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  • Pastoral community of Masai who are under threat of losing their lands because of the tourism industry in Ngorogoro in Tanzania September 30, 2003 (Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_025.jpg
  • UMUTARA, RWANDA, OCTOBER 9, 2003: Rwandans gather to see their President Kagame speak in a village near Umutara, Rwanda, October 9, 2003. (Phot by Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_011.jpg
  • UMUTARA, RWANDA, OCTOBER 9, 2003: Rwandans gather to see their President Kagame speak in a village near Umutara, Rwanda, October 9, 2003. (Phot by Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_010.jpg
  • CYENBOGO II, RWANDA, OCTOBER 11,2003: Village of Cyenbogo II, Rwanda near the town of Kagatumba that borders Uganda October 11, 2003. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_07.jpg
  • CYENBOGO II, RWANDA, OCTOBER 11,2003: Village of Cyenbogo II, Rwanda near the town of Kagatumba that borders Uganda October 11, 2003. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_05.jpg
  • CYENBOGO II, RWANDA, OCTOBER 11,2003: Village of Cyenbogo II, Rwanda near the town of Kagatumba that borders Uganda October 11, 2003. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_04.jpg
  • CYENBOGO II, RWANDA, OCTOBER 11,2003: Village of Cyenbogo II, Rwanda near the town of Kagatumba that borders Uganda October 11, 2003. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_02.jpg
  • Children wait in line to be fed lunch at the Endolin Primary school in Ngornogoro District in Tanzania September 29, 2003. The Masai were thrown out of the Crater in 1972 and struggle to hang onto the lands they live on now because of increasing pressure from conservationists. (Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_030.jpg
  • Pastoral community of Masai in Ngorogoro in Tanzania September 29, 2003 (Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_029.jpg
  • Pastoral community of Masai who are under threat of losing their lands because of the tourism industry in Ngorogoro in Tanzania September 30, 2003 (Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_026.jpg
  • Masai collect water  in Ngornogoro District in Tanzania September 30, 2003.  The Masai were thrown out of the Crater in 1972 and struggle to hang onto the lands they live on now because of increasing pressure from conservationists. (Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_024.jpg
  • CYENBOGO II, RWANDA, OCTOBER 11,2003: Village of Cyenbogo II, Rwanda near the town of Kagatumba that borders Uganda October 11, 2003. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_06.jpg
  • CYENBOGO II, RWANDA, OCTOBER 11,2003: Village of Cyenbogo II, Rwanda near the town of Kagatumba that borders Uganda October 11, 2003. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_03.jpg
  • CYENBOGO II, RWANDA, OCTOBER 11,2003: Village of Cyenbogo II, Rwanda near the town of Kagatumba that borders Uganda October 11, 2003. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_01.jpg
  • UMUTARA, RWANDA, OCTOBER 9, 2003: Rwandans gather to see their President Kagame speak in a village near Umutara, Rwanda, October 9, 2003. (Phot by Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_09.jpg
  • UMUTARA, RWANDA, OCTOBER 9, 2003: Rwandans gather to see their President Kagame speak in a village near Umutara, Rwanda, October 9, 2003. (Phot by Ami Vitale)
    2003_Rwanda_08.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Portrait of a woman worker from the Chitrakoot District in Uttar Pradesh, India.  (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_08.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Children play near dung piles while woman work to create dung patties using a mixture of cow dung and straw. In India, dung patties are used for fuel in heating homes and cooking food. Dung is renewable energy source and relatively inexpensive.  (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_07.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Woman create dung patties  using a mixture of cow dung and straw. In India, dung patties are used for fuel in heating homes and cooking food. Dung is renewable energy source and relatively inexpensive.  (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_05.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Woman create dung patties  using a mixture of cow dung and straw. In India, dung patties are used for fuel in heating homes and cooking food. Dung is renewable energy source and relatively inexpensive.  (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_04.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Woman create dung patties  using a mixture of cow dung and straw. In India, dung patties are used for fuel in heating homes and cooking food. Dung is renewable energy source and relatively inexpensive.  (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_03.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Women use their heads to carry wood back to their villages in the Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh. In India woman are responsible for carrying out many hard labored tasks.  (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_028.jpg
  • Bhutanse women harvest rice paddy in the fields of Karmeling Hotel owner Richin Wangmo in Trashi Yangtse village in Eastern Bhutan October 15, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    Bhutan050.jpg
  • Bhutanse women harvest rice paddy in the fields of Karmeling Hotel owner Richin Wangmo in Trashi Yangtse village in Eastern Bhutan October 15, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    Bhutan034.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Women work in the fields gathering wood in the Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh. In India woman are responsible for carrying out many hard labored tasks. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_023.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Women stone workers crush stone in the Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh, India.  (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_040.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Women stone workers crush stone in the Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh, India.  (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_039.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Women stone workers crush stone in the Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh, India.  (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_038.jpg
  • Bhutanse women harvest rice paddy in the fields of Karmeling Hotel owner Richin Wangmo in Trashi Yangtse village in Eastern Bhutan October 15, 2005. (Ami Vitale)
    Bhutan045.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Portriat of India woman after working in the fields in th Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh. In India woman are responsible for carrying out many hard labored tasks. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_029.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: A woman tends to her child in the  in the Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh. In India woman are responsible for carrying out many hard labored tasks. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_030.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: A woman stone worker, crushes stone in the Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh, India.  (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_037.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: A woman stone worker, crushes stone in the Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh, India.  (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_036.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: A portrait of a stone worker int the Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh, India.  (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_035.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Children attend school in the  Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_034.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Children attend school in the  Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_033.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Children attend school in the  Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_032.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Children attend school in the  Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_031.jpg
  • The daughter of Kadija, Saidya, 11, and her neighbors' children including Jima Ali (wearing purple) collect water with a donkey August 25, 2006 in Barentu, Eritrea. Some of the most difficult and labor intensive work is gathering wood and water and it is traditionally carried out by women only. (Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0104.jpg
  • The daughter of Kadija, Saidya, 11, and her neighbors' children including Jima Ali (wearing purple) collect water with a donkey August 25, 2006 in Barentu, Eritrea. Some of the most difficult and labor intensive work is gathering wood and water and it is traditionally carried out by women only. (Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0090.jpg
  • The daughter of Kadija, Saidya, 11, and her neighbors' children including Jima Ali (wearing purple) collect water with a donkey August 25, 2006 in Barentu, Eritrea. Some of the most difficult and labor intensive work is gathering wood and water and it is traditionally carried out by women only. (Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0086.jpg
  • The daughter of Kadija, Saidya, 11, and her neighbors' children including Jima Ali (wearing purple) collect water with a donkey August 25, 2006 in Barentu, Eritrea. Some of the most difficult and labor intensive work is gathering wood and water and it is traditionally carried out by women only. (Ami Vitale)
    DSC_0066b.jpg
  • RUKUM DISTRICT, NEPAL, APRIL 22, 2004:  Radna Bahadur Rana, right, who murdered a relative works inside a mill in an "open prison"  established by Maoists who have created an autonomous state with their own judicial sysytem in a village in Rukum District April 22, 2004. The prison was once a farm owned by a relative of the King but was taken over by Maoists. The Maoists believe that criminals can be reformed through labor and cannot be be corrected confined within a jail with bars. They beleive that crime is a social evil and the main cause is a class system.   Analysts and diplomats estimate there about 15,000-20,000 hard-core fighters, including many women, backed by 50,000 "militia".  In their remote strongholds, they collect taxes and have set up civil administrations, and "people's courts" to settle rows. They also raise money by taxing villagers and foreign trekkers. Though young, they are fearsome fighters and  specialise in night attacks and hit-and-run raids. They are tough in Nepal's rugged terrain, full of thick forests and deep ravines and the 150,000 government soldiers are not enough to combat this growing movement that models itself after the Shining Path of Peru. (Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    ami134.jpg
  • RUKUM DISTRICT, NEPAL, APRIL 24, 2004:  A child works in a tea stall in a small village in Rukum District April 24, 2004. Nepal is one of the poorest countries and most children are forced to be a part of the labor work force.  Ill-equipped security forces in politically unstable Nepal are unable to control  Maoist rebels, who continue to abduct thousands of villagers for forcible indoctrination and military training.  The Maoists mainly target students, teachers and youths. The victims are usually released after a few days of indoctrination, unless they actively resist the "training attempts," in which case the rebels torture or sometimes kill them. Maoist insurgents have capture most of the Western part of Nepal in their attempt to make it a Communist State. Analysts and diplomats estimate there about 15,000-20,000 hard-core Maoist fighters, including many women, backed by 50,000 "militia".  In their remote strongholds, they collect taxes and have set up civil administrations, and people's courts. They also raise money by taxing villagers and foreign trekkers.  They are tough in Nepal's rugged terrain, full of thick forests and deep ravines and the 150,000 government soldiers are not enough to combat this growing movement that models itself after the Shining Path of Peru. (Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    ami179.jpg
  • RUKUM DISTRICT, NEPAL, APRIL 22, 2004:  Mutiram Poon, a rapist serving 3 years in a Maoist "open prison"    in Rukum District harvests wheat April 22, 2004. The prison was once a farm owned by a relative of the King but was taken over by Maoists. The Maoists believe that criminals can be reformed through labor and cannot be be corrected confined within a jail with bars. They beleive that crime is a social evil and the main cause is a class system.   Analysts and diplomats estimate there about 15,000-20,000 hard-core fighters, including many women, backed by 50,000 "militia".  In their remote strongholds, they collect taxes and have set up civil administrations, and "people's courts" to settle rows. They also raise money by taxing villagers and foreign trekkers. Though young, they are fearsome fighters and  specialise in night attacks and hit-and-run raids. They are tough in Nepal's rugged terrain, full of thick forests and deep ravines and the 150,000 government soldiers are not enough to combat this growing movement that models itself after the Shining Path of Peru. (Ami Vitale/Getty Images)
    ami152.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Women and children work in the fields gathering wood in the Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh. In India woman are responsible for carrying out many hard labored tasks. (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_024.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Women work in the fields gathering wood in the Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh. In India woman are responsible for carrying out many hard labored tasks. Chitrakoot District in Uttar Pradesh, India.  (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_022.jpg
  • Chitrakoot District, Uttar Pradesh, India: Women work in the fields gathering wood in the Chitrakoot District of Uttar Pradesh. In India woman are responsible for carrying out many hard labored tasks.  (Photo by Ami Vitale)
    2005_India_UP_021.jpg