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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232292.jpgThe Senegalese Ministry of Health and Social Action reported Tuesday, July 14, 45 new confirmed cases of COVID-19, bringing the total number of infections to 8243 in Senegal. During the daily briefing on the epidemic situation in Senegal, the country's prevention director, Dr Mamadou Ndiaye, said that out of 764 tests carried out in the last 24 hours in the various laboratories, 45 were positive, including 33 follow-up contacts and 41 cases of community transmission. Photo: The Mosque of Divinity is a Senegalese mosque located in Ouakam, one of the district municipalities of Dakar.
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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232293.jpga man walks past graffiti of Mohamed Ali on the streets of Dakar.
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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232294.jpgStreet vendors are the most affected by the consequences of the coronavirus on the economy of the country as here in the market of the Medina in Dakar.
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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232295.jpga man performs road works near the Medina district after heavy rain in Dakar.
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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232296.jpga coffee seller in the center of the medina in Dakar.
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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232297.jpgan Imam speaks with street children near the Mosque of the Divinity in Dakar.
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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232298.jpga man without a protective mask against the Covid-19 is walking near the port of Ouakam in Dakar.
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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232299.jpgA horse alone in front of the houses of the Mosque of the Divinity.
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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232300.jpgOuakam beach in Dakar
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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232301.jpgA man waits for a taxi on the Dakar ledge.
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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232302.jpgA fish seller rests behind a warehouse at the Soumbédioune Market in Dakar.
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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232303.jpgThe sheep are stored on the sidewalk pending the feast of Eid al-Adha. It is called Tabaski in West and Central African countries with a large Muslim community.
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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0232304.jpgthe façade of the Léopold Sedar Senghor Museum in Dakar, closed since the start of the pandemic.
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White circles on the platform of an SNCF station in front of a TGV.FranceNicolas BeaumontLePictorium_0231084.jpgThe SNCF materialized the 1 m spacing with white circles on the ground. They allow travelers to maintain a distance to avoid a resurgence of the COVID-19 epidemic in France
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White circles on the platform of an SNCF station in front of a TGV.FranceNicolas BeaumontLePictorium_0231085.jpgThe SNCF materialized the 1 m spacing with white circles on the ground. They allow travelers to maintain a distance to avoid a resurgence of the COVID-19 epidemic in France
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White circles on the platform of an SNCF station in front of a TGV.FranceNicolas BeaumontLePictorium_0231086.jpgThe SNCF materialized the 1 m spacing with white circles on the ground. They allow travelers to maintain a distance to avoid a resurgence of the COVID-19 epidemic in France
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Covid-19 / Dakar: College of the Cathedral of DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230474.jpgThe Senegalese authorities have decided to postpone the return to school a few hours before the deadline Tuesday morning for hundreds of thousands of students. Classes have been suspended since March due to the coronavirus pandemic. The recovery is postponed until -a later date-, said the Ministry of National Education in a statement issued in the middle of the night, without specifying new dates. The ministry invokes the discovery of the contamination of teachers in Casamance (south). Photo: College of the cathedral with its marking of the college courtyard for social distancing on the basketball court.
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Covid-19 / Dakar: College of the Cathedral of DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230475.jpgThe empty corridors of the Dakar Cathedral College.
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Covid-19 / Dakar: College of the Cathedral of DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230476.jpgBarthélémy Ndong, Director of the cathedral college at the entrance of the establishment
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Covid-19 / Dakar: College of the Cathedral of DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230477.jpgThe entrance to the classes of the college of Dakar Cathedral
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Covid-19 / Dakar: College of the Cathedral of DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230478.jpgBarthélémy Ndong, Director of the cathedral college
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Covid-19 / Dakar: College of the Cathedral of DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230479.jpgBarthélémy Ndong, Director of the cathedral college on the marking of the court for social distancing.
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Covid-19 / Dakar: College of the Cathedral of DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230480.jpgBarthélémy Ndong, Director of the cathedral college and a general service employee open the blinds in the corridors to show me the disinfected classrooms.
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Covid-19 / Dakar: College of the Cathedral of DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230481.jpgBarthélémy Ndong, Director of the cathedral college at the entrance of the establishment
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Covid-19 / Dakar: College of the Cathedral of DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230482.jpgClassroom of the college of Dakar Cathedral.
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Covid-19 / Dakar: College of the Cathedral of DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230483.jpgBarthélémy Ndong, Director of the cathedral college at the entrance of the establishment
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Covid-19 / Dakar: College of the Cathedral of DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230484.jpgBarthélémy Ndong, Director of the cathedral college at the entrance of the establishment
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Covid-19 / Dakar: College of the Cathedral of DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230485.jpgBarthélémy Ndong, Director of the cathedral college on the marking of the entrance to the establishment for social distancing.
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Covid-19 / Dakar: College of the Cathedral of DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230486.jpgClassroom of the college of Dakar Cathedral.
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“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230179.jpgA dozen large canoes are usually parked in front of Hann's export wharf, but the coronavirus has slowed intensive fishing and factories that sort, package and send fish to Europe and Asia have temporarily closed.
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230180.jpgA man repairs his pirogue transformed into a fishing boat on the beach of Hann
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230181.jpgHann Beach.
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230182.jpga fisherman carries his cargo of fish in the port of Han.
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230183.jpg"I will leave as soon as the sea is calmer to come back to sell other fish during Ramadan, because if I stay at home, I will have nothing to eat and I will have chances of catching the coronavirus", supports Souleymane Jules, captain on the pirogue who spent two weeks at sea.
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230184.jpgCanoe owners take advantage of a slow period to repair their fleet, but renovations of the most important boats can cost up to “several thousand euros” according to Faly Sarr, ready to invest, “since this coronavirus crisis will be well finished, and we will be the first to go back to work ”.
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230185.jpg"The wharves had been closed for almost a week to disinfect everything, and we have just opened them again to small-scale fishermen, but cleaning weekly to prevent the spread of the virus," said Abdoulaye Sy, one of the officials of the Harbor.
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230186.jpgTwo carriers impatiently wait for their trucks to be loaded with fish before leaving to deliver customers to the city before 8 p.m., after which time they are no longer authorized to travel by the authorities and risk a fine for violating the curfew.
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230187.jpg"The disease still surprises us, but the Senegalese is resistant, it takes more to stop living and working. We are fishing with the hope of better days, ”said Faly Sarr, who is waiting for the return of his two sons, who have been at sea for eight days.
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230188.jpg"My two sons have been at sea for eight days, but even if they bring back tons of fish, they will gain almost nothing," laments Faly Sarr, owner of a dozen canoes and head of the largest family of fishermen and resellers at the Hann wharf in Dakar.
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230189.jpg"The prices have gone down and so have our margins, so I earn almost nothing every day, but I keep coming because it's my job," said Demba Gueye, one of the port's many wholesalers, active all day to sort and sell fish.
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230190.jpgFatou Ndour, 27, replaces her mother at the family fish sales stand, while the latter takes care of her sick brother: “We all come from far away to make a living here. But with the curfew at 8 p.m., I have to stay near the port, at my aunt's, because my house is an hour away by bus. ”
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230191.jpgAfter sixteen days at sea without interruption, one of the fishermen of a large pirogue whose cargo is intended for export collapses in front of the quay dedicated to shipments to Europe, while waiting for the resellers to negotiate and inspect the taken.
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230192.jpg"Negotiating with the wholesalers is too difficult at the moment, the prices are low and they are fighting for a small margin, so we sell at sums to which we have never sold", laments Malick Sy, a few minutes after his return two weeks at sea, spent on a large canoe with his brothers.
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230193.jpg“Before, black cod could sell in factories up to 15,000 CFA francs per kilo - more than twenty euros, note - but now it's difficult to negotiate above 4,000 francs - about six euros - kilo on the local market ”, explains one of the port's wholesalers, who must resign themselves to selling.
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230194.jpgNeither social distancing nor wearing masks are applied to the port of Hann, although they are recommended by the Senegalese government: "People eat together, shake hands and will never get used to the mask to work", explains Fatou Ndour.
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
“We fish with the hope of better days”: the galleySenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230195.jpgGalaye Gueye is the head of an export company which sells directly to factories: “I employ 15 people in this part of the port and it is out of the question to send them home during the first days of Ramadan, since this is a very busy period for orders. We will continue, even if we earn less. ”
Over 17% of Senegalese people make a living from fishing. Since the slowdown in world air traffic, the export sector has slowed down: the best fish, reserved for the European and Asian markets, are sold on the local market. On one of Dakar's major fishing docks, fishermen and retailers are suffering the consequences of the surplus of fish and the measures implemented by the Senegalese government to fight against the coronavirus. -
Dakar: eid el fitrSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230023.jpgThe Massalikoul Djinâne mosque received a few worshipers on the holy day of Eid al-Adha where Eid el kebir, which is the most important of Muslim celebrations.
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Dakar: eid el fitrSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230024.jpgThe Massalikoul Djinâne mosque received a few worshipers on the holy day of Eid al-Adha where Eid el kebir, which is the most important of Muslim celebrations.
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Dakar: eid el fitrSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230025.jpgThe Massalikoul Djinâne mosque received a few worshipers on the holy day of Eid al-Adha where Eid el kebir, which is the most important of Muslim celebrations.
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Dakar: eid el fitrSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230026.jpgThe Massalikoul Djinâne mosque received a few worshipers on the holy day of Eid al-Adha where Eid el kebir, which is the most important of Muslim celebrations.
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Dakar: eid el fitrSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230027.jpgMassalikoul Djinâne Mosque empty during eid el fitr.
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Dakar: eid el fitrSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230028.jpgThe Massalikoul Djinâne mosque received a few worshipers on the holy day of Eid al-Adha where Eid el kebir, which is the most important of Muslim celebrations.
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Dakar: eid el fitrSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230029.jpgThe Massalikoul Djinâne mosque received a few worshipers on the holy day of Eid al-Adha where Eid el kebir, which is the most important of Muslim celebrations.
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Dakar: eid el fitrSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230030.jpgThe Massalikoul Djinâne mosque received a few worshipers on the holy day of Eid al-Adha where Eid el kebir, which is the most important of Muslim celebrations.
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Dakar: eid el fitrSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230031.jpgThe Massalikoul Djinâne mosque received a few worshipers on the holy day of Eid al-Adha where Eid el kebir, which is the most important of Muslim celebrations.
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Dakar: eid el fitrSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230032.jpgThe Massalikoul Djinâne mosque received a few worshipers on the holy day of Eid al-Adha where Eid el kebir, which is the most important of Muslim celebrations.
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Dakar: eid el fitrSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0230033.jpgThe Massalikoul Djinâne mosque received a few worshipers on the holy day of Eid al-Adha where Eid el kebir, which is the most important of Muslim celebrations.
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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0229852.jpgThe Muslim population of Dakar prepare the Korité (Eid-El-Fitr), the Muslim holiday marking the breaking of the fast of the month of Ramadan.
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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0229853.jpgThe Muslim population of Dakar prepare the Korité (Eid-El-Fitr), the Muslim holiday marking the breaking of the fast of the month of Ramadan.
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Covid-19 in DakarSenegalSadak SouiciLePictorium_0229854.jpgThe Muslim population of Dakar prepare the Korité (Eid-El-Fitr), the Muslim holiday marking the breaking of the fast of the month of Ramadan.
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