the flood, she has been widowed, and is left with four young children and no home. Her family now lives in a temporary shelter built using the emergency shelter kit, and continues their recovery with the help of relief kits such as education kit, food basket, hygiene kit and non-food items from Save the Children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0633.jpg
  • Crumbled bricks lie on top of a Kashmiri carpet amidst destroyed properties in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 25th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0645.jpg
  • (Alison Griffin to fill in names) (L-R) (elde son, mother, younger son, youngest son, and daughter) poses for a family portrait inside their temporary shelter built next to their collapsed home in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 25th March 2015. Since the flood, (mother) has been widowed, and is left with four young children and no home. Her family now lives in a temporary shelter built using the emergency shelter kit, and continues their recovery with the help of relief kits such as education kit, food basket, hygiene kit and non-food items from Save the Children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0624.jpg
  • (Alison Griffin to fill in names) (Name) hugs her education kit inside her temporary shelter in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, as seen here on 25th March 2015. Since the flood, her mother has been widowed, and is left with four young children and no home. Her family now lives in a temporary shelter built using the emergency shelter kit, and continues their recovery with the help of relief kits such as education kit, food basket, hygiene kit and non-food items from Save the Children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0642.jpg
  • (Alison Griffin to fill in names) Save the Children team members talk to flood victims about their losses and the devastation for the floods in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 25th March 2015. Since the flood, she has been widowed, and is left with four young children and no home. Her family now lives in a temporary shelter built using the emergency shelter kit, and continues their recovery with the help of relief kits such as education kit, food basket, hygiene kit and non-food items from Save the Children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0576.jpg
  • (Alison Griffin to fill in names) (mother's name) cleans the temporary shelter as her children study on the floor of the shelter built next to their collapsed home in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 25th March 2015. Since the flood, she has been widowed, and is left with four young children and no home. Her family now lives in a temporary shelter built using the emergency shelter kit, and continues their recovery with the help of relief kits such as education kit, food basket, hygiene kit and non-food items from Save the Children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0597.jpg
  • (Alison Griffin to fill in names) (mother's name) holds a blanket, the only thing she managed to grab as she and her children fled their house during the floods in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 25th March 2015. Since the flood, she has been widowed, and is left with four young children and no home. Her family now lives in a temporary shelter built using the emergency shelter kit, and continues their recovery with the help of relief kits such as education kit, food basket, hygiene kit and non-food items from Save the Children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0564.jpg
  • (Alison Griffin to fill in names) (Name)'s youngest son hugs a brick at the entrance to his three storied house that was severely damaged during the floods in September in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, as seen here on 25th March 2015. Since the flood, she has been widowed, and is left with four young children and no home. Her family now lives in a temporary shelter built using the emergency shelter kit, and continues their recovery with the help of relief kits such as education kit, food basket, hygiene kit and non-food items from Save the Children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0535.jpg
  • (Alison Griffin to fill in names) (Name)'s youngest son walks to his temporary shelter from the skeleton of his three storied house that was severely damaged during the floods in September in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, as seen here on 25th March 2015. Since the flood, she has been widowed, and is left with four young children and no home. Her family now lives in a temporary shelter built using the emergency shelter kit, and continues their recovery with the help of relief kits such as education kit, food basket, hygiene kit and non-food items from Save the Children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0523.jpg
  • (Alison Griffin to fill in names) The solar lamp has been a big help to the (name) family during their time inside their temporary shelter in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, as seen here on 25th March 2015. Since the flood, she has been widowed, and is left with four young children and no home. Her family now lives in a temporary shelter built using the emergency shelter kit, and continues their recovery with the help of relief kits such as education kit, food basket, hygiene kit and non-food items from Save the Children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0552.jpg
  • (Alison Griffin to fill in names) (Name)'s youngest son hugs a brick at the entrance to his three storied house that was severely damaged during the floods in September in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, as seen here on 25th March 2015. Since the flood, she has been widowed, and is left with four young children and no home. Her family now lives in a temporary shelter built using the emergency shelter kit, and continues their recovery with the help of relief kits such as education kit, food basket, hygiene kit and non-food items from Save the Children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0543.jpg
  • A woman squats in the sun amidst destroyed properties on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 25th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0505.jpg
  • (Alison Griffin to fill in names) (Name)'s three storied house was severely damaged during the floods in September in Abikarpora village on the Dal Lake, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India, as seen here on 25th March 2015. Since the flood, she has been widowed, and is left with four young children and no home. Her family now lives in a temporary shelter built using the emergency shelter kit, and continues their recovery with the help of relief kits such as education kit, food basket, hygiene kit and non-food items from Save the Children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150325-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0509.jpg
  • damaged cars pile up in flood waters as homes wait to be repaired after the devastating floods that decimated Srinagar, the capital of Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0481.jpg
  • damaged cars pile up in flood waters as homes wait to be repaired after the devastating floods that decimated Srinagar, the capital of Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0474.jpg
  • Roads and homes wait to be repaired after the devastating floods that decimated Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0468.jpg
  • (L-R) Shugufta's husband carrying their son Zainab, 10 months, Igra, 8, Shugufta, 29, carrying Azra, 5, and Muzamil, 6, as the family poses for a portrait in front of their collapsed house in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0451.jpg
  • Shugufta, 29, tries to clean up her collapsed house as her husband carries their son Zainab, 10 months, while their other children Muzamil, 6, Azra, 5, and Igra, 8, play in front of their temporary shelter in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0439.jpg
  • Shugufta, 29, tries to clean up her collapsed house as her husband carries their son Zainab, 10 months, while their other children Muzamil, 6, Azra, 5, and Igra, 8, play in front of their temporary shelter in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0449.jpg
  • Shugufta, 29, tries to clean up her collapsed house as her husband carries their son Zainab, 10 months, while their other children Muzamil, 6, Azra, 5, and Igra, 8, play in front of their temporary shelter in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0406.jpg
  • L-R: Shugufta, 29, Zainab, 10 months, Muzamil, 6, Azra, 5, and Igra, 8, in their temporary shelter in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0381.jpg
  • L-R: Azra, 5, Igra, 8, and Muzamil, 6, study in their temporary shelter in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0364.jpg
  • Shugufta, 29, plays with Zainab, 10 months, as her other children take a nap in their temporary shelter in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0359.jpg
  • Shugufta, 29, and her husband, goes about their daily lives in their temporary shelter in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0338.jpg
  • L-R: Zainab, 10 months, Shugufta, 29, Shugufta's husband, Azra, 5, Igra, 8, and Muzamil, 6, sit with the relief items in their temporary shelter in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0321.jpg
  • Abdul Ahad Ganai's house is seen here, destroyed by floods, in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Abdul Ahad Ganai and his family with 5 children was lucky to escape with their lives despite half of his family home collapsing. Save the Children supported the family with emergency shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, education kits and food baskets. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0275.jpg
  • Shugufta's house which was destroyed by floods in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0274.jpg
  • Shugufta's house which was destroyed by floods in Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. When the floods hit in the middle of the night, Shugufta and her family had to walk 5 miles to find shelter. Save the Children supported the family with shelter kits, blankets, hygiene items, food and tarpaulin, which they have used to build a temporary shelter next to their crumbled home. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0272.jpg
  • Roads and homes wait to be repaired after the devastating floods that decimated Narbal village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0251.jpg
  • A room with broken windows and still filled with mud from the floods in Amina's collapsed house in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Amina's house was destroyed in the floods forcing her family to move in with relatives. Save the Children supported the family with kitchen items, hygiene kits, food baskets, blankets, a solar powered lamp and education kits for the children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0247.jpg
  • (L-R: Muskaan, 6, Hafiza, 10, Amina, 38, Kheshboo, 3 and Tasfiya, 16.) Amina, stands for a portrait with her children in their collapsed house in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Amina's house was destroyed in the floods forcing her to move in with relatives. Save the Children supported them with kitchen items, hygiene kits, food baskets, blankets, a solar powered lamp and education kits for the children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0216.jpg
  • Amina, 38, holds a solar lamp while carrying her son Kheshboo, 3, in their collapsed house in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Amina's house was destroyed in the floods forcing her to move in with relatives. Save the Children supported them with kitchen items, hygiene kits, food baskets, blankets, a solar powered lamp and education kits for the children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0224.jpg
  • Amina, 38, holds a solar lamp while carrying her son Kheshboo, 3, in their collapsed house in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Amina's house was destroyed in the floods forcing her to move in with relatives. Save the Children supported them with kitchen items, hygiene kits, food baskets, blankets, a solar powered lamp and education kits for the children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0202.jpg
  • Amina, 38, holds a solar lamp while carrying her son Kheshboo, 3, in their collapsed house in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Amina's house was destroyed in the floods forcing her to move in with relatives. Save the Children supported them with kitchen items, hygiene kits, food baskets, blankets, a solar powered lamp and education kits for the children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0192.jpg
  • Intermittent rain and flood waters continue to water-log many of the villages devastated by floods and landslides last September, as seen here in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Flattened agriculture fields have left many villagers without livelihoods and in debt. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0186.jpg
  • Shamima (centre), 35, stands with her son Sajad, 19, and daughter Shokeena, 17,  in front of their temporary shelter built using the Shelter kit given to them by Save the Children, in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Shamina is a widow who's house fell down during the floods. Save the Children supported the family with emergency shelter items like tarpaulin and other emergency relief kits for household, education, non-food items, and food baskets. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0183.jpg
  • Intermittent rain and flood waters continue to water-log many of the villages devastated by floods and landslides last September, as seen here in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Flattened agriculture fields have left many villagers without livelihoods and in debt. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0149.jpg
  • Fozia Nazir, a Humanitarian Field Officer in Save the Children Kashmir, poses for a portrait in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Fozia works 4 days a week in the field. (This is for A day in a life interview) Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0134.jpg
  • Apsa Darifa, 10, holds up a sign with the message " I escaped in a boat", next to her house which was flooded in September in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Apsa had to flee her house in a boat when the floods came. She had no time to take any of her belongings. Save the Children supported her with an education kit to replace the school books she had lost. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0105.jpg
  • Apsa Darifa, 10, holds up a sign with the message " I escaped in a boat", next to her house which was flooded in September in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Apsa had to flee her house in a boat when the floods came. She had no time to take any of her belongings. Save the Children supported her with an education kit to replace the school books she had lost. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0093.jpg
  • The Child-Friendly Space set up by Save the Children in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Save the Children has set up Child-Friendly Spaces (CFS) in many of the affected villages, providing a tented area where children can take emotional shelter and receive psychological first aid as well as continue their education as their homes and schools are being rebuild. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0081.jpg
  • Children from flood affected families play and study in the Child-Friendly Space in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Save the Children has set up Child-Friendly Spaces (CFS) in many of the affected villages, providing a tented area where children can take emotional shelter and receive psychological first aid as well as continue their education as their homes and schools are being rebuild. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0059.jpg
  • Children from flood affected families play and study in the Child-Friendly Space in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Save the Children has set up Child-Friendly Spaces (CFS) in many of the affected villages, providing a tented area where children can take emotional shelter and receive psychological first aid as well as continue their education as their homes and schools are being rebuild. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0053.jpg
  • Children from flood affected families play and study in the Child-Friendly Space in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Save the Children has set up Child-Friendly Spaces (CFS) in many of the affected villages, providing a tented area where children can take emotional shelter and receive psychological first aid as well as continue their education as their homes and schools are being rebuild. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0040.jpg
  • Children from flood affected families play and study in the Child-Friendly Space in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Save the Children has set up Child-Friendly Spaces (CFS) in many of the affected villages, providing a tented area where children can take emotional shelter and receive psychological first aid as well as continue their education as their homes and schools are being rebuild. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0032.jpg
  • Children from flood affected families play and study in the Child-Friendly Space in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Save the Children has set up Child-Friendly Spaces (CFS) in many of the affected villages, providing a tented area where children can take emotional shelter and receive psychological first aid as well as continue their education as their homes and schools are being rebuild. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0023.jpg
  • Shamima, 35, squats in her temporary shelter built using the shelter kit given to her by Save the Children, in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Shamina is a widow who's house fell down during the floods. Save the Children supported the family with emergency shelter items like tarpaulin and other emergency relief kits for household, education, non-food items, and food baskets. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0004.jpg
  • A village woman walks down a muddy road flanked by dead trees in Purnishadashah village, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on 24th March 2015. Nearly 2500 villagers including Srinagar, the capital of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, was devastated by severe floods and landslides in September 2014 the worst in 60 years, displacing millions of people, many of them children. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children
    20150324-SCUK-KashmirFloods-0001.jpg
  • An overview of the Nai Duniya Children's Activity Center in the rag-picker's colony Lodha Basti, in Manana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. Most of the children living here are rag-pickers like the rest of their families. They are now able to go to school from 8-12 in the morning, and study again at the activity center after work at 4pm. A new program to encourage the rag-picker's children to attend school is underway, to keep them from becoming the next generation of rag-pickers in cities. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
  • An overview of the rag-picker's colony Lodha Basti, in Manana village, Samalkha town, Haryana, India on 15th June 2012. Most of the children living here are rag-pickers like the rest of their families. They are now able to go to school from 8-12 in the morning, and study again at the activity center after work at 4pm. A new program to encourage the rag-picker's children to attend school is underway, to keep them from becoming the next generation of rag-pickers in cities. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National
    suzanne20120615-nat-snake-charmers-0...JPG
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