Olivier Asselin photography

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  • Girl posing for a portrait after being vaccinated against meningitis at a MSF vaccination site in the village of Soura Aladay near Maradi, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0460.JPG
  • His aunt checks on Issoufou Abdoul Wahab, 17, at the Aguie district hospital in the town of Aguie, roughly 80 km east of Maradi, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009. Issoufou was in coma for three days after being infected with meningitis. He's now on his way to recovery, but is suffering partial loss of hearing - an effect of meningitis that may go away, or not.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0682.jpg
  • Children wait in line to get vaccinated against meningitis at a MSF vaccination site in Fagougaou, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009..
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0539.jpg
  • MSF medical doctor Emma Manfrin examines seven-year-old Salissou Souley, who was infected with both meningitis and malaria, at the Aguie government hospital in the town of Aguie, roughly 80 km east of Maradi, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0724.jpg
  • MSF Belgium doctor Emma Manfrin checks on Issoufou Abdoul Wahab, 17, at the Aguie government hospital in the town of Aguie, roughly 80 km east of Maradi, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009. Issoufou was in coma for three days after being infected with meningitis. He's now on his way to recovery, but is suffering partial loss of hearing - an effect of meningitis that may go away, or not.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0652.jpg
  • A woman grimaces as she sees a child getting injected with meningitis vaccine at a MSF vaccination site in Tibiri, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0487.jpg
  • A woman poses for a portrait after getting vaccinated against meningitis at a MSF vaccination site in Tibiri, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0479.jpg
  • Two girls pose for a portrait after being vaccinated against meningitis at a MSF vaccination site in the village of Soura Aladay near Maradi, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0466.jpg
  • MSF medical doctor Emma Manfrin examines seven-year-old Salissou Souley, who was infected with both meningitis and malaria, at the Aguie government hospital in the town of Aguie, roughly 80 km east of Maradi, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0714.jpg
  • MSF medical doctor Emma Manfrin examines seven-year-old Salissou Souley, who was infected with both meningitis and malaria, at the Aguie government hospital in the town of Aguie, roughly 80 km east of Maradi, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0719.jpg
  • Mahaboube Achirou, 12, at the Aguie district hospital in the town of Aguie, roughly 80 km east of Maradi, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009. Mahaboube was infected with meningitis but has now almost entirely recoverd. At right is MSF Beligum doctor Emma Manfrin.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0704.jpg
  • His aunt checks on Issoufou Abdoul Wahab, 17, at the Aguie district hospital in the town of Aguie, roughly 80 km east of Maradi, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009. Issoufou was in coma for three days after being infected with meningitis. He's now on his way to recovery, but is suffering partial loss of hearing - an effect of meningitis that may go away, or not.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0686.jpg
  • His aunt checks on Issoufou Abdoul Wahab, 17, at the Aguie district hospital in the town of Aguie, roughly 80 km east of Maradi, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009. Issoufou was in coma for three days after being infected with meningitis. He's now on his way to recovery, but is suffering partial loss of hearing - an effect of meningitis that may go away, or not.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0677.jpg
  • MSF medical doctor Emma Manfrin (right) checks on Issoufou Abdoul Wahab, 17, at the Aguie government hospital in the town of Aguie, roughly 80 km east of Maradi, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009. Issoufou was in coma for three days after being infected with meningitis. He's now on his way to recovery, but is suffering partial loss of hearing - an effect of meningitis that may go away, or not.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0667.jpg
  • MSF Belgium doctor Emma Manfrin checks on Issoufou Abdoul Wahab, 17, at the Aguie government hospital in the town of Aguie, roughly 80 km east of Maradi, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009. Issoufou was in coma for three days after being infected with meningitis. He's now on his way to recovery, but is suffering partial loss of hearing - an effect of meningitis that may go away, or not.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0641.jpg
  • Fassouma Adamou vaccinates a woman at a MSF vaccination site in Safin Raffi, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0588.jpg
  • A child gets vaccinated against meningitis at a MSF vaccination site in Safin Raffi, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009..
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0568.jpg
  • Children wait in line to get vaccinated against meningitis at a MSF vaccination site in Fagougaou, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009..
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0541.jpg
  • A young woman grimaces as she receives meningitis vaccine at a MSF vaccination site in Tibiri, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009..
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0488.jpg
  • A boy cries as he gets vaccinated against meningitis at a MSF vaccination site in Tibiri, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009..
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0482.jpg
  • A girl gets vaccinated against meningitis at a MSF vaccination site in Tibiri, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009.
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0476.jpg
  • A girl gets vaccinated against meningitis at a MSF vaccination site in Fagougaou, Niger on Friday April 17, 2009..
    NER09.0417.MSFMENINGITIS0502.jpg
  • Granite stone carving at the Loango granite sanctuary near the town of Ziniare, Burkina Faso, West Africa.
    BFA12.0327.NUT0869.JPG
  • Granite stone carving at the Loango granite sanctuary near the town of Ziniare, Burkina Faso, West Africa..
    BFA12.0327.NUT0866.JPG
  • Community Health Nurse Isatu Djalloh carries two-year-old Blackie on her lap as he's transported aboard an emergency speedboat from the village of Yoni, on Sherbro Island, to the district hospital in Bonthe, Sierra Leone on Thursday April 22, 2010. Suffering from severe dehydration, the boy needed to be referred to the district hospital.
    SLE10.0422.HEALTH0145.JPG
  • Community Health Nurse Isatu Djalloh looks over two-year-old Blackie as he slowly recovers at the Bonthe district hospital in Bonthe, Sierra Leone on Thursday April 22, 2010. After medical staff struggled for over 30 minutes and gave the child ORS, an IV was successfully injected, and Blackie started to stabilize. At left is Samuel Coker from the Environmental justice foundation, an NGO the operates an emergency boat transport service.
    SLE10.0422.HEALTH0419.JPG
  • A man tries to force Marie Tabeh, the mother of two-year-old Blackie, to get aboard the emergency speedboat that will carry her child to the district hospital from 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. Marie refused to follow her child without the approval of her husband; medical staff had to leave the mother behind to save the child's life.
    SLE10.0422.HEALTH0119.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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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 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
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