Olivier Asselin photography

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  • A boy runs towards the camera in N'Djamena, Chad on Tuesday June 8, 2010.
    TCD10.0608.DDRCONF0124.JPG
  • Man running down the slope of Pico Fogo, Fogo Island, Cape Verde, West Africa.
    CPV10.0107.FOGO0453.JPG
  • Man running down the slope of Pico Fogo, Fogo Island, Cape Verde, West Africa.
    CPV10.0107.FOGO0470.JPG
  • Convention People's Party (CPP) presidential  running mate Abu Sakara Forster speaks during a rally in Accra, Ghana on Sunday September 21, 2008.
    GHA08.0921.CPPRALLY0021.JPG
  • Community members discuss about good hygiene practices to verify how they've understood key messages during a meeting in the village of Kawejah, Grand Cape Mount county, Liberia on Friday April 6, 2012. As part of the UNICEF sponsored CLTS programme, communities learn to put in practice good hygiene and sanitation practices.
    LBR12.0406.NUT0844.JPG
  • Satta Fahnbulleh, 17, interviews a woman while Karn B. Sherman, 17, takes notes as they work on producing a UNICEF-sponsored youth radio program that will air on a local radio station in the town of Sinje, Grand Cape Mount county, Liberia on Friday April 6, 2012. The program is entirely run by teenagers, and discusses various issues related to children's rights, health, education, etc.
    LBR12.0406.NUT0096.JPG
  • A health worker examines a sick child in a clinic run by MSF next to the Tabacongo health center, in the town of Tabacongo, Katanga province, on Sunday February 19, 2012.
    COD12.0219.FARROW0428.JPG
  • A health worker takes a child's temperature in a clinic run by MSF next to the Tabacongo health center, in the town of Tabacongo, Katanga province, on Sunday February 19, 2012.
    COD12.0219.FARROW0424.JPG
  • A boy who suffers from malaria lies on a bed in a clinic run by MSF next to the Tabacongo health center, in the town of Tabacongo, Katanga province, on Sunday February 19, 2012.
    COD12.0219.FARROW0423.JPG
  • Satta Fahnbulleh, 17, interviews a woman while Karn B. Sherman, 17, takes notes as they work on producing a UNICEF-sponsored youth radio program that will air on a local radio station in the town of Sinje, Grand Cape Mount county, Liberia on Friday April 6, 2012. The program is entirely run by teenagers, and discusses various issues related to children's rights, health, education, etc.
    LBR12.0406.NUT0089.JPG
  • Maria Mchele holds freshly-harvested sweet potatoes on a farm run by a local farmer's group in the village of Mwazonge, roughly 30km southwest of Mwanza, Tanzania on Sunday December 13, 2009..
    TZA09.1213.GATES0410.JPG
  • Maria Mchele holds freshly-harvested sweet potatoes on a farm run by a local farmer's group in the village of Mwazonge, roughly 30km southwest of Mwanza, Tanzania on Sunday December 13, 2009..
    TZA09.1213.GATES0425.JPG
  • Mwanaidi Ramadhani (C) and Theresa Mathias (L) harvest sweet potatoes on a farm run by a local farmer's group in the village of Mwazonge, roughly 30km southwest of Mwanza, Tanzania on Sunday December 13, 2009..
    TZA09.1213.GATES0359.JPG
  • Women harvest sweet potatoes on a farm run by a local farmer's group in the village of Mwazonge, roughly 30km southwest of Mwanza, Tanzania on Sunday December 13, 2009..
    TZA09.1213.GATES0341.JPG
  • Maria Mchele holds freshly-harvested sweet potatoes on a farm run by a local farmer's group in the village of Mwazonge, roughly 30km southwest of Mwanza, Tanzania on Sunday December 13, 2009..
    TZA09.1213.GATES0414.JPG
  • Maria Mchele (R) and Theresa Mathias (L) harvest sweet potatoes on a farm run by a local farmer's group in the village of Mwazonge, roughly 30km southwest of Mwanza, Tanzania on Sunday December 13, 2009..
    TZA09.1213.GATES0372.JPG
  • A woman harvests sweet potatoes on a farm run by a local farmer's group in the village of Mwazonge, roughly 30km southwest of Mwanza, Tanzania on Sunday December 13, 2009..
    TZA09.1213.GATES0357.JPG
  • Sweet potato farmers work on a farm run by a local farmer's group in the village of Mwazonge, roughly 30km southwest of Mwanza, Tanzania on Sunday December 13, 2009..
    TZA09.1213.GATES0306.JPG
  • Sweet potato farmers Mwanaidi Ramadhani (L) and Maria Mchele (R) transplant sweet potato plantlets on a farm run by a local farmer's group in the village of Mwazonge, roughly 30km southwest of Mwanza, Tanzania on Sunday December 13, 2009.
    TZA09.1213.GATES0116.JPG
  • Sweet potato farmers Mwanaidi Ramadhani (L) and Maria Mchele (R) work on a farm run by a local farmer's group in the village of Mwazonge, roughly 30km southwest of Mwanza, Tanzania on Sunday December 13, 2009.
    TZA09.1213.GATES0103.JPG
  • Sweet potato farmer Mwanaidi Ramadhani and fellow farmers walk through a field as they head to a farm run by a local farmer's group in the village of Mwazonge, roughly 30km southwest of Mwanza, Tanzania on Sunday December 13, 2009.
    TZA09.1213.GATES0077.JPG
  • Sweet potato farmers Mwanaidi Ramadhani (L) and Maria Mchele (R) transplant sweet potato plantlets on a farm run by a local farmer's group in the village of Mwazonge, roughly 30km southwest of Mwanza, Tanzania on Sunday December 13, 2009.
    TZA09.1213.GATES0150.JPG
  • A vintage American can drives by run-down colonial buildings in Old Havana, Cuba on Sunday June 29, 2008.
    CUB08.0629.HAVANA0110.jpg
  • Run-down colonial buildings in Old Havana, Cuba on Sunday June 29, 2008.
    CUB08.0629.HAVANA0109.jpg
  • Run-down colonial buildings in Old Havana, Cuba on Sunday June 29, 2008.
    CUB08.0629.HAVANA0106.jpg
  • Nicole, 16, stands in the doorway of one of the rooms where she meets clients in a brothel in Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire on Wednesday July 17, 2013. Nicole started working as a sex worker after running away from home, where her mother used to beat her. She says she can have up to 10 or 20 clients in a day; each of them pays 1000 CFA (2$). "When I started I went for a whole week without using condoms. I was new, I didn't know", she says. "Sometimes the police come to catch us. We have to pay them 3000, 5000 or 10,000 so that they leave us alone. Other times you have to sleep with them." Nicole went to school up to grade 5.
    CIV13.0717.UNCF0186.JPG
  • A boy runs back to the hut where he lives with his family in the Mugunga II IDP camp on the outskirts of Goma, Democratic Republic of Congo, on Wednesday December 17, 2008.
    DRC08.1217.HOSTFAMILIES528.JPG
  • Nicole, 16, stands in the doorway of one of the rooms where she meets clients in a brothel in Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire on Wednesday July 17, 2013. Nicole started working as a sex worker after running away from home, where her mother used to beat her. She says she can have up to 10 or 20 clients in a day; each of them pays 1000 CFA (2$). "When I started I went for a whole week without using condoms. I was new, I didn't know", she says. "Sometimes the police come to catch us. We have to pay them 3000, 5000 or 10,000 so that they leave us alone. Other times you have to sleep with them." Nicole went to school up to grade 5.
    CIV13.0717.UNCF0028.JPG
  • Rafael Yeboah, 13, waits to fill his plastic containers with water from a tap in a poor neighborhood of Accra, Ghana's capital, on Monday Mar 5, 2007. Only when Rafael will have finished transporting the water home will he be able to head to school. Most parts of the city are plagued with intermittent water shortages, and people buy water from the few running taps. They then have to carry the containers to their homes over distances that often reach several hundred meters. Meanwhile, Ghana is preparing to celebrate its 50 years of independence from the UK on March 6th.
    GHA07.0305.GHANA50150.JPG
  • Nicole, 16, stands in the doorway of one of the rooms where she meets clients in a brothel in Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire on Wednesday July 17, 2013. Nicole started working as a sex worker after running away from home, where her mother used to beat her. She says she can have up to 10 or 20 clients in a day; each of them pays 1000 CFA (2$). "When I started I went for a whole week without using condoms. I was new, I didn't know", she says. "Sometimes the police come to catch us. We have to pay them 3000, 5000 or 10,000 so that they leave us alone. Other times you have to sleep with them." Nicole went to school up to grade 5.
    CIV13.0717.UNCF0162.JPG
  • Nicole, 16, sits in one of the rooms where she meets clients in a brothel in Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire on Wednesday July 17, 2013. Nicole started working as a sex worker after running away from home, where her mother used to beat her. She says she can have up to 10 or 20 clients in a day; each of them pays 1000 CFA (2$). "When I started I went for a whole week without using condoms. I was new, I didn't know", she says. "Sometimes the police come to catch us. We have to pay them 3000, 5000 or 10,000 so that they leave us alone. Other times you have to sleep with them." Nicole went to school up to grade 5.
    CIV13.0717.UNCF0013.JPG
  • Nicole, 16, sits in one of the rooms where she meets clients in a brothel in Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire on Wednesday July 17, 2013. Nicole started working as a sex worker after running away from home, where her mother used to beat her. She says she can have up to 10 or 20 clients in a day; each of them pays 1000 CFA (2$). "When I started I went for a whole week without using condoms. I was new, I didn't know", she says. "Sometimes the police come to catch us. We have to pay them 3000, 5000 or 10,000 so that they leave us alone. Other times you have to sleep with them." Nicole went to school up to grade 5.
    CIV13.0717.UNCF0002.JPG
  • Displaced children sit on a tarp among their parents in the house where they sleep in Goma, Eastern Democratic of Congo on Monday December 15, 2008. Justine Faida, who lives in the house with her husband and four children, decided to take in 20 people from Rutshuru, about 70km north of Goma, after they reached the provincial capital, running away from conflict.
    DRC08.1215.GOMA013.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
  • 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
  • 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
  • Convention People's Party (CPP) presidential candidate Paa Kwesi Nduom (left) holds hands with running mate Abu Sakara Forster (right) during a rally in Accra, Ghana on Sunday September 21, 2008.
    GHA08.0921.CPPRALLY0018.JPG
  • A man fills plastic containers with water from a tap in a poor neighborhood of Accra, Ghana's capital, on Monday Mar 5, 2007. Most parts of the city are plagued with intermittent water shortages, and people buy water from the few running taps. They then have to carry the containers to their homes over distances that often reach several hundred meters. Meanwhile, Ghana is preparing to celebrate its 50 years of independence from the UK on March 6th.
    GHA07.0305.GHANA50152.JPG
  • Sarah Adjrokor, 18, fills plastic containers with water from a tap in a poor neighborhood of Accra, Ghana's capital, on Monday Mar 5, 2007. Most parts of the city are plagued with intermittent water shortages, and people buy water from the few running taps. They then have to carry the containers to their homes over distances that often reach several hundred meters. Meanwhile, Ghana is preparing to celebrate its 50 years of independence from the UK on March 6th.
    GHA07.0305.GHANA50135.JPG
  • Nicole, 16, stands in the doorway of one of the rooms where she meets clients in a brothel in Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire on Wednesday July 17, 2013. Nicole started working as a sex worker after running away from home, where her mother used to beat her. She says she can have up to 10 or 20 clients in a day; each of them pays 1000 CFA (2$). "When I started I went for a whole week without using condoms. I was new, I didn't know", she says. "Sometimes the police come to catch us. We have to pay them 3000, 5000 or 10,000 so that they leave us alone. Other times you have to sleep with them." Nicole went to school up to grade 5.
    CIV13.0717.UNCF0165.JPG
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