The queue is long for displaced Marawi residents who want to have their biometrics taken for the Kathanor program which the government and donor agencies uses in providing aid to victims of the May 2017 siege of Marawi.The crowd swells on the last day of Kathanor on 28 June 2019. Authorities were worried that even non-Marawi residents may have joined the queue after reports that the initial batch of IDPs who had undergone Kathanor were provided with cash assistance.To help them determine legitimate IDPs, Kathanor workers required residents to bring as much evidence as possible to prove their residency in Marawi.A Meranaw with her identification card and various documents to prove her residency in Marawi.A Meranaw argues his case before the staff of the Task Force Bangon Marawi collecting documents from IDPs.A Kathanor worker scans an old Meranaw woman’s fingerprints.A father submits to fingerprinting while taking care of his child.A girl gets fingerprinted.Aside from fingerprints, the IDPs get photographed too, including the children.A Meranaw Kathanor worker.Felix Castro, Task Force Bangon Marawi field office manager, oversees the Kathanor project.