Olivier Asselin photography

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  • A worker nails cow hides to the ground to stretch them as they dry at a local tannery in Tamale, Northern Ghana.
    CRW_2962.jpg
  • A boy runs towards the camera in N'Djamena, Chad on Tuesday June 8, 2010.
    TCD10.0608.DDRCONF0124.JPG
  • Shea products in the stock room at "La Maison du Karité" shea processing center in Siby, near Bamako, Mali on Friday January 15, 2010.
    MAL10.0115.SHEA0002.JPG
  • Simon Obroni Gamor, 45, in his family's home in the village of Tefle Kpotame, Ghana on Tuesday April 22, 2008.
    GHA08.0422.ALBINOS0034.JPG
  • Steven Gamor, 32, in his family's home in the village of Tefle Kpotame, Ghana on Tuesday April 22, 2008.
    GHA08.0422.ALBINOS0025.JPG
  • From left to right Steven Gamor, 32, Simon Obroni Gamor, 45, Sitsote Gamor, 28, and Paulina Gamor, 25 in their family's home in the village of Tefle Kpotame, Ghana on Tuesday April 22, 2008.
    GHA08.0422.ALBINOS0008.JPG
  • Steven Gamor, 32, in his family's home in the village of Tefle Kpotame, Ghana on Tuesday April 22, 2008.
    GHA08.0422.ALBINOS0024.JPG
  • Mariatou Dansira, 24, lies skin to skin with her newborn girl at the Kita reference health center in the town of Kita, Mali on Friday August 27, 2010. Skin-to-skin contact is recommended as part of the Kangaroo mother care practice, a universally available and biologically sound method of care for all newborns, particularly important for premature or under weight babies.
    MAL10.0827.UNICEF0251.JPG
  • Ndeye Sarr, 25, shows dermatosis affecting the skin of her face and neck. Sarr was visiting the traditional medicine center in Fatick, Senegal, because she said doctors elsewhere had been unable to help her with her skin problem. The center mixes modern medicine techniques with African medicine provided by traditional healers.
    SEN09.0806.TRADMED0018.jpg
  • Traditional healer Kama Mbagnick holds a handful of wooden chips from a local tree used for its healing properties as he explains their usage to patient Ndeye Sarr (left) at the traditional medicine center in Fatick, Senegal on August 6, 2009. Sarr was visiting the center because of skin problems she said doctors elsewhere were unable to help resolve.
    SEN09.0806.TRADMED0017.jpg
  • Dora Amuzu and her sons Magnus Apedo, 10 (left) and Kwaku, 7 sit outside their home in the town of Amasaman, Ghana on Thursday January 17, 2008. Albinism is an hereditary genetic disorder characterized by a lack of pigmentation in the skin and eyes. It only manifests itself in children when both parents - albino or not - carry the albinism gene.
    GHA08.0117.ALBINOS098.jpg
  • David Amuzu, 12, sits among his classmates school in the town of Amasaman, Ghana on Thursday January 17, 2008. "I can't see what the teacher is writing on the blackboard", he says. The pigment that gives skin its color - called melanin - is also a key element in the development of the eye. Because of the absence of melanin, most people with albinism have poor eyesight, especially from a distance.
    GHA08.0117.ALBINOS014.jpg
  • David Amuzu, 12, sits among his classmates school in the town of Amasaman, Ghana on Thursday January 17, 2008. "I can't see what the teacher is writing on the blackboard", he says. The pigment that gives skin its color - called melanin - is also a key element in the development of the eye. Because of the absence of melanin, most people with albinism have poor eyesight, especially from a distance.
    GHA08.0117.ALBINOS008.jpg
  • David Amuzu, 12, sits among his classmates school in the town of Amasaman, Ghana on Thursday January 17, 2008. "I can't see what the teacher is writing on the blackboard", he says. The pigment that gives skin its color - called melanin - is also a key element in the development of the eye. Because of the absence of melanin, most people with albinism have poor eyesight, especially from a distance.
    GHA08.0117.ALBINOS005.jpg
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