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Conakry before the electionsGuineaSadak SouiciLePictorium_0235022.jpgThe presidential elections in Guinea will take place on October 18, 2020. The roads of the capital of Guinea, Conakry, display the candidacies of the outgoing president Alpha Condé and his potential successor to the presidency Cellou Dalein Diallo President of the UFDG (Union des forces democratiques de Guinea) a few weeks before the presidential elections.
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Conakry before the electionsGuineaSadak SouiciLePictorium_0235023.jpgThe presidential elections in Guinea will take place on October 18, 2020. The roads of the capital of Guinea, Conakry, display the candidacies of the outgoing president Alpha Condé and his potential successor to the presidency Cellou Dalein Diallo President of the UFDG (Union des forces democratiques de Guinea) a few weeks before the presidential elections.
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Conakry before the electionsGuineaSadak SouiciLePictorium_0235024.jpgThe presidential elections in Guinea will take place on October 18, 2020. The roads of the capital of Guinea, Conakry, display the candidacies of the outgoing president Alpha Condé and his potential successor to the presidency Cellou Dalein Diallo President of the UFDG (Union des forces democratiques de Guinea) a few weeks before the presidential elections.
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Conakry before the electionsGuineaSadak SouiciLePictorium_0235025.jpgThe presidential elections in Guinea will take place on October 18, 2020. The roads of the capital of Guinea, Conakry, display the candidacies of the outgoing president Alpha Condé and his potential successor to the presidency Cellou Dalein Diallo President of the UFDG (Union des forces democratiques de Guinea) a few weeks before the presidential elections.
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Conakry before the electionsGuineaSadak SouiciLePictorium_0235026.jpgThe presidential elections in Guinea will take place on October 18, 2020. The roads of the capital of Guinea, Conakry, display the candidacies of the outgoing president Alpha Condé and his potential successor to the presidency Cellou Dalein Diallo President of the UFDG (Union des forces democratiques de Guinea) a few weeks before the presidential elections.
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Conakry before the electionsGuineaSadak SouiciLePictorium_0235027.jpgThe presidential elections in Guinea will take place on October 18, 2020. The roads of the capital of Guinea, Conakry, display the candidacies of the outgoing president Alpha Condé and his potential successor to the presidency Cellou Dalein Diallo President of the UFDG (Union des forces democratiques de Guinea) a few weeks before the presidential elections.
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Conakry before the electionsGuineaSadak SouiciLePictorium_0235028.jpgThe presidential elections in Guinea will take place on October 18, 2020. The roads of the capital of Guinea, Conakry, display the candidacies of the outgoing president Alpha Condé and his potential successor to the presidency Cellou Dalein Diallo President of the UFDG (Union des forces democratiques de Guinea) a few weeks before the presidential elections.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0234995.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0234996.jpgThe vehicle in which Soumaïla Cissé left the airport. In the early evening, upon the announcement of the release of opposition leader Soumaïla CISSÉ and 3 other Western hostages including Frenchwoman Sophie Pétronin, synpathisans and activists gathered at the airport to welcome and celebrate the release of Soumaïla Cissé.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0234997.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0234998.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0234999.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235000.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235001.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235002.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235003.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235004.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235005.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235006.jpgBamako, Mali. In the early evening, upon the announcement of the release of opposition leader Soumaïla CISSÉ and 3 other Western hostages including Frenchwoman Sophie Pétronin, synpathisans and activists gathered at the airport to welcome and celebrate the release of Soumaïla Cissé.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235007.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235008.jpgBamako, Mali. In the early evening, upon the announcement of the release of opposition leader Soumaïla CISSÉ and 3 other Western hostages including Frenchwoman Sophie Pétronin, synpathisans and activists gathered at the airport to welcome and celebrate the release of Soumaïla Cissé.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235009.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235010.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235011.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235012.jpgBamako, Mali. In the early evening, upon the announcement of the release of opposition leader Soumaïla CISSÉ and 3 other Western hostages including Frenchwoman Sophie Pétronin, synpathisans and activists gathered at the airport to welcome and celebrate the release of Soumaïla Cissé.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235013.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235014.jpgBamako, Mali. In the early evening, upon the announcement of the release of opposition leader Soumaïla CISSÉ and 3 other Western hostages including Frenchwoman Sophie Pétronin, synpathisans and activists gathered at the airport to welcome and celebrate the release of Soumaïla Cissé.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235015.jpgLate at night, around 1 a.m., the French ex-hostage Sophie Pétronin and her son Sébastien Chadaud-Pétronin during a press point at the Residence de France in Bamako, Mali.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235016.jpgBamako, Mali. In the early evening, upon the announcement of the release of opposition leader Soumaïla CISSÉ and 3 other Western hostages including Frenchwoman Sophie Pétronin, synpathisans and activists gathered at the airport to welcome and celebrate the release of Soumaïla Cissé.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235017.jpgBamako, Mali. In the early evening, upon the announcement of the release of opposition leader Soumaïla CISSÉ and 3 other Western hostages including Frenchwoman Sophie Pétronin, synpathisans and activists gathered at the airport to welcome and celebrate the release of Soumaïla Cissé.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235018.jpgBamako, Mali. In the early evening, upon the announcement of the release of opposition leader Soumaïla CISSÉ and 3 other Western hostages including Frenchwoman Sophie Pétronin, synpathisans and activists gathered at the airport to welcome and celebrate the release of Soumaïla Cissé.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235019.jpgBamako, Mali. In the early evening, upon the announcement of the release of opposition leader Soumaïla CISSÉ and 3 other Western hostages including Frenchwoman Sophie Pétronin, synpathisans and activists gathered at the airport to welcome and celebrate the release of Soumaïla Cissé.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235020.jpgBamako, Mali. In the early evening, upon the announcement of the release of opposition leader Soumaïla CISSÉ and 3 other Western hostages including Frenchwoman Sophie Pétronin, synpathisans and activists gathered at the airport to welcome and celebrate the release of Soumaïla Cissé.
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Release of Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé hostages in BamakoMaliLePictorium_0235021.jpgBamako, Mali. In the early evening, upon the announcement of the release of opposition leader Soumaïla CISSÉ and 3 other Western hostages including Frenchwoman Sophie Pétronin, synpathisans and activists gathered at the airport to welcome and celebrate the release of Soumaïla Cissé.
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Conakry before the electionsGuineaSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234989.jpgThe presidential elections in Guinea will take place on October 18, 2020. The roads of the capital of Guinea, Conakry, display the candidacies of the outgoing president Alpha Condé and his potential successor to the presidency Cellou Dalein Diallo President of the UFDG (Union des forces democratiques de Guinea) a few weeks before the presidential elections.
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Conakry before the electionsGuineaSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234990.jpgThe presidential elections in Guinea will take place on October 18, 2020. The roads of the capital of Guinea, Conakry, display the candidacies of the outgoing president Alpha Condé and his potential successor to the presidency Cellou Dalein Diallo President of the UFDG (Union des forces democratiques de Guinea) a few weeks before the presidential elections.
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Conakry before the electionsGuineaSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234991.jpgThe presidential elections in Guinea will take place on October 18, 2020. The roads of the capital of Guinea, Conakry, display the candidacies of the outgoing president Alpha Condé and his potential successor to the presidency Cellou Dalein Diallo President of the UFDG (Union des forces democratiques de Guinea) a few weeks before the presidential elections.
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Conakry before the electionsGuineaSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234992.jpgThe presidential elections in Guinea will take place on October 18, 2020. The roads of the capital of Guinea, Conakry, display the candidacies of the outgoing president Alpha Condé and his potential successor to the presidency Cellou Dalein Diallo President of the UFDG (Union des forces democratiques de Guinea) a few weeks before the presidential elections.
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Conakry before the electionsGuineaSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234993.jpgThe presidential elections in Guinea will take place on October 18, 2020. The roads of the capital of Guinea, Conakry, display the candidacies of the outgoing president Alpha Condé and his potential successor to the presidency Cellou Dalein Diallo President of the UFDG (Union des forces democratiques de Guinea) a few weeks before the presidential elections.
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Conakry before the electionsGuineaSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234994.jpgThe presidential elections in Guinea will take place on October 18, 2020. The roads of the capital of Guinea, Conakry, display the candidacies of the outgoing president Alpha Condé and his potential successor to the presidency Cellou Dalein Diallo President of the UFDG (Union des forces democratiques de Guinea) a few weeks before the presidential elections.
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The fight for the dignity of sex workers in Senegal. Maison Close de Dakar at the time of Covid-19SenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234535.jpgColette (first name has been changed), 38, has been receiving clients since 2009 in this small room in a popular district of Dakar.
In a brothel in Dakar, four sex workers help each other through the ordeals, together. From morning to night, it is in two small rooms of an insanitary building that they receive their customers, share them and protect each other. Once back home, living in the same hallway, the four single mothers continue to stick together to support their families who do not know their real job. This solidarity is all the more important in these times of coronavirus when they are particularly precarious and exposed.
One of them is even an "educator pair", and strives to raise awareness in her community. Fieldwork with the support of an association created in 2008 by a former prostitute, who has become a figure in the struggle for the rights of sex workers in Senegal. Strong in character, she stopped working in the streets to "protect the girls". Mediator for HIV prevention for years in the hospital, she preferred to resign to devote herself to the advocacy of her association, and to change the law to give more rights to sex workers. -
The fight for the dignity of sex workers in Senegal. Maison Close de Dakar at the time of Covid-19SenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234536.jpgFatoumata, 35, has been a prostitute since 2011 in Dakar, a brothel in the suburbs of Dakar.
In a brothel in Dakar, four sex workers help each other through the ordeals, together. From morning to night, it is in two small rooms of an insanitary building that they receive their customers, share them and protect each other. Once back home, living in the same hallway, the four single mothers continue to stick together to support their families who do not know their real job. This solidarity is all the more important in these times of coronavirus when they are particularly precarious and exposed.
One of them is even an "educator pair", and strives to raise awareness in her community. Fieldwork with the support of an association created in 2008 by a former prostitute, who has become a figure in the struggle for the rights of sex workers in Senegal. Strong in character, she stopped working in the streets to "protect the girls". Mediator for HIV prevention for years in the hospital, she preferred to resign to devote herself to the advocacy of her association, and to change the law to give more rights to sex workers. -
The fight for the dignity of sex workers in Senegal. Maison Close de Dakar at the time of Covid-19SenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234537.jpgFatoumata receives her clients in this small room in a popular district of Dakar, which she shares with three other sex workers.
In a brothel in Dakar, four sex workers help each other through the ordeals, together. From morning to night, it is in two small rooms of an insanitary building that they receive their customers, share them and protect each other. Once back home, living in the same hallway, the four single mothers continue to stick together to support their families who do not know their real job. This solidarity is all the more important in these times of coronavirus when they are particularly precarious and exposed.
One of them is even an "educator pair", and strives to raise awareness in her community. Fieldwork with the support of an association created in 2008 by a former prostitute, who has become a figure in the struggle for the rights of sex workers in Senegal. Strong in character, she stopped working in the streets to "protect the girls". Mediator for HIV prevention for years in the hospital, she preferred to resign to devote herself to the advocacy of her association, and to change the law to give more rights to sex workers. -
The fight for the dignity of sex workers in Senegal. Maison Close de Dakar at the time of Covid-19SenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234538.jpgAïsattou, 35-year-old sex worker in a popular district of Dakar.
In a brothel in Dakar, four sex workers help each other through the ordeals, together. From morning to night, it is in two small rooms of an insanitary building that they receive their customers, share them and protect each other. Once back home, living in the same hallway, the four single mothers continue to stick together to support their families who do not know their real job. This solidarity is all the more important in these times of coronavirus when they are particularly precarious and exposed.
One of them is even an "educator pair", and strives to raise awareness in her community. Fieldwork with the support of an association created in 2008 by a former prostitute, who has become a figure in the struggle for the rights of sex workers in Senegal. Strong in character, she stopped working in the streets to "protect the girls". Mediator for HIV prevention for years in the hospital, she preferred to resign to devote herself to the advocacy of her association, and to change the law to give more rights to sex workers. -
The fight for the dignity of sex workers in Senegal. Maison Close de Dakar at the time of Covid-19SenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234539.jpgFatoumata proudly shows the diploma received after training with the association And Soppeku.
In a brothel in Dakar, four sex workers help each other through the ordeals, together. From morning to night, it is in two small rooms of an insanitary building that they receive their customers, share them and protect each other. Once back home, living in the same hallway, the four single mothers continue to stick together to support their families who do not know their real job. This solidarity is all the more important in these times of coronavirus when they are particularly precarious and exposed.
One of them is even an "educator pair", and strives to raise awareness in her community. Fieldwork with the support of an association created in 2008 by a former prostitute, who has become a figure in the struggle for the rights of sex workers in Senegal. Strong in character, she stopped working in the streets to "protect the girls". Mediator for HIV prevention for years in the hospital, she preferred to resign to devote herself to the advocacy of her association, and to change the law to give more rights to sex workers. -
The fight for the dignity of sex workers in Senegal. Maison Close de Dakar at the time of Covid-19SenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234540.jpgColette sex worker on the roof of the brothel in Dakar.
In a brothel in Dakar, four sex workers help each other through the ordeals, together. From morning to night, it is in two small rooms of an insanitary building that they receive their customers, share them and protect each other. Once back home, living in the same hallway, the four single mothers continue to stick together to support their families who do not know their real job. This solidarity is all the more important in these times of coronavirus when they are particularly precarious and exposed.
One of them is even an "educator pair", and strives to raise awareness in her community. Fieldwork with the support of an association created in 2008 by a former prostitute, who has become a figure in the struggle for the rights of sex workers in Senegal. Strong in character, she stopped working in the streets to "protect the girls". Mediator for HIV prevention for years in the hospital, she preferred to resign to devote herself to the advocacy of her association, and to change the law to give more rights to sex workers. -
The fight for the dignity of sex workers in Senegal. Maison Close de Dakar at the time of Covid-19SenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234541.jpgTheir small room on the second floor in the brothel, the four women help each other pay for the room each month in the popular suburb of Dakar.
In a brothel in Dakar, four sex workers help each other through the ordeals, together. From morning to night, it is in two small rooms of an insanitary building that they receive their customers, share them and protect each other. Once back home, living in the same hallway, the four single mothers continue to stick together to support their families who do not know their real job. This solidarity is all the more important in these times of coronavirus when they are particularly precarious and exposed.
One of them is even an "educator pair", and strives to raise awareness in her community. Fieldwork with the support of an association created in 2008 by a former prostitute, who has become a figure in the struggle for the rights of sex workers in Senegal. Strong in character, she stopped working in the streets to "protect the girls". Mediator for HIV prevention for years in the hospital, she preferred to resign to devote herself to the advocacy of her association, and to change the law to give more rights to sex workers. -
The fight for the dignity of sex workers in Senegal. Maison Close de Dakar at the time of Covid-19SenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234542.jpgFatoumata looks out the window of the small room she rents with three other sex workers in a building in a popular district of Dakar.
In a brothel in Dakar, four sex workers help each other through the ordeals, together. From morning to night, it is in two small rooms of an insanitary building that they receive their customers, share them and protect each other. Once back home, living in the same hallway, the four single mothers continue to stick together to support their families who do not know their real job. This solidarity is all the more important in these times of coronavirus when they are particularly precarious and exposed.
One of them is even an "educator pair", and strives to raise awareness in her community. Fieldwork with the support of an association created in 2008 by a former prostitute, who has become a figure in the struggle for the rights of sex workers in Senegal. Strong in character, she stopped working in the streets to "protect the girls". Mediator for HIV prevention for years in the hospital, she preferred to resign to devote herself to the advocacy of her association, and to change the law to give more rights to sex workers. -
The fight for the dignity of sex workers in Senegal. Maison Close de Dakar at the time of Covid-19SenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234543.jpgthe health card allows sex workers to take HIV tests in centers dedicated to the holders of this card. It also allows in the event of a police check to prove the legality of their work.
In a brothel in Dakar, four sex workers help each other through the ordeals, together. From morning to night, it is in two small rooms of an insanitary building that they receive their customers, share them and protect each other. Once back home, living in the same hallway, the four single mothers continue to stick together to support their families who do not know their real job. This solidarity is all the more important in these times of coronavirus when they are particularly precarious and exposed.
One of them is even an "educator pair", and strives to raise awareness in her community. Fieldwork with the support of an association created in 2008 by a former prostitute, who has become a figure in the struggle for the rights of sex workers in Senegal. Strong in character, she stopped working in the streets to "protect the girls". Mediator for HIV prevention for years in the hospital, she preferred to resign to devote herself to the advocacy of her association, and to change the law to give more rights to sex workers. -
The fight for the dignity of sex workers in Senegal. Maison Close de Dakar at the time of Covid-19SenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234544.jpgWith two small phones in hand, Aïssatou manages her clients remotely. She "bought a chip at the start of the coronavirus crisis, because we can no longer look for customers in the evening in the street, nor in nightclubs or bars, all closed".
In a brothel in Dakar, four sex workers help each other through the ordeals, together. From morning to night, it is in two small rooms of an insanitary building that they receive their customers, share them and protect each other. Once back home, living in the same hallway, the four single mothers continue to stick together to support their families who do not know their real job. This solidarity is all the more important in these times of coronavirus when they are particularly precarious and exposed.
One of them is even an "educator pair", and strives to raise awareness in her community. Fieldwork with the support of an association created in 2008 by a former prostitute, who has become a figure in the struggle for the rights of sex workers in Senegal. Strong in character, she stopped working in the streets to "protect the girls". Mediator for HIV prevention for years in the hospital, she preferred to resign to devote herself to the advocacy of her association, and to change the law to give more rights to sex workers. -
The fight for the dignity of sex workers in Senegal. Maison Close de Dakar at the time of Covid-19SenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234545.jpgLala Maty Sow, former prostitute and president of the association And Soppeku, which she co-founded with colleagues in 2009.
In a brothel in Dakar, four sex workers help each other through the ordeals, together. From morning to night, it is in two small rooms of an insanitary building that they receive their customers, share them and protect each other. Once back home, living in the same hallway, the four single mothers continue to stick together to support their families who do not know their real job. This solidarity is all the more important in these times of coronavirus when they are particularly precarious and exposed.
One of them is even an "educator pair", and strives to raise awareness in her community. Fieldwork with the support of an association created in 2008 by a former prostitute, who has become a figure in the struggle for the rights of sex workers in Senegal. Strong in character, she stopped working in the streets to "protect the girls". Mediator for HIV prevention for years in the hospital, she preferred to resign to devote herself to the advocacy of her association, and to change the law to give more rights to sex workers. -
The fight for the dignity of sex workers in Senegal. Maison Close de Dakar at the time of Covid-19SenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234546.jpgScene of life in the corridors of a building where the inhabitants and the sex workers cross paths every day in a certain indifference.
In a brothel in Dakar, four sex workers help each other through the ordeals, together. From morning to night, it is in two small rooms of an insanitary building that they receive their customers, share them and protect each other. Once back home, living in the same hallway, the four single mothers continue to stick together to support their families who do not know their real job. This solidarity is all the more important in these times of coronavirus when they are particularly precarious and exposed.
One of them is even an "educator pair", and strives to raise awareness in her community. Fieldwork with the support of an association created in 2008 by a former prostitute, who has become a figure in the struggle for the rights of sex workers in Senegal. Strong in character, she stopped working in the streets to "protect the girls". Mediator for HIV prevention for years in the hospital, she preferred to resign to devote herself to the advocacy of her association, and to change the law to give more rights to sex workers. -
The fight for the dignity of sex workers in Senegal. Maison Close de Dakar at the time of Covid-19SenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234547.jpgFatoumata and these children share a traditional dish, thiéboudiène, a few steps from a friend's room where she performs sex work discreetly.
In a brothel in Dakar, four sex workers help each other through the ordeals, together. From morning to night, it is in two small rooms of an insanitary building that they receive their customers, share them and protect each other. Once back home, living in the same hallway, the four single mothers continue to stick together to support their families who do not know their real job. This solidarity is all the more important in these times of coronavirus when they are particularly precarious and exposed.
One of them is even an "educator pair", and strives to raise awareness in her community. Fieldwork with the support of an association created in 2008 by a former prostitute, who has become a figure in the struggle for the rights of sex workers in Senegal. Strong in character, she stopped working in the streets to "protect the girls". Mediator for HIV prevention for years in the hospital, she preferred to resign to devote herself to the advocacy of her association, and to change the law to give more rights to sex workers. -
The fight for the dignity of sex workers in Senegal. Maison Close de Dakar at the time of Covid-19SenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234548.jpgFatoumata looks at the horizon from the roof of her building where she lives with her children in a popular district of Dakar.
In a brothel in Dakar, four sex workers help each other through the ordeals, together. From morning to night, it is in two small rooms of an insanitary building that they receive their customers, share them and protect each other. Once back home, living in the same hallway, the four single mothers continue to stick together to support their families who do not know their real job. This solidarity is all the more important in these times of coronavirus when they are particularly precarious and exposed.
One of them is even an "educator pair", and strives to raise awareness in her community. Fieldwork with the support of an association created in 2008 by a former prostitute, who has become a figure in the struggle for the rights of sex workers in Senegal. Strong in character, she stopped working in the streets to "protect the girls". Mediator for HIV prevention for years in the hospital, she preferred to resign to devote herself to the advocacy of her association, and to change the law to give more rights to sex workers. -
The fight for the dignity of sex workers in Senegal. Maison Close de Dakar at the time of Covid-19SenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0234549.jpgFatoumata is waiting for her future client at the foot of the bedroom door.
In a brothel in Dakar, four sex workers help each other through the ordeals, together. From morning to night, it is in two small rooms of an insanitary building that they receive their customers, share them and protect each other. Once back home, living in the same hallway, the four single mothers continue to stick together to support their families who do not know their real job. This solidarity is all the more important in these times of coronavirus when they are particularly precarious and exposed.
One of them is even an "educator pair", and strives to raise awareness in her community. Fieldwork with the support of an association created in 2008 by a former prostitute, who has become a figure in the struggle for the rights of sex workers in Senegal. Strong in character, she stopped working in the streets to "protect the girls". Mediator for HIV prevention for years in the hospital, she preferred to resign to devote herself to the advocacy of her association, and to change the law to give more rights to sex workers. -
The Belvédère-Sébikotane ecovillageSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232811.jpgSenegal loses 40,000 hectares of forests per year. To remedy this, the country is part of the international project of the Great Green Wall in the Sahel. In this dynamic of reforestation, a new project has just been launched, the "tolou keur", or small nourishing and medicinal forests, replanted next to villages with an ecological vocation. A second pilot project was launched on Wednesday August 12 in the village of Belvédère, 40 kilometers from Dakar. Portrait of Djibril Sall, the village chief
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The Belvédère-Sébikotane ecovillageSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232812.jpgWith the participation of the 60 people of the village, the Senegalese agency for Reforestation and the Great Green Wall has planted a nourishing forest of 5000 m², a few steps from their houses.
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The Belvédère-Sébikotane ecovillageSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232813.jpgIn Senegal, in Belvédère, nourishing forests are emerging as part of the Great Green Wall project. The goal is to fight against deforestation.
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The Belvédère-Sébikotane ecovillageSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232814.jpgA farmer from the village of Belvédère feeds his oxen.
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The Belvédère-Sébikotane ecovillageSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232815.jpgthe reforestation agency wanted to help this village without water and electricity to become more autonomous, in an ecological way.
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