Olivier Asselin photography

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  • A Convention People's Party (CPP) with his body painted in the colors of the party is seen during a rally in Accra, Ghana on Sunday September 21, 2008.
    GHA08.0921.CPPRALLY0036.JPG
  • A Convention People's Party (CPP) with his body painted in the colors of the party is seen during a rally in Accra, Ghana on Sunday September 21, 2008.
    GHA08.0921.CPPRALLY0035.JPG
  • Bandaged leg of a young boy suffering from guinea worm at the guinea worm case containment center in Savelugu, northern Ghana, on Friday March 9, 2007. A parasite transmitted through water, guinea worm emerges from the host's body nine months after drinking contaminated water. Measuring up to 1 meter, it can only be pulled out a few cm every day to prevent it from breaking inside the host's body. Despite a widespread eradication program Ghana has the second largest number of cases in the world - after Sudan.
    GHA07.0309.GUINEAWORM010.jpg
  • Bandaged foot of a boy suffering from guinea worm at the guinea worm case containment center in Savelugu, northern Ghana, on Friday March 9, 2007. A parasite transmitted through water, guinea worm emerges from the host's body nine months after drinking contaminated water. Measuring up to 1 meter, it can only be pulled out a few cm every day to prevent it from breaking inside the host's body. Despite a widespread eradication program Ghana has the second largest number of cases in the world - after Sudan..
    GHA07.0309.GUINEAWORM124.jpg
  • Assana Mohammed, 10, cries as a health worker extracts a guinea worm her ankle at the guinea worm case containment center in Savelugu, northern Ghana, on Friday March 9, 2007. A parasite transmitted through water, guinea worm emerges from the host's body nine months after drinking contaminated water. Measuring up to 1 meter, it can only be pulled out a few cm every day to prevent it from breaking inside the host's body. Despite a widespread eradication program Ghana has the second largest number of cases in the world - after Sudan..
    GHA07.0309.GUINEAWORM089.jpg
  • Dawoda Idrissu, 17, sits at the guinea worm case containment center in Savelugu, northern Ghana, on Friday March 9, 2007. A parasite transmitted through water, guinea worm emerges from the host's body nine months after drinking contaminated water. Measuring up to 1 meter, it can only be pulled out a few cm every day to prevent it from breaking inside the host's body. Despite a widespread eradication program Ghana has the second largest number of cases in the world - after Sudan..
    GHA07.0309.GUINEAWORM138.jpg
  • Information sign on guinea worm outside the guinea worm case containment center in Savelugu, northern Ghana, on Friday March 9, 2007. A parasite transmitted through water, guinea worm emerges from the host's body nine months after drinking contaminated water. Measuring up to 1 meter, it can only be pulled out a few cm every day to prevent it from breaking inside the host's body. Despite a widespread eradication program Ghana has the second largest number of cases in the world - after Sudan..
    GHA07.0309.GUINEAWORM125.jpg
  • Amina Abukari, 7, lies on a wooden bench as as a health worker extracts a guinea worm from her buttocks at the guinea worm case containment center in Savelugu, northern Ghana, on Friday March 9, 2007. A parasite transmitted through water, guinea worm emerges from the host's body nine months after drinking contaminated water. Measuring up to 1 meter, it can only be pulled out a few cm every day to prevent it from breaking inside the host's body. Despite a widespread eradication program Ghana has the second largest number of cases in the world - after Sudan..
    GHA07.0309.GUINEAWORM106.jpg
  • A health worker holds up a guinea worm after pulling it out of the leg of Fatima Sayibu, 4, at the guinea worm case containment center in Savelugu, northern Ghana, on Friday March 9, 2007. A parasite transmitted through water, guinea worm emerges from the host's body nine months after drinking contaminated water. Measuring up to 1 meter, it can only be pulled out a few cm every day to prevent it from breaking inside the host's body. Despite a widespread eradication program Ghana has the second largest number of cases in the world - after Sudan..
    GHA07.0309.GUINEAWORM074.jpg
  • A health worker extracts a guinea worm from the ankle of ten-year-old Assana Mohammed, at the guinea worm case containment center in Savelugu, northern Ghana, on Friday March 9, 2007. A parasite transmitted through water, guinea worm emerges from the host's body nine months after drinking contaminated water. Measuring up to 1 meter, it can only be pulled out a few cm every day to prevent it from breaking inside the host's body. Despite a widespread eradication program Ghana has the second largest number of cases in the world - after Sudan..
    GHA07.0309.GUINEAWORM054.jpg
  • A boy with suffering from guinea worm sits at the guinea worm case containment center in Savelugu, northern Ghana, on Friday March 9, 2007. A parasite transmitted through water, guinea worm emerges from the host's body nine months after drinking contaminated water. Measuring up to 1 meter, it can only be pulled out a few cm every day to prevent it from breaking inside the host's body. Despite a widespread eradication program Ghana has the second largest number of cases in the world - after Sudan..
    GHA07.0309.GUINEAWORM012.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
  • A girl points to body parts as she learns English vocabulary during class at the Kotonli kindergarten in the village of Kotonli, northern Ghana, on Thursday June 7, 2007...
    GHA07.0607.GIRLSED1302.JPG
  • A pregnant woman stands on a body scale during a prenatal clinic at the UBC hospital in Mattru Jong, Sierra Leone on Friday April 23, 2010.
    SLE10.0423.HEALTH0056.JPG
  • A pregnant woman stands on a body scale during a prenatal clinic at the UBC hospital in Mattru Jong, Sierra Leone on Friday April 23, 2010.
    SLE10.0423.HEALTH0052.JPG
  • Community Health Nurse Isatu Djalloh reads a thermometer to check the body temperature of two-year-old Blackie at the PHU in the village of Yoni, on Sherbro Island, Sierra Leone on Thursday April 22, 2010. Suffering from severe dehydration, the boy needed to be referred to the district hospital.
    SLE10.0422.HEALTH0044.JPG
  • Community Health Nurse Isatu Djalloh checks the body temperature of two-year-old Blackie at the PHU in the village of Yoni, on Sherbro Island, Sierra Leone on Thursday April 22, 2010. Suffering from severe dehydration, the boy needed to be referred to the district hospital.
    SLE10.0422.HEALTH0027.JPG
  • An elderly woman spreads a concoction of ground millet and water - a symbol of protection - on the body of a young girl from the Krobo tribal group undergo puberty rites - locally called dipo - in Somanya, Eastern Region, Ghana.
    GHA06.04.02.Dipo024.JPG
  • An elderly woman spreads a concoction of ground millet and water - a symbol of protection - on the body of a young girl from the Krobo tribal group as she undergoes puberty rites - locally called dipo - in Somanya, Eastern Region, Ghana.
    GHA06.04.02.Dipo023.JPG
  • An elderly woman spreads a concoction of ground millet and water - a symbol of protection - on the body of young girls from the Krobo tribal group undergo puberty rites - locally called dipo - in Somanya, Eastern Region, Ghana.
    GHA06.04.02.Dipo022.JPG
  • An elderly woman spreads a concoction of ground millet and water - a symbol of protection - on the body of young girls from the Krobo tribal group undergo puberty rites - locally called dipo - in Somanya, Eastern Region, Ghana.
    GHA06.04.02.Dipo019.JPG
  • An elderly woman prepares to spread a concoction of ground millet and water - a symbol of protection - on the body of young girls from the Krobo tribal group undergo puberty rites - locally called dipo - in Somanya, Eastern Region, Ghana.
    GHA06.04.02.Dipo018.JPG
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