Sean T. Hawkey Photography

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  • Standing crops, particularly of maize and beans, have been lost across Honduras because of the floods caused by hurricanes Eta and iota. Some rotted, some dried out, some sprouted, and the losses will have a huge impact among thousands of subsistence farmers who rely on the crops to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201203_88...jpg
  • Standing crops, particularly of maize and beans, have been lost across Honduras because of the floods caused by hurricanes Eta and iota. Some rotted, some dried out, some sprouted, and the losses will have a huge impact among thousands of subsistence farmers who rely on the crops to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201203_88...jpg
  • Standing crops, particularly of maize and beans, have been lost across Honduras because of the floods caused by hurricanes Eta and iota. Some rotted, some dried out, some sprouted, and the losses will have a huge impact among thousands of subsistence farmers who rely on the crops to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201204_90...jpg
  • Standing crops, particularly of maize and beans, have been lost across Honduras because of the floods caused by hurricanes Eta and iota. Some rotted, some dried out, some sprouted, and the losses will have a huge impact among thousands of subsistence farmers who rely on the crops to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201204_89...jpg
  • Handfuls of beans that have sprouted on in their pods before being harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_68...jpg
  • Handfuls of beans that have sprouted on in their pods before being harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Corn sprouting on the cob before being harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_71...jpg
  • Corn sprouting on the cob before being harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_68...jpg
  • Corn sprouting on the cob before being harvested in Copán. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_71...jpg
  • Santiago Oaxaca, is an indigenous Maya Chortí who lives in Carrizalón, Honduras. Here he checks through some beans salvaged from a ruined harvest, most however are inedible by humans because they sprouted and also have a fungal rot, caused by excessive humidity during the rains that came with hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Coffee trees were destroyed across hundreds of hectares of land that suffered landslides in Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota. Extremely heavy and protracted rainfall also caused widespread dropping of green coffee and the leafs from coffee trees.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_96...jpg
  • Coffee plantations across Honduras suffered extensive damage after hurricanes Eta and Iota. Many farms were damaged by landslides as well as widespread outbreaks of fungal diseases and root rot from flooding.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201204_90...jpg
  • Santiago Oaxaca and Moises Mancía are  indigenous Maya Chortí men who lives in Carrizalón, Honduras. Here they inspect a batch of beans that has been harvested, from a whole year's harvest they say there's enough good beans to make a single meal.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Coffee trees were destroyed across hundreds of hectares of land that suffered landslides in Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota. Extremely heavy and protracted rainfall also caused widespread dropping of green coffee and the leafs from coffee trees.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201208_96...jpg
  • Rice farming in the district of Koinadugu in a remote area of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. <br />
<br />
Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping villages in this area with agricultural trainining to improve farm outputs and with sanitation, clean water supply and post-harvest support to protect harvests.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • Sebastian Cedillos, agricultural technician at FUNDES, a partner of ACT member LWR, inspects a farmers corn field during the current drought. In wide areas across El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua, harvests have been completely destroyed by the drought causing enormous hardship for many thousands of poor subsistence farming families. The drought in this area is believed to be an effect of climate change.
    El _Salvador_Hawkey_drought_20140801...jpg
  • Rice farming in the district of Koinadugu in a remote area of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. <br />
<br />
Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping villages in this area with agricultural trainining to improve farm outputs and with sanitation, clean water supply and post-harvest support to protect harvests.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • Rice farming in the district of Koinadugu in a remote area of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. <br />
<br />
Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping villages in this area with agricultural trainining to improve farm outputs and with sanitation, clean water supply and post-harvest support to protect harvests.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • Rice farming in the district of Koinadugu in a remote area of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. <br />
<br />
Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping villages in this area with agricultural trainining to improve farm outputs and with sanitation, clean water supply and post-harvest support to protect harvests.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • Rice farming in the district of Koinadugu in a remote area of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. <br />
<br />
Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping villages in this area with agricultural trainining to improve farm outputs and with sanitation, clean water supply and post-harvest support to protect harvests.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • Rice farming in the district of Koinadugu in a remote area of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. <br />
<br />
Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping villages in this area with agricultural trainining to improve farm outputs and with sanitation, clean water supply and post-harvest support to protect harvests.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • Rice farming in the district of Koinadugu in a remote area of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. <br />
<br />
Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping villages in this area with agricultural trainining to improve farm outputs and with sanitation, clean water supply and post-harvest support to protect harvests.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • Rice farming in the district of Koinadugu in a remote area of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. <br />
<br />
Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping villages in this area with agricultural trainining to improve farm outputs and with sanitation, clean water supply and post-harvest support to protect harvests.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • Rice farming in the district of Koinadugu in a remote area of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. <br />
<br />
Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping villages in this area with agricultural trainining to improve farm outputs and with sanitation, clean water supply and post-harvest support to protect harvests.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • Rice farming in the district of Koinadugu in a remote area of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. <br />
<br />
Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping villages in this area with agricultural trainining to improve farm outputs and with sanitation, clean water supply and post-harvest support to protect harvests.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • Arnulfo José Espinoza Gonzalez inspects one of dozens of wells that have dried up near San Francisco Libre, Nicaragua. Drought is affecting large areas of Central America. Across Nicaragua hundreds of cattle are dying, wells are drying up and the harvests have failed.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_drought_20140820_01...jpg
  • A bridge at Pueblo Nuevo in northern Nicaragua. Without the hoped-for rains, the bridge hasn't seen any water running under it for many months. The rains just didn't come. In wide areas across Central America harvests have been completely destroyed by the drought causing great hardship for many thousands of poor subsistence farming families. The drought in this area is believed to be an effect of climate change.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_drought_20140811_00...jpg
  • José Alejandro Romero, coffee farmer at Las Marias, Usulután, on his coffee farm. Two years ago he harvested 60 times more than the last two years, because of leaf rust, a fungal disease that has propagated with climate change. Carlos is growing cocoa in this nursery to replace coffee, as cocoa is more resistent to high temperatures and humidity.
    El _Salvador_Hawkey_drought_20140801...jpg
  • Sebastian Cedillos, agricultural technician at FUNDES, a partner of ACT member LWR, inspects a nursery of cocoa that is being grown to replace coffee plantations affected by leaf rust in Las Marias, Usulután, El Salvador. Leaf rust has destroyed the productivity of coffee plantations and the income of the coffee farmers in the region.
    El _Salvador_Hawkey_drought_20140801...jpg
  • Maria del Cid Aguilar, mother of five, community leader and coffee farmer, on her coffee farm in Las Marias, Usulután, El Salvador. Maria explains that leaf rust has destroyed most of her coffee farm, and she is preparing to plant cocoa alongside it, because it is more resistent to the higher temperatures and humidity that have come with climate change. Climate change adaptation is a serious challenge for organisations working in rural areas.
    El _Salvador_Hawkey_drought_20140801...jpg
  • Rice farming in the district of Koinadugu in a remote area of Kabala province, in northern Sierra Leone, an area heavily affected by the civil war in the 1990s. <br />
<br />
Working with partner Christian Extension Services, World Renew is helping villages in this area with agricultural trainining to improve farm outputs and with sanitation, clean water supply and post-harvest support to protect harvests.
    SierraLeone_Hawkey_WorldRenew_201706...jpg
  • Two girls ride their horses near San Francisco Libre. Drought is affecting large areas of Central America. Across Nicaragua hundreds of cattle are dying, wells are drying up and the harvests have failed.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_drought_20140820_03...jpg
  • Jean Felix Delice helped set up a local development organisation for farmers in the mountains of Léogane, Haiti. His group then joined with another 16 organisations in FOTADEL one of World Renew's strongest partners in Haiti. Jean Felix's organisation, with support from World Renew, works on improving how farmers deal with persistent lack of rain and the impact of drought, and has worked on humanitarian relief and emergency programs to re-establish agricultural production when seeds are lost in failed crops.<br />
<br />
Here Jean Felix works with a scythe cleaning around a young crop of corn.
    Haiti_Hawkey_WorldRenew_20170616_110...jpg
  • People sort through heaps of destroyed furniture in La Planeta, San Pedro Sula, Honduras.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.g crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_47...jpg
  • Dilma Chávez is a small-scale coffee farmer in San Luis Planes, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. She is a member of the Montaña Verde cooperative. “On my farm and my husbands farm we have a lot of fissures on the farm, and some landslides. The roads are badly damaged, some of them you can’t pass. We are having to fix the small roads into the farms ourselves, there’s no help from the government. The coffee is suffering a lot from fungal infections, ojo de gallo, leaf rust, and it’s very hard to control with so much moisture, it will probably spread and gets worse. This year we’ll have a big drop in production, everyone in the coop will suffer, it’s big. And that affects us all economically. And some houses have been affected, in the two villages called El Zapote. We grow most of our own food here, and all those crops have also be affected, the corn, the beans, with so much rain we’ve lost a lot of that too.”
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201207_94...jpg
  • Dilma Chávez is a small-scale coffee farmer in San Luis Planes, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. She is a member of the Montaña Verde cooperative. “On my farm and my husbands farm we have a lot of fissures on the farm, and some landslides. The roads are badly damaged, some of them you can’t pass. We are having to fix the small roads into the farms ourselves, there’s no help from the government. The coffee is suffering a lot from fungal infections, ojo de gallo, leaf rust, and it’s very hard to control with so much moisture, it will probably spread and gets worse. This year we’ll have a big drop in production, everyone in the coop will suffer, it’s big. And that affects us all economically. And some houses have been affected, in the two villages called El Zapote. We grow most of our own food here, and all those crops have also be affected, the corn, the beans, with so much rain we’ve lost a lot of that too.”
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201207_94...jpg
  • In Estanzuelas, Copán, many houses were damaged and crops were destroyed. This village is one of the poorest in the region suffering from malnutrition, serious health problems and overcrowding.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_76...jpg
  • Lourdes Canan Oaxaca, 17, is expecting a baby early in 2021. She lives in an indigenous Maya Chortí village in Copán, Honduras. The double hurricanes of Eta and Iota have destroyed most of the staple crops in the area and she and her family face hunger and malnutrition.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_68...jpg
  • In Estanzuelas, Copán, many houses were damaged by subsidence and landslides and crops were destroyed. This village is one of the poorest in the region suffering from malnutrition, serious health problems and overcrowding.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_76...jpg
  • Lourdes López Vásquez, 16, with her baby Saida, 9 months old. <br />
<br />
“The family was evacuated at midnight, that was during hurricane Eta. We heard thundering noises coming from underground, from inside the mountain” said Lourdes, “We were all evacuated, it was dark, we all felt sad”. Lourdes’ family is one of 60 families affected by the landslide in the village of El Zapote, San Luis Planes, Santa Bárbara. That night six houses were destroyed by a landslide there and another 55 were made unsafe by subsidence, and have now been declared uninhabitable. The region of Santa Bárbara, with steep mountain slopes that are ideal for coffee growing, is particularly prone to landslides. Fairtrade-certified cooperative Montaña Verde is based in San Luis Planes and coop members are all affected by climate change, hurricanes and landslides. Serious problems with access to farms, loss of land, loss of topsoil, washed-out nutrients, the early fall of unripe cherries, leaf drop, root rot, and a proliferation of fungal diseases all affect the producers, as well as the loss of their corn and bean crops that they rely on as their staple food.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_94...jpg
  • A family begins to clear the mud from their house in La Planeta, San Pedro Sula, Honduras.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_60...jpg
  • A woman carries a bag as she walks through mud after hurricane Eta in La Planeta, San Pedro Sula, Honduras.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_33...jpg
  • In Estanzuelas, Copán, many houses were damaged by subsidence and landslides and crops were destroyed. This village is one of the poorest in the region suffering from malnutrition, serious health problems and overcrowding.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_76...jpg
  • Lourdes López Vásquez, 16, with her baby Saida, 9 months old. <br />
<br />
“The family was evacuated at midnight, that was during hurricane Eta. We heard thundering noises coming from underground, from inside the mountain” said Lourdes, “We were all evacuated, it was dark, we all felt sad”. Lourdes’ family is one of 60 families affected by the landslide in the village of El Zapote, San Luis Planes, Santa Bárbara. That night six houses were destroyed by a landslide there and another 55 were made unsafe by subsidence, and have now been declared uninhabitable. The region of Santa Bárbara, with steep mountain slopes that are ideal for coffee growing, is particularly prone to landslides. Fairtrade-certified cooperative Montaña Verde is based in San Luis Planes and coop members are all affected by climate change, hurricanes and landslides. Serious problems with access to farms, loss of land, loss of topsoil, washed-out nutrients, the early fall of unripe cherries, leaf drop, root rot, and a proliferation of fungal diseases all affect the producers, as well as the loss of their corn and bean crops that they rely on as their staple food.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_94...jpg
  • In Estanzuelas, Copán, many houses were damaged by subsidence and landslides and crops were destroyed. This village is one of the poorest in the region suffering from malnutrition, serious health problems and overcrowding.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_76...jpg
  • Following hurricanes Eta and Iota, with widespread damage to housing and crops, a caravan of migrants set off from San Pedro Sula heading north to the US. Honduran authorities, at the behest of the US government, used police and military to block their movement and most were stopped and returned before even arriving at the Guatemala border. Some men went around the border post through the bush to get into Guatemala, but even some of those were quickly returned to Honduras. Migrants reported desperate and unattended situations they were fleeing from.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201210_98...jpg
  • Lourdes López Vásquez, 16, with her baby Saida, 9 months old. <br />
<br />
“The family was evacuated at midnight, that was during hurricane Eta. We heard thundering noises coming from underground, from inside the mountain” said Lourdes, “We were all evacuated, it was dark, we all felt sad”. Lourdes’ family is one of 60 families affected by the landslide in the village of El Zapote, San Luis Planes, Santa Bárbara. That night six houses were destroyed by a landslide there and another 55 were made unsafe by subsidence, and have now been declared uninhabitable. The region of Santa Bárbara, with steep mountain slopes that are ideal for coffee growing, is particularly prone to landslides. Fairtrade-certified cooperative Montaña Verde is based in San Luis Planes and coop members are all affected by climate change, hurricanes and landslides. Serious problems with access to farms, loss of land, loss of topsoil, washed-out nutrients, the early fall of unripe cherries, leaf drop, root rot, and a proliferation of fungal diseases all affect the producers, as well as the loss of their corn and bean crops that they rely on as their staple food.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_94...jpg
  • Lourdes López Vásquez, 16.<br />
<br />
“The family was evacuated at midnight, that was during hurricane Eta. We heard thundering noises coming from underground, from inside the mountain” said Lourdes, “We were all evacuated, it was dark, we all felt sad”. Lourdes’ family is one of 60 families affected by the landslide in the village of El Zapote, San Luis Planes, Santa Bárbara. That night six houses were destroyed by a landslide there and another 55 were made unsafe by subsidence, and have now been declared uninhabitable. The region of Santa Bárbara, with steep mountain slopes that are ideal for coffee growing, is particularly prone to landslides. Fairtrade-certified cooperative Montaña Verde is based in San Luis Planes and coop members are all affected by climate change, hurricanes and landslides. Serious problems with access to farms, loss of land, loss of topsoil, washed-out nutrients, the early fall of unripe cherries, leaf drop, root rot, and a proliferation of fungal diseases all affect the producers, as well as the loss of their corn and bean crops that they rely on as their staple food.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_94...jpg
  • Maria holds her son Isaac under the overpass at Chamelecón, along with hundreds of others her house was washed away and she lost all her belongings.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_23...jpg
  • Maria holds her son Isaac under the overpass at Chamelecón, along with hundreds of others her house was washed away and she lost all her belongings.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_05...jpg
  • Santos Noelia Interiano is an indigenous  Maya-Chortí woman who lives in Carrizalón, Copán, Honduras. CASM works with this community that has lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop, after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Santos Noelia Interiano is an indigenous  Maya-Chortí woman who lives in Carrizalón, Copán, Honduras. CASM works with this community that has lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop, after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Beatriz Interiano, 14, is a Maya Chortí indigenous girl. CASM works with the indigenous Maya Chortí communities in Copán who have lost approximately 90% of their bean crop and about half their maize crop after heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, leaving them without the basic food they need to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_65...jpg
  • A failed crop of corn that died from lack of water, near Nacaome, southern Honduras.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Choluteca_20170223_3...jpg
  • A Cambodia farmer tends her crop.
    Cambodia_Hawkey_World_Renew_2015_b_0...jpg
  • Young women bathe in the Guapinol river, Colón. Members of the Guapinol community have been criminalised and imprisoned for protesting against a massive mining operation that affects the river.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201203_89...jpg
  • Juana Zuniga, Guapinol, partner of José Abelino Cedillo, one of the men who has been in prison for 15 months for protesting against the mining company in Guapinol.<br />
<br />
"The struggle we have here is in defence of this lovely river. The mining company Los Pinares ha been causing damage here since 2018. We began our struggle when we couldn't use the water from this river for seven months, it's essential for this community. This river provides the water for more than 3,000 people in the community... We began our struggle, a non-violent struggle, we wanted to recover our river as when the mining company started work the water turned into thick chocolatey substance that even the animals didn't want to drink. It was sad, we had to start buying large bottles of water. But some people didn't have the money to do that, we suffered seven months with water like that. Thank God, the water is clean again, but the flow is reduced, we don't know what the mine is doing to make that happen. For us, water is life, it is eveything. We have eight men in prison in Olanchito, without any evidence against them, we want them back, and we want the mining company to leave."
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201203_86...jpg
  • A pregnant young woman on her bicycle in Dos Bocas, Santa Rosa de Aguán, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201202_82...jpg
  • Mabel Córdoba, 17, runs a small shop in Las Lomas, Santa Rosa de Aguán, Honduras. 50 people were killed and washed out to sea in hurricane Mitch here, people were better prepared this time and there were no fatalities in the village. No written parental consent.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201202_82...jpg
  • Leslie Gómez, Dos Bocas, Santa Rosa de Aguán, Honduras<br />
<br />
"At about 11 at night, the water was rising quickly from the creek. We had to et out quickly, or we'd have drowned. We couldn't take anything with us... look at the house, how it's all damaged... when we left the water was already up to here [she puts her hand up to her chest]"
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201202_82...jpg
  • Flor Alvarado with her daughter Yosaris Fabiola, they live in Cabanas, Copan, Honduras. Their family takes part in a CASM-supported project on food security.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_77...jpg
  • Flor Alvarado with her daughter Yosaris Fabiola, they live in Cabanas, Copan, Honduras. Their family takes part in a CASM-supported project on food security.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_77...jpg
  • Maria Macaria Martinez, 14, Carrizalón
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_73...jpg
  • Santos Raymunda Oaxaca is an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman who lives in Carrizalón, Copán, Honduras. She is part of a women's programme with CASM and uses permaculture techniques to farm chickens, fish and vegetables in an integrated system. Chicken manure feeds the fish below, and the waste from the fish is fertilizer for the vegetables.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_68...jpg
  • Lourdes Canan Oaxaca, 17, is expecting a baby early in 2021.She lives in Carrizalón, Copan, Honduras. Her community works with CASM on food security issues and has recently been badly affected by the loss of harvest because of hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_67...jpg
  • Lourdes Canan Oaxaca, 17, is expecting a baby early in 2021.She lives in Carrizalón, Copan, Honduras. Her community works with CASM on food security issues and has recently been badly affected by the loss of harvest because of hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_67...jpg
  • Santos Raymunda Oaxaca is an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman who lives in Carrizalón, Copán, Honduras. She is part of a women's programme with CASM and uses permaculture techniques to farm chickens, fish and vegetables in an integrated system. Chicken manure feeds the fish below, and the waste from the fish is fertilizer for the vegetables.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_66...jpg
  • Santos Raymunda Oaxaca is an indigenous Maya-Chortí woman who lives in Carrizalón, Copán, Honduras. She is part of a women's programme with CASM and uses permaculture techniques to farm chickens, fish and vegetables.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • Digna Maribel Mejía, Los Puentes, living in a shelter because the floods from hurricanes Eta and Iota washed away their houses. What do they most need? "a roof".
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_50...jpg
  • In a school-turned-shelter, people who lost their houses in the floods from hurricanes Eta and Iota speak with César Soriano of CASM about their needs. Most of the people left homeless are landless labourers, they express their most basic need as 'a roof'.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_50...jpg
  • Miriam Rivera, Los Puentes, Macualizo. The community is living in the local school as a shelter. Many in the shelter lost their house, some of them lost the land that their house was on as well. The priority for the community is to have a roof over their heads.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_50...jpg
  • In a school-turned-shelter, people who lost their houses in the floods from hurricanes Eta and Iota speak with César Soriano of CASM about their needs. Most of the people left homeless are landless labourers, they express their most basic need as 'a roof'.
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  • Fairtrade-certified coop COAGRICSAL were the first on the scene of the La Reina disaster in Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Bringing in food and clothes, items for personal hygiene and visiting regularly thereafter to provide boxes of Xol hot chocolate. Grecia Romero (left) speaks with Kenia (surname withheld) and her baby in the Valle Verde shelter.
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  • People gather around a charging station in La Lima, brought in to allow people to be in touch with family during the emergency. In this area of La Lima many people were still stranded in their houses with water covering the ground floor.
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  • Angie Rodriguez, Colonia San Juan, Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula. Beginning to clean out her house after the double hurricanes of Eta and Iota.
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  • Angie Rodriguez, Colonia San Juan, Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula. Beginning to clean out her house after the double hurricanes of Eta and Iota.
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  • Wendy Arce, 26, mother of four, lives in Juan Orlando Hernández neighbourhood in Choloma. She is currently living in a shelter provided by a church. The government of Juan Orlando Hernández hasn't done anything for the community that bears his name.
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  • Caterine Urbina is a young mother who lives in the Juan Orlando Hernandez neighbourhood in Choloma. She is currently in a shelter provided by a church following the floods that came with hurricanes Eta and Iota
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  • Suli Moncada lives near the river in Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula, Honduras. When hurricane Eta came it caught them off guard, no one expected severe flooding so quickly, but the river bank burst in the night. Suli lost all her possessions and her house, but escaped with her children unharmed. CASM is helping her children in a programme and she has found a shelter run by a church for the meanwhile.
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  • A family who lost their house in hurricane Eta pray inside a makeshift shelter on the side of the road in Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula. One of the members of the family is part of a CASM-supported programme for deported migrants.
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  • Two young women travel in a boat provided by volunteers with Captain Santos Orellana in La Lima, Honduras. Volunteer marines with Captain Santos Orellana run a group called Del Pueblo Para El Pueblo (from the people for the people). During all the flooding the group has been running provisions into the most flooded areas including in La Lima. Many people didn't evacuate, afraid that thieves would rob the properties if left alone.
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  • The whole family help out at harvest time in Léogane, Haiti.
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  • Torland Danneri 'Neri' Gútierrez, coffee producer at the COAQUIL cooperative in Quiragüira, Intibucá, Honduras. Neri was a migrant in the US for 12 years, working in the catering industry, and returned home to work on coffee production.
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  • A young woman works picking coffee on a coffee farm in Intibucá, Honduras.
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  • Torland Danneri 'Neri' Gútierrez, coffee producer at the COAQUIL cooperative in Quiragüira, Intibucá, Honduras. Neri was a migrant in the US for 12 years, working in the catering industry, and returned home to work on coffee production.
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  • Torland Danneri 'Neri' Gútierrez, coffee producer at the COAQUIL cooperative in Quiragüira, Intibucá, Honduras. Neri was a migrant in the US for 12 years, working in the catering industry, and returned home to work on coffee production.
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  • A Cambodian farmer in her field
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  • World Renew works through its partners across rural Cambodia on community development projects.
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  • A girl cycles her bike between rice paddies in a rural area of Takéo province, Cambodia
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  • Saem Sokhey is a woman farmer in Cambodia, she makes a living by growing corn for sale locally.
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  • A boy sits in a hammock in Takéo province, Cambodia
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  • Cynthia Montes bathes in the Guapinol river. Members of her community have been criminalised and imprisoned for protesting against a massive mining operation that affects the river.
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  • Cynthia Montes (r) bathes in the Guapinol river. Members of her community have been criminalised and imprisoned for protesting against a massive mining operation that affects the river.
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  • Juana Zuniga, Guapinol, partner of José Abelino Cedillo, one of the men who has been in prison for 15 months for protesting against the mining company in Guapinol.<br />
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"The struggle we have here is in defence of this lovely river. The mining company Los Pinares ha been causing damage here since 2018. We began our struggle when we couldn't use the water from this river for seven months, it's essential for this community. This river provides the water for more than 3,000 people in the community... We began our struggle, a non-violent struggle, we wanted to recover our river as when the mining company started work the water turned into thick chocolatey substance that even the animals didn't want to drink. It was sad, we had to start buying large bottles of water. But some people didn't have the money to do that, we suffered seven months with water like that. Thank God, the water is clean again, but the flow is reduced, we don't know what the mine is doing to make that happen. For us, water is life, it is eveything. We have eight men in prison in Olanchito, without any evidence against them, we want them back, and we want the mining company to leave."
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  • Sandra Rodas, Dos Bocas, Santa Rosa de Aguán, Colon, Honduras.<br />
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"When the water came, we had to leave at midnight, we were on a terrace for four nights. It was ugly, we were surrounded by water, people moved around with canoes."
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  • A CASM-supported projected helped women set up small businesses. Nazareth Vanegas set up a bakery for cakes, and a small shop.Nazareth is pictured here with her husband Jacobo Amador.
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  • A CASM-supported projected helped women set up small businesses. Nazareth Vanegas set up a bakery for cakes, and a small shop.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_80...jpg
  • A CASM-supported projected helped women set up small businesses. Nazareth Vanegas set up a bakery for cakes, and a small shop.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_79...jpg
  • A CASM-supported projected helped women set up small businesses. Nazareth Vanegas set up a bakery for cakes, and a small shop.
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  • In the house of Nelly Mejía, Cabañas, Copan, Honduras, an integrated project of production of chickens, eggs and fish is underway. The fish are nourished on the hen droppings and the production of proteins in a small space is maximised.
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