• Wangarang, Casamance, Senegal. The head of a family in Wangarang signs the list of people who are to receive food, presented by a volunteer from the Bignona branch of the Senegalese Red Cross.
    • Wangarang, Casamance, Senegal. The head of a family in Wangarang signs the list of people who are to receive food, presented by a volunteer from the Bignona branch of the Senegalese Red Cross.
      © ICRC / v-p-sn-e-00225
  • Wangarang, Casamance, Senegal. A team from the ICRC and the Senegalese Red Cross present the mandate and activities of the two organizations to the villagers. This is a good time to explain in detail how the supplies will be divided up.
    • Wangarang, Casamance, Senegal. A team from the ICRC and the Senegalese Red Cross present the mandate and activities of the two organizations to the villagers. This is a good time to explain in detail how the supplies will be divided up.
      © ICRC / v-p-sn-e-00227
  • Wangarang, Casamance, Senegal. Women attend the information session. They are the ones in charge of managing the supplies received. Messages are addressed directly to them in order to prevent waste in a time of food crisis.
  • Wangarang, Casamance, Senegal. Before distributing the food and seed, a volunteer from the Bignona branch and a leader from the village of Essom Silathiaye check the lists of beneficiaries as a local resident looks on.
  • Wangarang, Casamance, Senegal. The distribution gets under way: 2,000 tonnes of food and 250 tonnes of seed are distributed to more than 34,000 people in all.
  • Kamomghone, Casamance, Senegal. Beneficiaries from the village of Kamomghone are delighted to receive the eagerly anticipated supplies: rice, peas, oil and salt, as well as seed for rice, groundnut and black-eyed pea crops.
  • Casamance, Senegal. Hope is restored to these women, who have received rice and groundnut seed. They go to work in their fields, uprooting the weeds so the rice plants can flourish.
  • Casamance, Senegal. With the operation a success, it's off to the next stop. The ICRC has been working in Casamance since 2004, where it is attuned to the needs of these communities affected by the armed conflict and recurring natural disasters.

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