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  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the injured arm of Alma Maldonado, a Mexican migrant who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where she sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Maldonado, from Veracruz, Mexico, was injured while walking at night through the desert. In the darkness she walked into a barbed wire fence, cutting her face and arms. It also caused her to fall and injure her arm and one foot. Unable to move very fast, she and her husband were apprehended the next day by the Border Patrol. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the injured arm of Alma Maldonado, a Mexican migrant who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where she sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Maldonado, from Veracruz, Mexico, was injured while walking at night through the desert. In the darkness she walked into a barbed wire fence, cutting her face and arms. It also caused her to fall and injure her arm and one foot. Unable to move very fast, she and her husband were apprehended the next day by the Border Patrol. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats wounds on the neck of Alma Maldonado, a Mexican migrant who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where she sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Maldonado, from Veracruz, Mexico, was injured while walking at night through the desert. In the darkness she walked into a barbed wire fence, cutting her face and arms. It also caused her to fall and injure her arm and one foot. Unable to move very fast, she and her husband were apprehended the next day by the Border Patrol. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Ros Ruiz (left), of Oakland, California, and Sarah Parker, of Redlands, California, hike through the desert of southern Arizona in order to place water for migrants crossing from Mexico into the United States. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-18.jpg
  • Sarah Parker (left) of Redlands, California, and Ros Ruiz, of Oakland, California, hike through the desert of southern Arizona in order to place water for migrants crossing from Mexico into the United States. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-16.jpg
  • Sarah Parker (left), of Redlands, California, Ros Ruiz, of Oakland, California, and Walter Staton, of Tucson, Arizona, hike through the desert of southern Arizona. They place water jugs along trails in order to save the lives of migrants crossing through the hostile terrain from Mexico into the United States. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-12.jpg
  • Walter Staton (right), of Tucson, Arizona, places water jugs along trails in the desert of southern Arizona in order to save the lives of migrants crossing through the hostile terrain from Mexico into the United States.  In the background are Ros Ruiz (closest), of Oakland, California, and Sarah Parker, of Redlands, California. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-07.jpg
  • Walter Staton (right), of Tucson, Arizona, places water jugs along trails in the desert of southern Arizona in order to save the lives of migrants crossing through the hostile terrain from Mexico into the United States.  In the background are Ros Ruiz (closest), of Oakland, California, and Sarah Parker, of Redlands, California. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-06.jpg
  • Ros Ruiz (left), of Oakland, California, and Sarah Parker, of Redlands, California, hike through the desert of southern Arizona in order to place water for migrants crossing from Mexico into the United States. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-21.jpg
  • Ros Ruiz (left), of Oakland, California, and Sarah Parker, of Redlands, California, hike through the desert of southern Arizona in order to place water for migrants crossing from Mexico into the United States. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-20.jpg
  • Ros Ruiz (left), of Oakland, California, and Sarah Parker, of Redlands, California, hike through the desert of southern Arizona in order to place water for migrants crossing from Mexico into the United States. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-19.jpg
  • Ros Ruiz (left), of Oakland, California, and Sarah Parker, of Redlands, California, hike through the desert of southern Arizona in order to place water for migrants crossing from Mexico into the United States. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-17.jpg
  • Sarah Parker (left) of Redlands, California, and Ros Ruiz, of Oakland, California, hike through the desert of southern Arizona in order to place water for migrants crossing from Mexico into the United States. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-15.jpg
  • Sarah Parker (left) of Redlands, California, and Ros Ruiz, of Oakland, California, hike through the desert of southern Arizona in order to place water for migrants crossing from Mexico into the United States. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-14.jpg
  • Ros Ruiz, of Oakland, California, hikes through the desert of southern Arizona in order to place water for migrants crossing from Mexico into the United States. She is part of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-13.jpg
  • Walter Staton (left), of Tucson, Arizona, Ros Ruiz, of Oakland, California, and Sarah Parker, of Redlands, California, hike through the desert of southern Arizona. They place water jugs along trails in order to save the lives of migrants crossing through the hostile terrain from Mexico into the United States. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-11.jpg
  • Walter Staton (right), of Tucson, Arizona, places water jugs along trails in the desert of southern Arizona in order to save the lives of migrants crossing through the hostile terrain from Mexico into the United States.  In the background are Ros Ruiz (closest), of Oakland, California, and Sarah Parker, of Redlands, California. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-10.jpg
  • Walter Staton (right), of Tucson, Arizona, places water jugs along trails in the desert of southern Arizona in order to save the lives of migrants crossing through the hostile terrain from Mexico into the United States.  In the background are Ros Ruiz (closest), of Oakland, California, and Sarah Parker, of Redlands, California. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-09.jpg
  • Walter Staton (right), of Tucson, Arizona, places water jugs along trails in the desert of southern Arizona in order to save the lives of migrants crossing through the hostile terrain from Mexico into the United States.  In the background are Ros Ruiz (closest), of Oakland, California, and Sarah Parker, of Redlands, California. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-08.jpg
  • Ros Ruiz (right), of Oakland, California, places water jugs in the desert of southern Arizona. She is accompanied by Sarah Parker (left), of Redlands, California, and Walter Staton, of Tucson, Arizona. They place water jugs along trails in order to save the lives of migrants crossing through the hostile terrain from Mexico into the United States. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-05.jpg
  • Sarah Parker (right), of Redlands, California, and Walter Staton, of Tucson, Arizona, place water jugs along trails in the desert of southern Arizona in order to save the lives of migrants crossing through the hostile terrain from Mexico into the United States. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-04.jpg
  • Sarah Parker (left) of Redlands, California, and Ros Ruiz, of Oakland, California, hike through the desert of southern Arizona in order to place water for migrants crossing from Mexico into the United States. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-01.jpg
  • Walter Staton (left), of Tucson, Arizona, Ros Ruiz, of Oakland, California, and Sarah Parker, of Redlands, California, survey a cache of water jugs in the desert of southern Arizona. They place the jugs along trails in order to save the lives of migrants crossing through the hostile terrain from Mexico into the United States. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-03.jpg
  • Walter Staton (left), of Tucson, Arizona, Ros Ruiz, of Oakland, California, and Sarah Parker, of Redlands, California, survey a cache of water jugs in the desert of southern Arizona. They place the jugs along trails in order to save the lives of migrants crossing through the hostile terrain from Mexico into the United States. They are members of No More Deaths, a group dedicated to stopping the deaths of migrants along the border.
    usa-2009-arizona-border-02.jpg
  • The desert area each side of the US/Mexico border where thousand of migrants pass each year has extreme and inhospitable conditions that cause the death of many migrants, from dehydration and heatstroke.
    Mexico_migration_Hawkey_20210622_792.jpg
  • The US/Mexico border wall near Mexicalli, northern Mexico. Thousands of migrants pass over the wall in this region each year, and many go through the desert to reach the US, large numbers of them die along the way, of heatstroke or dehydration.
    Mexico_migration_Hawkey_20210622_751.jpg
  • The desert area each side of the US/Mexico border where thousand of migrants pass each year has extreme and inhospitable conditions that cause the death of many migrants, from dehydration and heatstroke.
    Mexico_migration_Hawkey_20210622_787.jpg
  • The desert area each side of the US/Mexico border where thousand of migrants pass each year has extreme and inhospitable conditions that cause the death of many migrants, from dehydration and heatstroke.
    Mexico_migration_Hawkey_20210622_504.jpg
  • The desert area each side of the US/Mexico border where thousand of migrants pass each year has extreme and inhospitable conditions that cause the death of many migrants, from dehydration and heatstroke.
    Mexico_migration_Hawkey_20210622_488.jpg
  • The desert area each side of the US/Mexico border where thousand of migrants pass each year has extreme and inhospitable conditions that cause the death of many migrants, from dehydration and heatstroke.
    Mexico_migration_Hawkey_20210622_486.jpg
  • The desert area each side of the US/Mexico border where thousand of migrants pass each year has extreme and inhospitable conditions that cause the death of many migrants, from dehydration and heatstroke.
    Mexico_migration_Hawkey_20210622_485.jpg
  • The US/Mexico border wall near Mexicalli, northern Mexico. Thousands of migrants pass over the wall in this region each year, and many go through the desert to reach the US, large numbers of them die along the way, of heatstroke or dehydration.
    Mexico_migration_Hawkey_20210622_456.jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the foot of a Mexican migrant who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where he sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the foot of a Mexican migrant who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where he sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the foot of Cira Salinas, a migrant from Oaxaca, Mexico, who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where she sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona. Translating for the two is Sally Meisenhelder, a nurse from Las Cruces, new Mexico, who volunteers with No More Deaths, a group dedicated to saving the lives of migrants in the border area.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the foot of Cira Salinas, a migrant from Oaxaca, Mexico, who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where she sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the foot of a Mexican migrant who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where he sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the foot of a Mexican migrant who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where he sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the foot of a Mexican migrant who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where he sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the foot of a Mexican migrant who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where he sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the injured leg of a Mexican migrant who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where he sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • The route to Dadaab is 150km through desert. The journey is only possible with a military escort because of the threat of attacks by bandits and Al Shabaab militia. Dadaab is the biggest refugee camp in the world, housing nearly 300,000 refugees, mainly from Somalia.
    kenya_hawkey_20100110_192.jpg
  • The desert area each side of the US/Mexico border where thousand of migrants pass each year has extreme and inhospitable conditions that cause the death of many migrants, from dehydration and heatstroke.
    Mexico_migration_Hawkey_20210622_795.jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the foot of a Mexican migrant who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where he sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the foot of Cira Salinas, a migrant from Oaxaca, Mexico, who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where she sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the foot of Cira Salinas, a migrant from Oaxaca, Mexico, who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where she sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the foot of Jairo Berieza, a Mexican migrant who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where he sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona. Berieza grew up in Arizona and lived there for 17 years before being detained and deported. In the background is Sally Meisenhelder, a nurse from Las Cruces, new Mexico, who volunteers at the center.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the foot of Jairo Berieza, a Mexican migrant who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where he sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona. Berieza grew up in Arizona and lived there for 17 years before being detained and deported.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • Dawn Gustafson, from Vail, Arizona, treats the foot of a Mexican migrant who was captured by the U.S. Border Patrol in southern Arizona and deported back across the border to Nogales, Mexico, where he sought help from the Catholic-sponsored Kino Border Project. Gustafson, a member of the Green Valley Samaritans, volunteers at the Project's Comedor, where deported migrants receive food, clothing and medical care. Much of the medical care provided in the center is to migrants' feet, which are often left blistered and wounded by the long and dangerous desert trek. Gustafson is a member of the Good Shepherd United Church of Christ in Sahuarita, Arizona.
    mexico-2009-jeffrey-nogales-migrants...jpg
  • The route to Dadaab is 150km through desert. The journey is only possible with a military escort because of the threat of attacks by bandits and Al Shabaab militia. Dadaab is the biggest refugee camp in the world, housing nearly 300,000 refugees, mainly from Somalia.
    kenya_hawkey_20100110_194.jpg
  • 9 January 2018, Sahara Desert, Morocco: Driving to the dunes of Erg Chebbi, one of Morocco's two Saharan seas of sand dunes, formed by the wind. The dunes of Erg Chebbi reach a height of up to 150 meters in places and altogether it spans an area of 50 kilometers from north to south and up to 5–10 kilometers from east to west lining the Algerian border.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180109_AH2_475...jpg
  • Boys harvest clean desert sand, loading it on donkeys for transport to construction sites in Timbuktu, the northern Mali city captured by Islamist forces in 2012 and liberated by French and Malian soldiers in 2013.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-079.jpg
  • A boy harvests clean desert sand, loading it on donkeys for transport to construction sites in Timbuktu, the northern Mali city captured by Islamist forces in 2012 and liberated by French and Malian soldiers in 2013.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-076.jpg
  • 16 December 2016, Cairo, Egypt: Coptic Orthodox nun Sister Haria riding her bike accompanied by a German Shepherd, at the Anaphora Institute, a Coptic Orthodox retreat and educational centre located north-west of Cairo.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20161216_AHP_884...jpg
  • 16 December 2016, Cairo, Egypt: A young man rides a carriage pushed ahead by a donkey, at the Anaphora Institute, a Coptic Orthodox retreat and educational centre located north-west of Cairo.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20161216_AHP_884...jpg
  • 14 June 2017, Nairobi, Kenya: Trees and fence near Jomo Kenyatta International Airport.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20170614_AHP_290...jpg
  • 10 January 2018, Erg Chebbi, Morocco: The dunes of Erg Chebbi is one of Morocco's two Saharan seas of sand dunes, formed by the wind. The dunes of Erg Chebbi reach a height of up to 150 meters in places and altogether it spans an area of 50 kilometers from north to south and up to 5–10 kilometers from east to west lining the Algerian border.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180110_AH1_544...jpg
  • 10 January 2018, Erg Chebbi, Morocco: The dunes of Erg Chebbi is one of Morocco's two Saharan seas of sand dunes, formed by the wind. The dunes of Erg Chebbi reach a height of up to 150 meters in places and altogether it spans an area of 50 kilometers from north to south and up to 5–10 kilometers from east to west lining the Algerian border.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180110_AH1_543...jpg
  • 9 January 2018, Erg Chebbi, Morocco: The dunes of Erg Chebbi is one of Morocco's two Saharan seas of sand dunes, formed by the wind. The dunes of Erg Chebbi reach a height of up to 150 meters in places and altogether it spans an area of 50 kilometers from north to south and up to 5–10 kilometers from east to west lining the Algerian border.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180109_AH2_476...jpg
  • 9 January 2018, Erg Chebbi, Morocco: The dunes of Erg Chebbi is one of Morocco's two Saharan seas of sand dunes, formed by the wind. The dunes of Erg Chebbi reach a height of up to 150 meters in places and altogether it spans an area of 50 kilometers from north to south and up to 5–10 kilometers from east to west lining the Algerian border.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180109_AH1_538...jpg
  • 9 January 2018, Erg Chebbi, Morocco: The dunes of Erg Chebbi is one of Morocco's two Saharan seas of sand dunes, formed by the wind. The dunes of Erg Chebbi reach a height of up to 150 meters in places and altogether it spans an area of 50 kilometers from north to south and up to 5–10 kilometers from east to west lining the Algerian border.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180109_AH1_537...jpg
  • 4 January 2018, Atlas Mountains, Morocco.
    PhotoByAlbinHillert_20180104_AH1_463...jpg
  • Pausing from planting, Adel Dut, a woman displaced by conflict in Sudan's Darfur region, displays sorghum seeds given to her by the United Methodist Committee on Relief. Since 2003, the conflict in Darfur has killed some 400,000 people and displaced about 2.5 million.
    sudan-2005-jeffrey-darfur-66.jpg
  • The Birqash camel market, north of Cairo, brings camel traders together from throughout Somalia, Sudan, and Egypt to buy and sell the animals.
    egypt-2008-jeffrey-camels-10.jpg
  • Meal time at the Birqash camel market, north of Cairo, which brings camel traders together from throughout Somalia, Sudan, and Egypt to buy and sell the animals.
    egypt-2008-jeffrey-camels-08.jpg
  • The Birqash camel market, north of Cairo, brings camel traders together from throughout Somalia, Sudan, and Egypt to buy and sell the animals.
    egypt-2008-jeffrey-camels-07.jpg
  • The Birqash camel market, north of Cairo, brings camel traders together from throughout Somalia, Sudan, and Egypt to buy and sell the animals.
    egypt-2008-jeffrey-camels-04.jpg
  • The Birqash camel market, north of Cairo, brings camel traders together from throughout Somalia, Sudan, and Egypt to buy and sell the animals.
    egypt-2008-jeffrey-camels-03.jpg
  • The Birqash camel market, north of Cairo, brings camel traders together from throughout Somalia, Sudan, and Egypt to buy and sell the animals.
    egypt-2008-jeffrey-camels-02.jpg
  • A man writes on an animal in the Birqash camel market, north of Cairo, which brings camel traders together from throughout Somalia, Sudan, and Egypt to buy and sell the animals.
    egypt-2008-jeffrey-camels-01.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-278.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
  • Followed by one child, a woman greets another 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-276.jpg
  • Carrying water on her head, a woman walks 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. During jihadist rule, women and girls were not permitted in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-273.jpg
  • Carrying water on her head, a woman walks 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. During jihadist rule, women and girls were not permitted in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-271.jpg
  • Carrying water on her head, a woman walks 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. During jihadist rule, women and girls were not permitted in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-272.jpg
  • A woman walks 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. During jihadist rule, women and girls were not permitted in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-268.jpg
  • 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-265.jpg
  • A girl gets water 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. During jihadist rule, women and girls were not allowed in public unless completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-264.jpg
  • 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-263.jpg
  • While other women go about their work, a woman carries a bucket of water 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. During the jihadis' rule, girls and women could not appear in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-261.jpg
  • A man reads the Koran in front of his home 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-262.jpg
  • A woman walks 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. During the jihadis' rule, girls and women could not appear in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-258.jpg
  • A girl jumps rope in 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. During the jihadis' rule, girls and women could not appear in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-257.jpg
  • Children run through the street early on a Friday morning 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. During the jihadis' rule, girls and women could not appear in public unless they were completely covered. On Friday mornings the children make the rounds of houses where they receive sweets.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-253.jpg
  • A girl sweeps the street in front of a house early in the morning 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. During the jihadis' rule, girls and women could not appear in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-252.jpg
  • A woman cooks bread early in the morning 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. During the jihadis' rule, girls and women could not appear in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-250.jpg
  • Girls walking in the 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. During the jihadis' rule, girls and women could not appear in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-247.jpg
  • A boy copies Koranic verses in a Muslim school 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-245.jpg
  • Girls walking in the 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. During the jihadis' rule, girls and women could not appear in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-246.jpg
  • A boy copies Koranic verses in a Muslim school 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-244.jpg
  • Girls playing in the 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. During the jihadists' rule, women and girls were not allowed in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-239.jpg
  • Girls playing in the liberated streets of Timbuktu, the northern Mali city that was seized by Islamist fighters in 2012 and then liberated by French and Malian soldiers in early 2013. During the jihadists' rule, women and girls were not allowed in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-237.jpg
  • Girls playing in the 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. During the jihadists' rule, women and girls were not allowed in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-238.jpg
  • Girls playing in the 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. During the jihadists' rule, women and girls were not allowed in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-236.jpg
  • Girls playing in the 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. During the jihadists' rule, women and girls were not allowed in public unless they were completely covered.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-234.jpg
  • A Malian soldier on patrol in Toya, a village in northern Mali near Timbuktu. The region was seized by Islamist fighters in 2012 and then liberated by French and Malian soldiers in early 2013.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-232.jpg
  • A Malian soldier on patrol in Toya, a village in northern Mali near Timbuktu. The region was seized by Islamist fighters in 2012 and then liberated by French and Malian soldiers in early 2013.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-231.jpg
  • A woman walks in in Toya, a village in northern Mali near Timbuktu. The region was seized by Islamist fighters in 2012 and then liberated by French and Malian soldiers in early 2013.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-230.jpg
  • A Malian soldier on patrol in Toya, a village in northern Mali near Timbuktu. The region was seized by Islamist fighters in 2012 and then liberated by French and Malian soldiers in early 2013.
    mali-2013-jeffrey-229.jpg
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