A new home after tragedy

Four leading photographers, Olly Burn, Tom Stoddart, Veronique de Viguerie, and Dougie Wallace working with non-governmental organisation Shelterbox travelled to meet families living through drought in Somaliland and devastation in the British Virgin Islands, as well as to Rohingya families living in the refugee camps in Bangladesh. (To see all the  photos, click here.)
A man attends his weddingImage copyright Veronique de Viguerie / Shelterbox
Rohingyas Ali Hussein and his wife, Shomi Nara, are newlyweds. But they were brought together by tragedy. Their families fled for their lives from violence in their home villages in Myanmar, also known as Burma, and now live in Balukhali refugee camp, where their marriage was arranged.
Shomi wore a traditional yellow Rohingya wedding dress that she had made in the camp. Ali says: "The wedding party took place in this house. We invited some respected people in the camp and had the celebration inside.
"We hired a sound box for dancing, and cooked some chicken for the guests. We had a small party."
Veronique de Viguerie photographed the couple as part of a series of images exploring daily life in emergency shelters.
A woman tends to two childrenImage copyright Veronique de Viguerie / Shelterbox
A man comes out of bathing in a riverImage copyright Veronique de Viguerie / Shelterbox
The Rohingya families were displaced from their homes by sectarian violence. Many left with nothing and need shelter, lighting, and water. Now, cyclone season is on the way and could wash away the flimsy shelters.
Photographer Tom Stoddart also visited these camps, meeting 12-year-old Hossion Juhar. Wrapped in a bright red blanket to protect himself from the early morning chill, he was playing with friends on a hill in Kutupalong, Cox's Bazar.
"I go to the madrassa [school] to study, and I walk around the camp with friends," he says. "We like to play football sometimes, I am very good."
Hossion travelled from his village with 10 family members including his mother and siblings. His father died a year earlier. "We left because they were killing all of the Rohingyas. We walked through the jungle for three days."
Hossion Juhar wrapped in a blanketImage copyright Tom Stoddart / Shelterbox
A girl carries a bundle of sticksImage copyright Tom Stoddart / Shelterbox
A child carries a bag on her headImage

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