Olivier Asselin photography

Show Navigation
  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 100 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Young boy sitting on large roots, Ghana.
    05GHA.CRW_2761.jpg
  • Silhouette of person sitting under large baobab tree, Ghana.
    GHA25.jpg
  • Silhouette of person sitting under large baobab tree, Ghana.
    GHA25_v2.jpg
  • Silhouette of person sitting under large baobab tree, Ghana.
    05GHA.CRW_2757.jpg
  • African elephant, Masai Mara, Kenya
    KEN07.0429.MASAIMARA093.jpg
  • Young boy playing with professional camera at the NDA health center in Dimbokro, Cote d'Ivoire on Friday June 19, 2009.
    CIV09.0619.GATES0237.jpg
  • Large tractor carrying pienapple crates in warehouse.
    05GHA.IMG_5479.jpg
  • Large tractor moving containers at seaport.
    05GHA.IMG_5549.jpg
  • Large tractor carrying pienapple crates in warehouse.
    05GHA.IMG_5483.jpg
  • Large tractor carrying pienapple crates in warehouse.
    05GHA.IMG_5486.jpg
  • Togolese flags and miniature footballs hang from the windshield of a large truck at the Terminal du Sahel, a large truck terminal in Lome, Togo on Wednesday October 1, 2008.
    TGO08.1001.ROADS0021.JPG
  • A man looks out from the driver seat of a large truck at the Terminal du Sahel, a large truck terminal in Lome, Togo on Wednesday October 1, 2008.
    TGO08.1001.ROADS0012.JPG
  • A man stands by a row of large trucks parked at the Terminal du Sahel, a large truck terminal in Lome, Togo on Wednesday October 1, 2008.
    TGO08.1001.ROADS0010.JPG
  • Mud guard reading "Bon voyage, good luck" on the rear wheel of a large truck at the Terminal du Sahel, a large truck terminal in Lome, Togo on Wednesday October 1, 2008.
    TGO08.1001.ROADS0022.JPG
  • Men stand by a row of large trucks parked at the Terminal du Sahel, a large truck terminal in Lome, Togo on Wednesday October 1, 2008.
    TGO08.1001.ROADS0023.JPG
  • Women working at palm oil processing plant outside Ashaiman, one of Ghana's largest slums. The plant is set a few meters away from a large garbage dump.
    GHA05Ashaiman0010.jpg
  • Women working at palm oil processing plant outside Ashaiman, one of Ghana's largest slums. The plant is set a few meters away from a large garbage dump.
    GHA05Ashaiman0015.jpg
  • People waiting in line under a large mango tree at a vaccination site in the town of Yadè Bohou, north of Kara, northern Togo, on Tuesday Feb 13, 2007.
    TGO94.jpg
  • A girl stands next to a large barrel used to smoke fish in the West Point slum of Monrovia, Montserrado county, Liberia on Monday April 2, 2012.
    LBR12.0402.NUT1162.JPG
  • Pick up truck carrying a large load of small tree branches in Tamale, northern Ghana, on Sunday June 3, 2007.
    GHA07.0603.GIRLSED0045.JPG
  • Men riding motorbike by large mosque in Tamale, Ghana on Sunday June 3, 2007.
    GHA07.0603.GIRLSED0031.JPG
  • Farm worker Thomas Kavi leans against a large bin used to store dried jatropha fruits at the farm where he works in the town of Lolito, roughly 80km east of Ghana's capital Accra, on Thursday Dec. 12, 2006. Jatropha - which grows naturally in Ghana and other parts of Africa - can be used to make biodiesel.<br />
    GHA06.1221.JATROPHA190.JPG
  • Women working at palm oil processing plant outside Ashaiman, one of Ghana's largest slums. The plant is set a few meters away from a large garbage dump.
    GHA05Ashaiman0012.jpg
  • Women working at palm oil processing plant outside Ashaiman, one of Ghana's largest slums. The plant is set a few meters away from a large garbage dump.
    GHA05Ashaiman0001.jpg
  • Young boy sitting on empty sugar bags at a UNHCR food distribution centre in the Ghanaian Volta region. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0005.jpg
  • Togolese refugee man at a UNHCR registration camp near Aflao, eastern Ghana. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0004.jpg
  • Togolese refugees waiting at a UNHCR food distribution centre in the Ghanaian Volta region. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0012.jpg
  • Togolese refugees at a UNHCR food distribution centre in the Ghanaian Volta region. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0013.jpg
  • Togolese refugees at a UNHCR food distribution centre in the Ghanaian Volta region. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0014.jpg
  • A girl peeks from behind a large barrel used to smoke fish in the West Point slum of Monrovia, Montserrado county, Liberia on Monday April 2, 2012.
    LBR12.0402.NUT1154.JPG
  • A girl picks up a large smoked fish in the West Point slum of Monrovia, Montserrado county, Liberia on Monday April 2, 2012.
    LBR12.0402.NUT1028.JPG
  • Shea butter in a large barrel at "La Maison du Karité" shea processing center in Siby, near Bamako, Mali on Friday January 15, 2010.
    MAL10.0115.SHEA0010.JPG
  • Mesh filters use to prevent guinea worm lay on the ground while two boys drive the donkey-pulled cart they use to carry large barrels of water at the Dikunani dam in Savelugu, northern Ghana, on Friday March 9, 2007. The only of four water sources that has not completely dried out around Savelugu, the pond is used by hundreds of people daily who sometimes walk several kilometers to fetch water. Despite the presence of mesh filters available to people who come get water, cases of guinea worm in the area have gone up sharply in the recent months.
    GHA07.0309.GUINEAWORM274.jpg
  • An excavator loads a large truck with ore in a pit of the Youga gold mine near the town of Youga, approximately 205 km southeast of Burkina Faso's capital Ouagadougou on Tuesday April 28, 2009..
    BFA09.0428.GOLDMINING0297.jpg
  • Mine worker Mahmoud Nanga (right) and a co-worker (name unknown) watch as a large truck gets loaded with ore in the main pit of the Youga gold mine near the town of Youga, approximately 205 km southeast of Burkina Faso's capital Ouagadougou on Tuesday April 28, 2009.
    BFA09.0428.GOLDMINING0255.jpg
  • An excavator loads a large truck with ore in the main pit of the Youga gold mine near the town of Youga, approximately 205 km southeast of Burkina Faso's capital Ouagadougou on Tuesday April 28, 2009..
    BFA09.0428.GOLDMINING0081.jpg
  • In the shade of a large umbrella, a chief sitting on a palaquin is carried by followers during the parade held on the occasion of the annual Oguaa Fetu Afahye Festival in Cape Coast, Ghana on Saturday September 6, 2008.
    GHA_FESTIVAL008.JPG
  • A man rides his bicycle along a road overlooked by a large mountain formation called mogote near Vinales, Cuba.
    CUB08.0722.VINALES0090.jpg
  • A Cuban flag flies against a backdrop of large cloud formations at Marina Marlin, near playa Ancon, Cuba, on Thursday July 3, 2008.
    CUB08.0703.TRINIDAD0076.JPG
  • Girls gathered around large plates of food for lunch at the Mame Diarra Bousso koranic school in the village of Porokhane, Senegal, on Monday June 18, 2007.
    SEN07.0618.GIRLSED1474.JPG
  • Children gather around a large plate of food during lunch at the Tangory Transgambienne 2 primary school in the town of Bignona, Senegal on Wednesday June 13, 2007.
    SEN07.0613.GIRLSED0927.JPG
  • Children gather around a large plate of lentils during lunch in a classroom at the Idrissa Diouf primary school in Bignona, Senegal, on Tuesday June 12, 2007.
    SEN07.0612.GIRLSED0380.JPG
  • Teenage boys sit on a large tree trunk as they eat their lunch outside the Zogbeli Junior Secondary School in Tamale, Ghana on Thursday June 7, 2007..
    GHA07.0607.GIRLSED1325.JPG
  • Mariam Alhassan, 11, pours the water she brought back from a borehole located 15 minutes away in a large clay container inside the compound where she lives with her family in the village of Ying, northern Ghana, on Monday June 4, 2007.
    GHA07.0604.GIRLSED0363.JPG
  • Front end of a large cargo plane.
    05GHA.IMG_5684.jpg
  • Women working at palm oil processing plant outside Ashaiman, one of Ghana's largest slums. The plant is set a few meters away from a large garbage dump.
    GHA05Ashaiman0006.jpg
  • Women working at palm oil processing plant outside Ashaiman, one of Ghana's largest slums. The plant is set a few meters away from a large garbage dump.
    GHA05Ashaiman0008.jpg
  • Women working at palm oil processing plant outside Ashaiman, one of Ghana's largest slums. The plant is set a few meters away from a large garbage dump.
    GHA05Ashaiman0009.jpg
  • Women working at palm oil processing plant outside Ashaiman, one of Ghana's largest slums. The plant is set a few meters away from a large garbage dump.
    GHA05Ashaiman0011.jpg
  • Women working at palm oil processing plant outside Ashaiman, one of Ghana's largest slums. The plant is set a few meters away from a large garbage dump.
    GHA05Ashaiman0013.jpg
  • Young girl sitting on palm nut bags at palm oil processing plant outside Ashaiman, one of Ghana's largest slums. The plant is set a few meters away from a large garbage dump.
    GHA05Ashaiman0014.jpg
  • Togolese refugees stand by newly-built homes in a small village along the Togolese border, Eastern Ghana. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0027.jpg
  • Young Togolese boy waiting at a UNHCR food distribution centre in the Ghanaian Volta region. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0024.jpg
  • Togolese refugees waiting at a UNHCR food distribution centre in the Ghanaian Volta region. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0023.jpg
  • Portrait of young Togolese refugee girl waiting at a UNHCR food distribution centre in the Ghanaian Volta region. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0008.jpg
  • Togolese refugees waiting at a UNHCR registration centre in the Ghanaian Volta region. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0001.jpg
  • Togolese children in a crowded classroom in a small village along the Togolese border, Eastern Ghana. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0015.jpg
  • Togolese children in a crowded classroom in a small village along the Togolese border, Eastern Ghana. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0017.jpg
  • Togolese refugees waiting by the roadside in a small village along the Togolese border, Eastern Ghana. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0020.jpg
  • Togolese refugee woman and her child in a small village along the Togolese border, Eastern Ghana. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0021.jpg
  • Togolese refugee woman and her child in a small village along the Togolese border, Eastern Ghana. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0022.jpg
  • Mariam, 14, pours water she just brought back from a UNICEF-sponsored pump into large ceramic pots at her home in the village of Game, Guera province, Chad on Tuesday October 16, 2012.
    TCD12.1017.UNICEF0402.JPG
  • A boy sets up a mesh filter on top a large barrel before filling it with water at the Dikunani dam in Savelugu, northern Ghana, on Friday March 9, 2007. The only of four water sources that has not completely dried out around Savelugu, the pond is used by hundreds of people daily who sometimes walk several kilometers to fetch water. Despite the presence of mesh filters available to people who come get water, cases of guinea worm in the area have gone up sharply in the recent months.
    GHA07.0309.GUINEAWORM281.jpg
  • A large mountain formation called mogote overlooks a road near Vinales, Cuba.
    CUB08.0722.VINALES0089.jpg
  • Children gather around a large plate of food during lunch at the Tangory Transgambienne 2 primary school in the town of Bignona, Senegal on Wednesday June 13, 2007.
    SEN07.0613.GIRLSED0928.JPG
  • Women working at palm oil processing plant outside Ashaiman, one of Ghana's largest slums. The plant is set a few meters away from a large garbage dump.
    GHA05Ashaiman0016.jpg
  • Togolese refugees work building a mud-brick house in a small village along the Togolese border, Eastern Ghana. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0026.jpg
  • Togolese refugees work building a mud-brick house in a small village along the Togolese border, Eastern Ghana. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0025.jpg
  • Man holding refugee id card at a UNHCR food distribution centre in the Ghanaian Volta region. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0010.jpg
  • Togolese refugees waiting at a UNHCR food distribution centre in the Ghanaian Volta region. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0006.jpg
  • Togolese refugees waiting at a UNHCR food distribution centre in the Ghanaian Volta region. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0003.jpg
  • Togolese refugees waiting at a UNHCR food distribution centre in the Ghanaian Volta region. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0011.jpg
  • Togolese children in a crowded classroom in a small village along the Togolese border, Eastern Ghana. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0016.jpg
  • Togolese man teaching in a classroom in a small village along the Togolese border, Eastern Ghana. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0018.jpg
  • Young togolese boy peeking into a classroom in a small village along the Togolese border, Eastern Ghana. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0019.jpg
  • Aid worker unloading food bags from truck at a UNHCR food distribution centre in the Ghanaian Volta region. Thousands of Togolese citizens crossed the border into Ghana after the violence that followed presidential elections in April 2005. Partly because of strong cultural ties between populations on both sides of the border, Togolese refugees were able to enjoy the relative hospitality of their Ghanaian neighbours, and are today scattered in various villages across the border. The UNHCR complains that, since the refugees aren't concentratred in large camps, media attention has been minimal, and that it has been very difficult to attract funding.
    GHA05TogoRefugees0009.jpg
  • Large tree in the forest in Katiola, Cote d'Ivoire on Friday July 12, 2013. In this region, FGM/C is often practiced in a sacred forest, where young girls are taken by FGM/C practitioners.
    CIV13.0712.UNCF0747.JPG
  • Men tie a tarp on the trailer of a large truck near Notse, Togo on Thursday October 2, 2008.
    TGO08.1002.TOGOROADS0259.jpg
  • Signboard identifying a drivers union office at the Terminal du Sahel, a large truck terminal in Lome, Togo on Wednesday October 1, 2008.
    TGO08.1001.ROADS0003.JPG
  • A man walks past large bronze statues at the Village Artisanal de Ouagadougou, a cooperative that employs dozens of artisans who work in different mediums, in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, on Monday November 3, 2008.
    GHA08.1103.SIAO0554.jpg
  • A woman carries a large plate of peanuts on her head while offering them for sale in Kpong, Ghana on Wednesday June 17, 2009.
    GHA09.0617.GATES0265.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
  • A boy sits on his bicycle near a large pile of plastic casings from computers and other electronics near the Agbogboloshie market in Accra, Ghana on Tuesday August 12, 2008.
    GHA08.0812.COMPUTERDUMP0058.jpg
  • Large tree in the forest in Katiola, Cote d'Ivoire on Friday July 12, 2013. In this region, FGM/C is often practiced in a sacred forest, where young girls are taken by FGM/C practitioners.
    CIV13.0712.UNCF0752.JPG
  • A man holds millet he pulled from a grain silo outside his home in the village of Nabitenga, Plateau-Centre region, Burkina Faso on Tuesday March 27, 2012. He says the cobs are normally twice as large, but that the rain has been insufficient this year.
    BFA12.0327.NUT0220.JPG
  • Internally displaced women and children fill jericans with water from a large UNICEF-sponsored bladder outside the Kanyaruchinya school in the town of Kibati, on the outskirts of Goma, Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo on Friday December 12, 2008. Classes stopped in the school - normally attended by 400 children - when people displaced by recent fighting found refuge inside the school buildings.
    DRC08.1212.FARROW1030.jpg
  • A member of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) looks over a large crowd of supporters during a campaign rally in Ghana's capital Accra on Friday December 5, 2008. Thousands of Ghanaians gathered in final rallies as they prepared to head to the polls on Sunday December 7 to elect a new government.
    GHA08.1205.ELECTIONS0708.JPG
  • Containers getting loaded aboard a large freighter at the sea port in Lome, Togo on Friday October 3, 2008.
    TGO08.1003.HARBOUR0006.JPG
  • People are engulfed by a cloud of dust as they walk past large trucks near Notse, Togo on Thursday October 2, 2008.
    TGO08.1002.TOGOROADS0223.jpg
  • A man rides a bicycle past trucks parked at the Terminal du Sahel, a large truck terminal in Lome, Togo on Wednesday October 1, 2008.
    TGO08.1001.ROADS0009.JPG
  • A woman carries a large plate of peanuts on her head while offering them for sale in Kpong, Ghana on Wednesday June 17, 2009.
    GHA09.0617.GATES0263.jpg
  • A woman and a girl stand next to a large wall painting in the town of Valle de Angeles, Honduras on Friday April 26, 2013.
    HND13.0426.SABIN916.JPG
  • A man spreads sawdust on a large mound of charcoal at a wood charcoal production site on the outskirts of San Pedro, Bas-Sassandra region, Côte d'Ivoire on Sunday March 4, 2012. Men, women and children - who don't go to school - work here seven days a week.
    CIV12.0304.PROTECTION0246.JPG
  • A man drives a group of donkeys who carry large loads of hay on their backs in Mao, Kanem region, Chad on Monday February 13, 2012.
    TCD12.0213.WASH0441.JPG
  • Children rest on a large wooden mortar in the village of Banankoro, Mali on Saturday August 28, 2010.
    MAL10.0828.UNICEF0696.JPG
  • Supporters surround a large fake elephant - the New Patriotic Party's emblem - during a campaign rally in Ghana's capital Accra on Friday December 5, 2008. Thousands of Ghanaians gathered in final rallies as they prepared to head to the polls on Sunday December 7 to elect a new government.
    GHA08.1205.ELECTIONS0490.jpg
  • A worker stands by a large cargo boat at the sea port in Lome, Togo on Friday October 3, 2008.
    TGO08.1003.HARBOUR0002.JPG
  • Men tie a tarp on the trailer of a large truck near Notse, Togo on Thursday October 2, 2008.
    TGO08.1002.TOGOROADS0253.jpg
  • People sit under a large tree in Tano Akakro, Cote d'Ivoire on Saturday June 20, 2009.
    CIV09.0620.GATES0190.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
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x