Olivier Asselin photography

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  • Cocoa farm, Central Region.<br />
<br />
Farmer is Lawson Lanquaye Mensah, 70.<br />
<br />
Farms cocoa since 1998, his father was also a cocoa farmer in the Eastern Region.<br />
<br />
A bag of 65kg of cocoa beans sells for 572,000 cedis, the profit after paying farm workers, etc, is about 150k.
    GHA64.jpg
  • Men and boys sort nets after returning from fishing at sea at the harbor in Elmina, about 130km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. Throughout sub-Saharan Africa, losses due to illegal, unregulated or unreported fishing are estimated at US$1 billion, roughly a quarter of Africa's total yearly fisheries exports.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0848.jpg
  • A man takes driving lessons in an open field in N'Djamena, Chad on Tuesday June 8, 2010.
    TCD10.0608.DDRCONF0098.JPG
  • A woman and her child stand in the doorway of their home during the visit of a polio vaccination team in Djambala, Republic of Congo on Wednesday December 8, 2010.
    COG10.1208.POLIO0615_BW.JPG
  • A woman's finger is marked with indelible ink after she was vaccinated against polio during the second round of vaccination in Djambala Village, Republic of Congo on Wednesday December 8, 2010.
    COG10.1208.POLIO0201_BW.JPG
  • A bible lies next to the foot of Maouaka, 19, who suffers from respiratory complications from polio, as she lies in a bed at the A. Sice general hospital in Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo on Wednesday December 1, 2010. Maouaka died a few hours after this image was taken.
    COG10.1201.POLIO0089_BW.JPG
  • A girl carries a load on top of her head in N'Djamena, Chad on Thursday June 10, 2010.
    TCD10.0610.DDRCONF0256.JPG
  • Boy holding elastic bands at an orphanage and school in N'Djamena, Chad on Thursday June 10, 2010.
    TCD10.0610.DDRCONF0219.JPG
  • Boy at an orphanage and school in N'Djamena, Chad on Thursday June 10, 2010.
    TCD10.0610.DDRCONF0216.JPG
  • A former child soldier sits against a wall covered in drawings of firearms and military vehicles in a transit and orientation center for child soldiers in N'Djamena, Chad on Thursday June 10, 2010. Center workers ask children to draw anything they like as a way to understand how they feel and get a sense of what's on their minds.
    TCD10.0610.DDRCONF0085.JPG
  • Drawing of family and daily scenes next to drawings of guns on the wall of a transit and orientation center for child soldiers in N'Djamena, Chad on Thursday June 10, 2010.
    TCD10.0610.DDRCONF0069.JPG
  • Two soldiers ride a motorcycle in N'Djamena, Chad on Tuesday June 8, 2010.
    TCD10.0608.DDRCONF0163.JPG
  • A boy runs towards the camera in N'Djamena, Chad on Tuesday June 8, 2010.
    TCD10.0608.DDRCONF0124.JPG
  • Vivien Massomba, 12, who suffers from palsy following a polio infection, grimaces while being massaged by a health worker at the Tie-Tie hospital in Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo, on Thursday December 2, 2010.
    COG10.1202.POLIO0139_BW.JPG
  • A child receives two drops of polio vaccine during the second round of vaccination in Djambala Village, Republic of Congo on Wednesday December 8, 2010.
    COG10.1208.POLIO0107_BW.JPG
  • A young woman stands in the doorway of her home after the door was marked with chalk by vaccinators to indicate that occupants were vaccinated against polio in Djambala, Republic of Congo on Wednesday December 8, 2010.
    COG10.1208.POLIO0593_BW.JPG
  • A man gets vaccinated against polio during the second round of vaccination in Djambala Village, Republic of Congo on Wednesday December 8, 2010.
    COG10.1208.POLIO0196_BW.JPG
  • A member of a social mobilization team uses a megaphone from a moving vehicle to inform the population about the upcoming polio vaccination round in Djambala, Republic of Congo on Tuesday December 7, 2010.
    COG10.1207.POLIO0133_BW.JPG
  • Volunteers hang a banner announcing the upcoming round of polio vaccination in Djambala, Republic of Congo on Monday December 6, 2010.
    COG10.1206.POLIO0049_BW.JPG
  • Relatives prepare to bury the body of Rachel Yaki Diane, 26, who died following a polio infection at the Vendelou cemetery in Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo on Saturday December 4, 2010.
    COG10.1204.POLIO0124_BW.JPG
  • His father Alphonse sits next to Blaise Alonda, 19, who suffers from polio, at the Loandjili hospital in Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo, on Saturday December 4, 2010. Blaise first started feeling ill almost three weeks ago. He was diagnosed and treated for malaria, but woke up unable to move his arms and legs the next morning.
    COG10.1204.POLIO0047_BW.JPG
  • Tony Boussana, 24, who is partly paralized by polio, is helped by his girlfriend Sabena, 19, as he tries to sit up in his bed at the A. Cisse Hospital in Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo on Friday December 3, 2010. "When I got to the hospital I could still move my arms, but now I can't", he says. "I feel completely lost."
    COG10.1203.POLIO0481_BW.JPG
  • Volunteer Napoleon Mukengue uses a megaphone to announce the upcoming polio vaccination campaign to the population as he walks down a street in Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo on Thursday December 2, 2010.
    COG10.1202.POLIO0281_BW.JPG
  • Volunteer Napoleon Mukengue uses a megaphone to announce the upcoming polio vaccination campaign to the population as he walks down a street in Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo on Thursday December 2, 2010.
    COG10.1202.POLIO0276_BW.JPG
  • Vivien Massomba, 12, who suffers from palsy following a polio infection, grimaces while being massaged by a health worker at the Tie-Tie hospital in Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo, on Thursday December 2, 2010.
    COG10.1202.POLIO0173_BW.JPG
  • Deo Gracia Bomda, 12, who suffers from palsy following a polio infection, lies in bed while being massaged by a health worker at the Tie-Tie hospital in Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo, on Thursday December 2, 2010.
    COG10.1202.POLIO0164_BW.JPG
  • Maouaka, 19, who suffers from respiratory complications from polio, lies in a bed at the A. Sice general hospital in Pointe-Noire, Republic of Congo on Wednesday December 1, 2010. Maouaka died a few hours after this image was taken.
    COG10.1201.POLIO0091_BW.JPG
  • GHA79.jpg
  • A farm worker carries a basket full of cocoa pods on his head at a farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007.
    GHA63.jpg
  • Women sell fish at the market in Elmina, about 130km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. Ghanaian women are usually responsible for selling the fish caught by their husbands. Some local fishermen complain that the recent reduction in the amount of fish they catch is not only making it more difficult for them to support their family, but can also be a cause of tension and conflict between husband and wife..
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0838.jpg
  • View of the fishing harbor of Elmina, about 130km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009..
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0866.jpg
  • Fishing boats in the harbor of Elmina, about 130km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. Global fish stocks are running low; the advocacy group Environmental Justice Foundation says fisheries are in deep decline and could collapse within 50 years if current trends continue. Developing countries like Ghana are among the crisis' first victims.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0857.jpg
  • Fish is laid out for sale at the market in Elmina, about 130km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. In Ghana, women are usually responsible for selling the fish caught by their husbands. Some local fishermen complain that the recent reduction in fish populations is not only making it more difficult for them to support their family, but also often a cause of tension and conflict between husband and wife.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0844.jpg
  • Fish is laid out for sale at the market in Elmina, about 130km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation, nearly a billion people worldwide depend on fish as their primary source of protein, and  120 million people depend on fishing for all or part of their income, with both kinds of dependence highest in the developing world.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0841.jpg
  • Fish is laid out for sale at the market in Elmina, about 130km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0819.jpg
  • Fishermen clean their nets after returning from sea in Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. "Local jobs are collapsing" says the Ministry of Fisheries' Isiah Amoukouandoh. "It's a difficult balance for the government because foreign trawlers contribute to government funds. If the trawlers stuck to regulations, there would be less of a problem. But they are fishing in the waters reserved for the local fishermen, stealing their fish."
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0785.jpg
  • Fish and crustaceans lay in a bucket after being brought back from sea by fishermen in Cape Coast roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. Local fishermen say that the volume of fish has severely dwindled in recent years with the increased presence of international fishing vessels in Ghanaian waters.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0781.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their boat onto the beach after returning from sea in Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009..
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0773.jpg
  • Fishermen stand on their boats while cleaning nets under the towering former slave fort of Cape Coast castle in Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. Cape Coast's slave-trading days may be long gone but the town is no stranger to modern exploitation. Pirate fishing vessels and illegally-operating foreign trawlers are raping the seas, stealing the town's biggest commodity - its fish.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0768.jpg
  • Fishermen head back to shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009..
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0746.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. Fish is a staple in the diet of most Ghanaians: it is estimated that up to 60% of animal protein nationwide is derived from fish products.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0717.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0675.jpg
  • A small fish lies on a wooden fishing boat while fishermen pull in their catch a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0654.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0624.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0614.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0612.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0600.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. Unlike traditional fishing boats, industrial trawlers are required by law to operate in waters deeper than 30 meters. However, local fishermen frequently report that foreign vessels come much closer to the coast, often destroying their nets and causing important damage to the ocean floor by dragging their nets to maximize their catch.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0583.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. Ghanaian fishermen have for generations harvested the ocean in a small-scale, sustainable way.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0579.jpg
  • Fishermen pull in their catch into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. The increasing presence of international trawlers in Ghanaian waters not only means more competition to capture a declining fish stock, but larger boats often damage the nets of small-scale fishermen by running through them as they pursue fish.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0573.jpg
  • Fishermen pull nets they had left overnight into their small wooden boat a few hundred meters away from shore near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0504.jpg
  • Workers set up a large billboard promoting the National Democratic Congress (NDC) ahead of presidential elections in Cape Coast, Ghana on Sunday September 7, 2008.
    GHA08.0907.CAPECOAST0734.JPG
  • Banners of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), top, and National Democratic Congress (NDC) hanging from a light post ahead of presidential elections in Cape Coast, Ghana on Saturday September 6, 2008.
    GHA08.0906.CAPECOAST0440.jpg
  • Workers set up a large billboard promoting the National Democratic Congress (NDC) ahead of presidential elections in Cape Coast, Ghana on Sunday September 7, 2008.
    GHA08.0907.CAPECOAST0733.JPG
  • Election posters for New Patriotic Party (NPP) and National Democratic Congress (NDC) presidential candidates on a wall in Cape Coast, Ghana on Sunday September 7, 2008.
    GHA08.0907.CAPECOAST0728.JPG
  • National Democratic Congress (NDC) candidate Atta Mills during a traditional festival in Cape Coast, Ghana on Saturday September 6, 2008.
    GHA08.0906.CAPECOAST0496.JPG
  • National Democratic Congress (NDC) candidate Atta Mills during a traditional festival in Cape Coast, Ghana on Saturday September 6, 2008.
    GHA08.0906.CAPECOAST0493.JPG
  • Convention People's Party (CPP) candidate Kwasi Nduom during a traditional festival in Cape Coast, Ghana on Saturday September 6, 2008..
    GHA08.0906.CAPECOAST0543.JPG
  • Cocoa farmer Lawson Lanquaye Mensah, 70, stands in a cocoa plantation on his farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA240.jpg
  • Cocoa farmer Lawson Lanquaye Mensah, 70, stands in a cocoa plantation on his farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA224.jpg
  • A ripe cocoa pod hangs from a tree on a farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007. The pods grow on the trunk of the tree - not its branches - and turn from green to yellow as they mature.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA211.jpg
  • Ripe cocoa pods hang from a tree on a farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007. The pods grow on the trunk of the tree - not its branches - and turn from green to yellow as they mature.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA208.jpg
  • Cocoa pods at various levels of maturity hang from a tree on a farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007. The pods grow on the trunk of the tree - not its branches - and turn from green to yellow as they mature.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA199.jpg
  • Cocoa beans dry in the sun at a farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA192.jpg
  • Cocoa beans dry in the sun at a farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA188.jpg
  • Cocoa farmer Lawson Lanquaye Mensah, 70, holds a handful of dry cocoa beans on his farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007. The cocoa industry employs more people than any other sector in Ghana, and cocoa is the country's second export (after gold). Ghana is the world's second largest producer of cocoa - only Cote d'Ivoire produces more.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA161.jpg
  • Cocoa farmer Lawson Lanquaye Mensah, 70, holds a handful of dry cocoa beans on his farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007. The cocoa industry employs more people than any other sector in Ghana, and cocoa is the country's second export (after gold). Ghana is the world's second largest producer of cocoa - only Cote d'Ivoire produces more.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA159.jpg
  • Cocoa farmer Lawson Lanquaye Mensah (right), 70, and a farm worker spread cocoa beans over a mat where they will dry in the sun at Mensah's farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007. A bag of 65 kg of dry cocoa beans will sell for just over $60 - Mensah says the profit he makes on one bag barely reaches $15.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA139.jpg
  • Cocoa farmer Lawson Lanquaye Mensah, 70, holds a cocoa pod he just cracked open to display the seeds on his farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007. The seeds will then be wrapped in banana leaves and left to ferment for six days before being sun-dried.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA109.jpg
  • Farm workers use machetes to crack cocoa pods open on a farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007. The seeds will then be wrapped in banana leaves and left to ferment for six days before being sun-dried.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA092.jpg
  • A farm worker carries a basket full of cocoa pods on his head at a farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA070.jpg
  • Cocoa farmer Lawson Lanquaye Mensah, 70, uses a blade mounted on a long stick to cut cocoa pods of a tree on his farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007. The tool is used to cut off cocoa pods that grow at various heights and are sometimes unreachable by hand. The pods are then collected by another farm worker and carried out of the plantation to a location where the pods will be cracked.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA035.jpg
  • Cocoa farmer Lawson Lanquaye Mensah, 70, uses a blade mounted on a long stick to cut cocoa pods of a tree on his farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007. The tool is used to cut off cocoa pods that grow at various heights and are sometimes unreachable by hand. The pods are then collected by another farm worker and carried out of the plantation to a location where the pods will be cracked.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA038.jpg
  • A farm worker collects a cocoa pod from the ground at a farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA031.jpg
  • Cocoa farmer Lawson Lanquaye Mensah, 70, uses a blade mounted on a long stick to cut cocoa pods of a tree on his farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007. The tool is used to harvest cocoa pods that grow at various heights and are sometimes unreachable by hand.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA016.jpg
  • Fishermen set off to work at sunrise on their small traditional wooden boat near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009..
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0567.jpg
  • A fisherman pulls in his catch near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. Small fish get caught in nets left at sea overnight and retrieved by fishermen in the morning. The increasing presence of international trawlers in Ghanaian waters not only means more competition to capture a declining fish stock, but larger boats often damage the nets of small-scale fishermen by running through them as they pursue fish.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0537.jpg
  • Fishermen set off to work at sunrise on their small traditional wooden boat near Cape Coast, roughly 120km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Thursday April 9, 2009. The Ghana Ministry of Fisheries estimates to about 500,000 the number of fishermen and fishmongers in Ghana. Up to 2 million people - nearly 10 percent of the country's population  - make a living from professions - such as canoe-building - dependent on the fishing industry.
    GHA09.0409.FISHING0480.jpg
  • A ripe cocoa pod hangs from a tree on a farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007. The pods grow on the trunk of the tree - not its branches - and turn from green to yellow as they mature.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA197.jpg
  • Cocoa beans dry in the sun at a farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA190.jpg
  • Cocoa farmer Lawson Lanquaye Mensah (back), 70, and a farm worker spread cocoa beans over a mat where they will dry in the sun at Mensah's farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007. A bag of 65 kg of dry cocoa beans will sell for just over $60 - Mensah says the profit he makes on one bag barely reaches $15.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA137.jpg
  • Farm workers use machetes to crack cocoa pods open on a farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007. The seeds will then be wrapped in banana leaves and left to ferment for six days before being sun-dried.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA108.jpg
  • Cocoa beans dry in the sun at a farm in the town of Assin Adadientem, roughly 100km west of Ghana's capital Accra on Sat. January 21, 2007.
    GHA07.0120.COCOA002.jpg
  • Children in a classroom at the Bazzama primary school in the town of Bazzama, Cameroon on Wednesday September 16, 2009.  The school integrates the children of refugees from Central African Republic with residents from the area.
    CMR09.0916.FARROW0333.JPG
  • A boy walks past classroom windows outside the Bazzama primary school in the town of Bazzama, Cameroon on Wednesday September 16, 2009.  The school integrates the children of refugees from Central African Republic with residents from the area.
    CMR09.0916.FARROW0307.JPG
  • Children sit at the UNICEF-sponsored Bazzama kindergarden in the town of Bazzama, Cameroon on Wednesday September 16, 2009.  The school integrates the children of refugees from Central African Republic with residents from the area..
    CMR09.0916.FARROW0292.JPG
  • A young refugee girl from Central African Republic sits by plastic jericans lined up by a water pump in the village of Boulembe, near Bertoua, Cameroon, on Tuesday September 15, 2009.
    CMR09.0915.FARROW0684.JPG
  • Refugee women from Central African Republic watch during a visit by UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador Mia Farrow in the village of Boulembe, near Bertoua, Cameroon, on Tuesday September 15, 2009.
    CMR09.0915.FARROW0671.JPG
  • Refugee women from Central African Republic smile while watching UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador Mia Farrow in the village of Boulembe, near Bertoua, Cameroon, on Tuesday September 15, 2009.
    CMR09.0915.FARROW0659.JPG
  • A refugee woman from Central African Republic wears a cloth with the image of her president in the village of Tongo Gandima, near Bertoua, Cameroon, on Tuesday September 15, 2009.
    CMR09.0915.FARROW0565.JPG
  • Refugee women from Central African Republic in the village of Tongo Gandima, near Bertoua, Cameroon, on Tuesday September 15, 2009.
    CMR09.0915.FARROW0544.JPG
  • A refugee woman from Central African Republic holds a card she uses to receive food rations at the Garga Sarali integrated health center in the town of Garga Sarali, near Bertoua, Cameroon, on Tuesday September 15, 2009.
    CMR09.0915.FARROW0408.JPG
  • Refugees from Central African Republic wait for food distribution at the Garga Sarali integrated health center in the town of Garga Sarali, near Bertoua, Cameroon, on Tuesday September 15, 2009..
    CMR09.0915.FARROW0367.JPG
  • Refugees from Central African Republic wait in line for food distribution at the Garga Sarali integrated health center in the town of Garga Sarali, near Bertoua, Cameroon, on Tuesday September 15, 2009.
    CMR09.0915.FARROW0290.JPG
  • Refugees from Central African Republic wait in line for food distribution at the Garga Sarali integrated health center in the town of Garga Sarali, near Bertoua, Cameroon, on Tuesday September 15, 2009.
    CMR09.0915.FARROW0285.JPG
  • Young refugee girl from Central African Republic at the Garga Sarali integrated health center in the town of Garga Sarali, near Bertoua, Cameroon, on Tuesday September 15, 2009.
    CMR09.0915.FARROW0152.JPG
  • Refugee woman and her child from Central African Republic waiting for food distribution at the Garga Sarali integrated health center in the town of Garga Sarali, near Bertoua, Cameroon, on Tuesday September 15, 2009.
    CMR09.0915.FARROW0061.JPG
  • Young refugee girl from Central African Republic at the Garga Sarali integrated health center in the town of Garga Sarali, near Bertoua, Cameroon, on Tuesday September 15, 2009.
    CMR09.0915.FARROW0147.JPG
  • A woman carrying her child on her back walks down a street in central Accra, Ghana on Tuesday June 16, 2009.
    GHA09.0616.GATES0032.jpg
  • Refugee women from Central African Republic sit on the ground in the village of Boulembe, near Bertoua, Cameroon, on Tuesday September 15, 2009..
    CMR09.0915.FARROW0689.JPG
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