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  • A young prisoner in South Africa show a tattoo on his arm that says West Side.
    south_africa_hawkey_20031119_033.jpg
  • Women carry water home from a communal well in the Hassa Hissa Camp for internally displaced persons in West Darfur. Water is a key element in the conflict in Darfur, where over 400,000 people have died and some 2.5 million have been displaced.
    sudan-2007-jeffrey-darfur-089.jpg
  • 6 December 2017, Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire: Eklou Kokou Gil from Togo, a volunteer of the West Africa regional branch of the World Council of Churches Ecumenical HIV and AIDS Initiatives and Advocacy, WCC-EHAIA, attends ICASA 2017. The 19th International Conference on AIDS and STIs in Africa (ICASA) 2017 gathers thousands of researchers, medical professionals, academics, activists and faith-based organizations from all over the world, all looking to overcome the HIV epidemic and eliminate AIDS as a public health threat. Through a Faith Networking Zone, the World Council of Churches offers a space highlighting the role of faith-based organizations in the global response to HIV. Throughout ICASA, the Faith Networking Zone hosts a range of activities, including prayers, debriefing sessions, and workshops.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20171206_AHP_128...jpg
  • Dr. Sakoba Keita, coordinator of the Guinean Ebola Response speaks to local media during a village meeting on Ebola. <br />
<br />
The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for Ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eradicate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150704_1843.jpg
  • The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eliminate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150704_1717.jpg
  • The bonnet of a vehicle of the World Health Organisation during the clinical trials for ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150704_1600.jpg
  • The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eliminate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150704_1563.jpg
  • Allasane Coumbassa, at the Conakry City Morgue. The morgue dealt with many Ebola deaths, Ousmane complained of inadequate protective measures, clothing or waste management to deal with the Ebola .
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150703_0025.jpg
  • Allasane Coumbassa, at the Conakry City Morgue. The morgue has dealt with several Ebola deaths this week, and Ousmane complains that they don't have adequate protective measures, clothing or waste management to deal with Ebola.<br />
<br />
The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for Ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eradicate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150703_0036.jpg
  • Fatoumata Conte, logisitics specialist for the WHO during the Ebola vaccine clinical trial in Conakry, Guinea.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150703_0002.jpg
  • The phase III clinical trial of the Ebola vaccine in Guinea was hampered by difficulty in transport to remote regions.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150702_0142.jpg
  • The phase III clinical trial of the Ebola vaccine in Guinea was hampered by difficulty in transport to remote regions.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150702_0146.jpg
  • Members of the data management team sort files on Ebola vaccine trial participants in the WHO data centre in Conakry. <br />
<br />
The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for Ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eradicate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150702_0079.jpg
  • Young men in Bonfe village, the first village in Guinea to take part in the Ebola vaccine trials that began in March 2015.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150702_0017.jpg
  • The drill for destroying the Ebola virus where medical staff come in contact with confirmed cases is strict routine, one small mistake and the infection can be passed on. Staff in PPE, are often close to being overcome by the heat and dehydration, and sometimes need to be shouted instructions like "raise your head up" as each part of the drill is gone through, a series of specific movements as they are sprayed with a bleach solution and each part of the protective clothing is peeled off in the right order and in the right direction, and put straight in the incineration bucket, even the ground where they stand is considered contaminated and has to be covered in bleach. Eventually, a very grateful and completely sweat-sodden worker emerges from inside.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_2093.jpg
  • A poster from the Ebola ça Suffit campaign against Ebola in Guinea
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_2082.jpg
  • Nene Aminata Diallo (l) and Gamou Saiman Gaston (r), carefully go through the consent process with a participant in the Ebola vaccine trial.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_1954.jpg
  • The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eliminate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_1939.jpg
  • The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eliminate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_1867.jpg
  • A security guard in Guinea wears PPE and holds a thermo flash, a non-contact thermometer for testing at a road block. High temperature is the first major sign of Ebola infection, anyone with a temperature of 37 degrees celsius or above was stopped immediately for further testing and isolation to stop the spread of infections.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_1848.jpg
  • rVSV Zebov-GP, the Ebola vaccine that was trialled in Guinea, ready to be administered to a participant in the clinical trial in Guinea.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_1745.jpg
  • A doctor wore PPE in the phase III clinical trials for Ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique used was "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eliminate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_1639.jpg
  • Hadja Kakoro Sogbe and Halimatu Diallo, members of team nine of the WHO Ebola vaccine trials in Guinea, went through the extensive consent procedure with a participant in the Ebola vaccine trial. They wore protective clothing as the participants were all direct contacts of verified cases of Ebola.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_1635.jpg
  • The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eliminate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_1611.jpg
  • An injection of the trial vaccine for Ebola is prepared for a participant in the trial in Katongourou, Guinea. <br />
<br />
The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for Ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eradicate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_1606.jpg
  • Kimberley Steeds in the Ebola vaccine lab at Donka Hospital in Conakry, Guinea. <br />
<br />
The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for Ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eradicate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150629_0381.jpg
  • Mamadouba Conté processed blood samples in the Ebola lab at Donka Hospital in Conakry, Guinea as part of the Ebola vaccine clinical trials.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150629_0389.jpg
  • WHO staff prepared pharmaceuticals for participants in the clinical trials of the Ebola vaccine in Guinea.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150629_0304.jpg
  • Foromo Kpakpavogui, Ebola vaccine laboratory technician at Donka Hospital, Conakry, Guinea.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150629_0191.jpg
  • The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eliminate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150629_0122.jpg
  • Dr. Sakoba Keita, coordinator of the Guinean Ebola Response spoke to local media during a village meeting on Ebola.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150704_1689.jpg
  • Mohamed Soumah, 27, the first person to be vaccinated in the Ebola vaccine trial. "It wasn't easy, I can't say I wasn't afraid, I was afraid. People in the village were saying that the injection was to kill me. I was the first one to be injected, the very first, here in my village on March 23. 44 people were vaccinated. I had fever after the vaccination, it worried me a bit, but they warned me that would happen and it didn't last long. I've been monitored for three months and I've had no problems. The last follow up, 84 days after the vaccination, was all clear".
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150702_0207.jpg
  • rVSV Zebov-GP, the Ebola vaccine that was trialled in Guinea, ready to be administered to a participant in the clinical trial in Guinea.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_2102.jpg
  • rVSV Zebov-GP, the Ebola vaccine being prepared for injection.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_2116.jpg
  • The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eliminate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_2072.jpg
  • A security guard in Guinea wears PPE and holds a thermo flash, a non-contact thermometer for testing at a road block. High temperature is the first major sign of Ebola infection, anyone with a temperature of 37 degrees celsius or above was stopped immediately for further testing and isolation to stop the spread of infections.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_2050.jpg
  • Team nine of the WHO Ebola vaccine trial at work in Guinea.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_2019.jpg
  • Souare Sekouba (l), and Conde Doussou, (r) part of the WHO vaccine trial teams, run a final follow up with a participant. Follow ups monitor the health of everyone who is taking part in the trial, and are programmed for 3, 9, 21, 42, 63 and 84 days after the administration of the vaccine. <br />
<br />
The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for Ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eradicate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_1886.jpg
  • A young woman in the village of Katongourou, western Guinea, an area heavily affected by Ebola. Many people in the village were participants in the WHO Ebola vaccine trial.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_1844.jpg
  • An injection of the trial vaccine for Ebola is administered to a participant in the vaccine trial in Katongourou, Guinea. <br />
<br />
The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for Ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eradicate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150630_1616.jpg
  • The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eliminate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150629_0424.jpg
  • While the Ebola vaccine was trialled it had to be kept at a temperature of minus 60 degrees celsius, these Arktek passive vaccine storage devices use jet fuel to keep the right temperature for up to five days in the field, even being opened several times a day. Here a vaccine core is being inserted into the device.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150629_0252.jpg
  • During the phase III Ebola vaccine trial in Guinea, serum was separated from red blood cells for Ebola tests in Donka Hospital in Conakry, Guinea.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150629_0134.jpg
  • The World Health Organisation is running phase III clinical trials for ebola virus disease vaccine in Guinea. The technique being used is "ring vaccination" which was used in the 1970s to eliminate smallpox.
    Guinea_Hawkey_ebola_20150629_0164.jpg
  • Marion Zenneh, 23, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Felicia Davis, 24, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-3...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-2...jpg
  • Vabrah Weekie (right), 54, and Martha Francis, 53, work with several other women on a six-acre farm where they are growing cassava near Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-1...jpg
  • Isabella Washington (left), 26, and Catherine Hill, 28, walk along a street in Monrovia, Liberia, after attending class at United Methodist University. Both women are studying with help from scholarships from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-univ-08.jpg
  • Youth participate in a class on hair styling, one of many skills training opportunities at the Brighter Future Children Rescue Center in Buchanan, Liberia. The center, supported by the United Methodist Church in Germany and United Methodist Women, carries out rehabilitation work with ex-combatants and other war-affected children.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-postwar-26.jpg
  • Anthony Logan at work in a carpenter's shop in Buchanan, Liberia. The young man is a graduate of the skills training program at the Brighter Future Children Rescue Center in Buchanan. Supported by the United Methodist Church in Germany and United Methodist Women, the center carries out rehabilitation work with ex-combatants and other war-affected children.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-postwar-14.jpg
  • Anthony Logan at work in a carpenter's shop in Buchanan, Liberia. The young man is a graduate of the skills training program at the Brighter Future Children Rescue Center in Buchanan. Supported by the United Methodist Church in Germany and United Methodist Women, the center carries out rehabilitation work with ex-combatants and other war-affected children.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-postwar-13.jpg
  • Beatrice Nelson and one of her goats. She was kidnapped and mistreated by rebel soldiers during Liberia's civil wars, but today she's a mother and entrepreneur near Buchanan, Liberia. When she graduated from My Daughter's Place, a program for war-affected girls at Camphor Mission, she received a sewing machine and two goats, and leveraged that capital into a successful small business which today supports her family. My Daughter's Place is supported by United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-postwar-08.jpg
  • Beatrice Nelson works on her sewing machine outside her house. She was kidnapped and mistreated by rebel soldiers during Liberia's civil wars, but today she's a mother and entrepreneur near Buchanan, Liberia. When she graduated from My Daughter's Place, a program for war-affected girls at Camphor Mission, she received a sewing machine and two goats, and leveraged that capital into a successful small business which today supports her family. My Daughter's Place is supported by United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-postwar-03.jpg
  • Members of "Daughters of the King," a girls' organization that carries out public education about HIV and AIDS, performs a drama in the market in Kakata, Liberia, focused on fighting the stigma and discrimination often associated with the disease. The group  is sponsored by the HIV/AIDS Program of the Lutheran Church in Liberia.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-HIV-27.jpg
  • Members of "Daughters of the King," a girls' organization that carries out public education about HIV and AIDS, marches through the market in Kakata, Liberia, singing and chanting about the disease and how to prevent it. The group  is sponsored by the HIV/AIDS Program of the Lutheran Church in Liberia.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-HIV-10.jpg
  • Grace Tutu Stevens, a counselor for a Lutheran-sponsored HIV and AIDS program in Monrovia, Liberia, demonstrates proper condom use to a woman.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-HIV-03.jpg
  • One girl helps another with her braid in a day care center in Monrovia, Liberia, sponsored by United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-daycare-57.jpg
  • Children clap as they sing during class in a day care center in Monrovia, Liberia, sponsored by United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-daycare-39.jpg
  • Children sing a song with hand motions during class in a day care center in Monrovia, Liberia, sponsored by United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-daycare-19.jpg
  • Children during class in a day care center in Monrovia, Liberia, sponsored by United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-daycare-08.jpg
  • An internally displaced girl living in Segou, Mali, takes a photograph with her mobile phone.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-361.jpg
  • Aramatou Maiga winnows grain to cook for her family in Segou, Mali. She was displaced when Islamist rebels seized the north of the country, including her home town of Gao, in 2012. The Islamists were chased out in early 2013 by French troops. Many displaced and refugee families have yet to return, preferring to wait for better security and improved economic conditions in the north.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-355.jpg
  • A man displaced from his home town of Gossi, Mali, living in a rented house with his family in Mopti. They were displaced by fighting when Islamist rebels seized control of the north of Mali in 2012. The Islamists were chased out in early 2013 by French troops. Many displaced and refugee families have yet to return, preferring to wait for better security and improved economic conditions in the north.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-339.jpg
  • A girl displaced from her home in Gossi, Mali, and living in a rented house with her family in Mopti. They were displaced when Islamist rebels seized control of the north of Mali in 2012. The Islamists were chased out in early 2013 by French troops. Many displaced and refugee families have yet to return, preferring to wait for better security and improved economic conditions in the north.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-335.jpg
  • A family sits in front of their tent in a camp in Mopti, Mali, for people displaced by the fighting in the north of the country. Islamist rebels seized control of the north of Mali in 2012, but were chased out in early 2013 by French troops. Many displaced and refugee families have yet to return, preferring to wait for better security and improved economic conditions in the north.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-328.jpg
  • Eight-year old Sisi Maiga carries water in a camp in Mopti, Mali, for families displaced by the fighting in the north of the country. Islamist rebels seized control of Maiga's home town of Gossi and other areas of the north in 2012, but were chased out in early 2013 by French troops. Many displaced and refugee families have yet to return, preferring to wait for better security and improved economic conditions in the north.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-316.jpg
  • A woman carries water in a camp in Mopti, Mali, for families displaced by the fighting in the north of the country. Islamist rebels seized control of Maiga's home town of Gossi and other areas of the north in 2012, but were chased out in early 2013 by French troops. Many displaced and refugee families have yet to return, preferring to wait for better security and improved economic conditions in the north.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-311.jpg
  • A small child crawls along a street in Timbuktu, the northern Mali city that was seized by Islamist fighters in 2012 and then liberated by French and Malian soldiers in early 2013.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-277.jpg
  • A woman checks her mobile phone in front of her simple shelter in Timbuktu, a city in northern Mali which was seized by Islamist fighters in 2012 and then liberated by French and Malian soldiers in early 2013. She belongs to the Bella ethnic group, which has traditionally been exploited by Timbuktu's lighter-skinned groups.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-182.jpg
  • Maman Dedeou, 22, had his right hand amputated by Islamist radicals who seized his home town of Timbuktu in northern Mali in 2012. After he was accused of stealing a mattress, Dedeou's family paid fines to the jihadis for weeks, but when their ability to pay ran out, the Islamists cut off Dedeou's hand. He later fled to Bamako, the nation's capital, but returned to Timbuktu in April 2013, several weeks after it was liberated by French and Malian troops. He's currently looking for work.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-169.jpg
  • A  boy carries sand on his head for use in construction in Timbuktu, a city in northern Mali which was seized by Islamist fighters in 2012 and then liberated by French and Malian soldiers in early 2013.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-164.jpg
  • Ghaichatou Dicko (right), along with Aichatou Boiny (left) and Fadimoutou Dicko, prepare food for children at a school in Timbuktu, a city in northern Mali which was seized by Islamist fighters in 2012 and then liberated by French and Malian soldiers in early 2013. During the jihadi occupation, schools were first closed but then allowed to reopen only if boys and girls were strictly separated. The ACT Alliance has provided this group of women with cereal grains, oil and salt to help them provide nutritious food for the children.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-141.jpg
  • Abdoulaye Cisse, the interim director of the Ahmed Baba Institute in Timbuktu, Mali, inspects ancient Islamic manuscripts that went undetected by militant Islamists, who seized control of the city in 2012, and destroyed any such documents they could find. The city was liberated by French and Malian soldiers in early 2013. Most of the city's thousands of ancient manuscripts were smuggled out of the region under the nose of the jihadis.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-137.jpg
  • Students in the Bahadon Second Cycle School in Timbuktu, a city in northern Mali which was seized by Islamist fighters in 2012 and then liberated by French and Malian soldiers in early 2013. The jihadis first banned all schools, then under pressure from the community, allowed them to open but with separate classes for boys and girls.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-114.jpg
  • A woman washes dishes in front of her family's tent in Timbuktu, a city in northern Mali which was seized by Islamist fighters in 2012 and then liberated by French and Malian soldiers in early 2013. This woman belongs to the Bella ethnic group, which has traditionally been exploited by the region's lighter-skinned groups.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-095.jpg
  • A boy in Timbuktu, the northern Mali city captured by Islamist forces in 2012 and liberated by French and Malian soldiers in 2013.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-077.jpg
  • Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, the president of Liberia, dances with a choir of Ugandan children after addressing the 2008 United Methodist General Conference in Fort Worth, Texas, on April 29. Johnson Sirleaf is a long-time member of the United Methodist Church.
    usa-2008-jeffrey-umc-general-confere...jpg
  • Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, the president of Liberia, addresses the United Methodist General Conference in Fort Worth, Texas, on April 29, 2008. President Johnson-Sirleaf is a member of the United Methodist Church.
    usa-2008-jeffrey-liberia-president.jpg
  • Vabrah Weekie, 54, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-6...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-6...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-6...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-6...jpg
  • Alice Sampea, 32, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-6...jpg
  • Women working on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia where several dozen women are farming cassava. The income-generating project is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • A woman prepares the ground for planting on a six-acre farm where several dozen women are farming cassava in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Alice Sampea, 32, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women. Behind her is Martha Francis, 53.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Helena B. Mensahn, 37, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Beatrice Sawyedeh, 57, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Martha Francis, 53, works with several dozen women to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-5...jpg
  • Marion Zenneh, 23, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Vabrah Weekie, 54, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Vabrah Weekie, 54, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Alice Sampea, 32, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Alice Sampea, 32, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Alice Sampea, 32, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Patience Gonwoe, 19, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-4...jpg
  • Patience Gonwoe, 19, is one of several dozen women who work together to grow cassava on a six-acre farm in Mount Barclay, Liberia. The income-generating project, called "Say No to Poverty," is administered by the National Federation of Women Employees and Allied Workers, with financial support from United Methodist Women.
    liberia-2013-jeffrey-women-farmers-3...jpg
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