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  • AVEPOZO, TOGO  13-05-04   -   Clothes hang on a line in the Avepozo refugee camp in Avepozo, Togo. The camp was set up for refugees from Cote d'Ivoire fleeing violence. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    refugee-camp.JPG
  • AVEPOZO, TOGO  13-05-04   -  A girl stands in a doorway of a UNHCR shelter in the Avepozo Refugee Camp in Avepozo, Togo. The camp is for refugees from Cote d'Ivoire who fled violence in 2011.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    child-refugee.JPG
  • AVEPOZO, TOGO  13-05-04   - Boys stand near a hut destroyed during violent clashes between refugees and Togolese Gendarmes at the Avepozo Refugee Camp. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    avepozo-refugee003.JPG
  • AVEPOZO, TOGO  13-05-04   - A shelter destroyed during violent clashes between refugees and Togolese Gendarmes at the Avepozo Refugee Camp. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    avepozo-refugee004.JPG
  • AVEPOZO, TOGO  13-05-04   - A boy stands near a hut destroyed during violent clashes between refugees and Togolese Gendarmes at the Avepozo Refugee Camp. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    avepozo-refugee001.JPG
  • AVEPOZO, TOGO  13-05-04   - Boys stand near a hut destroyed during violent clashes between refugees and Togolese Gendarmes at the Avepozo Refugee Camp. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    avepozo-refugee002.JPG
  • LOME, TOGO -  13-01-10   - Under fire from both sides, journalists (in vests) attempt to gather details of an arrest as protesting women call for the man's release. Shortly after gathering for the first in three days of planned demonstrations, protesters clashed with police in Lome, Togo on January 10. Opposition groups are calling for the resignation of President Faure Gnassingbe, whose family has been in power for over 40 years.   Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-availableforpurchase-005.JPG
  • 11-12-14  --  LOMÉ, TOGO  --  Students protest at the Technical School (Lycee Thechnique) in Adidogome, a suburb of Lomé, on December 14. Police fired tear gas and flash-bangs into crowds of high-school aged students; they are upset that government-paid teachers, who have not been paid, are on strike. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-studentdemonstration07.jpg
  • 12-03-21   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA --  A young girl stands in the Acholi Quarter slum on March 21, 2012. Fleeing rebel violence in Northern Uganda, thousands of Acholi settled in a rock quarry, where -- to make a living -- they have been mining by hand for over 20 years. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-portrait02-14-003.jpg
  • 12-03-22   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA --  Steven Akena, 8, plays on a structure in the Acholi Quarter on March 22. Since the early 1990's, people from the Acholi tribe (and from other northern tribes) migrated to a plot of land in a suburb of Kampala to escape the violence in the north. Now, rather than returning to their ancestral lands, some are calling the Acholi Quarter home. Many residents, unable to find well-paying employment, make a living mining and crushing rocks by hand..  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ008.JPG
  • 12-03-20   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA --  Charles Otiyasu uses a sledgehammer to break stones in a quarry at the Acholi Quarter on March 20.  Since the early 1990's, people from the Acholi tribe (and from other northern tribes) migrated to a plot of land in a suburb of Kampala to escape the violence in the north. Now, rather than returning to their ancestral lands, some are calling the Acholi Quarter home. Many residents, unable to find well-paying employment, make a living mining and crushing rocks by hand.. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ006.JPG
  • 12-03-22   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA --  Charles Okongo, from Kitgum, stands in the street in a drunken stupor. Alcoholism is prevalent in the Acholi Quarter, as many try to forget their traumatic past. Since the early 1990's, people from the Acholi tribe (and from other northern tribes) migrated to a plot of land in a suburb of Kampala to escape the violence in the north. Now, rather than returning to their ancestral lands, some are calling the Acholi Quarter home. Many residents, unable to find well-paying employment, make a living mining and crushing rocks by hand.. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ011.JPG
  • 12-03-21   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA -- Josephine Amala, 6, plays amidst piles of aggregate in the Acholi Quarter on March 21, 2012. Since the early 1990's, people from the Acholi tribe (and from other northern tribes) migrated to a plot of land in a suburb of Kampala to escape the violence in the north. Now, rather than returning to their ancestral lands, some are calling the Acholi Quarter home. Many residents, unable to find well-paying employment, make a living mining and crushing rocks by hand.. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ012.JPG
  • 12-03-20   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA --  Pedestrians walk on a narrow strip of land next to a stone quarry in the Acholi Quarter on March 20. Since the early 1990's, people from the Acholi tribe (and from other northern tribes) migrated to a plot of land in a suburb of Kampala to escape the violence in the north. Now, rather than returning to their ancestral lands, some are calling the Acholi Quarter home. Many residents, unable to find well-paying employment, make a living mining and crushing rocks by hand..  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ013.JPG
  • 12-04-03   -- KAMPALA, UGANDA  -- The product of two cultures, Gloria Aforwot, 18, at her home in the Acholi Quarter on April 3, 2012. Her parents are northerners, from Moyo district, but fled the violence and moved to the Acholi Quarter when Aforwot was a young child.  Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ004.JPG
  • 12-03-19   -- UGANDA --   l-r Viko Dodo, 6, and Ronny Komakech, 5, sift aggregate at a rock quarry in the Acholi Quarter on March 19. Since the early 1990's, people from the Acholi tribe (and from other northern tribes) migrated to a plot of land in a suburb of Kampala to escape the violence in the north. Now, rather than returning to their ancestral lands, some are calling the Acholi Quarter home. Many residents, unable to find well-paying employment, make a living mining and crushing rocks by hand. Photo by Daniel Hayduk
    hayduk-AQ001.JPG
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Humanitarian Photographer Daniel Hayduk

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