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DUKAS_34109615_REX
Shopping Mall Terror Attack, Nairobi, Kenya - 23 Sep 2013
Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Nation Media / Ann Kamoni (3034637c)
Kenyans line up as they wait to donate blood for the victims
Shopping Mall Terror Attack, Nairobi, Kenya - 23 Sep 2013
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_34109612_REX
Shopping Mall Terror Attack, Nairobi, Kenya - 23 Sep 2013
Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Nation Media / Ann Kamoni (3034637b)
Kenyans line up as they wait to donate blood for the victims
Shopping Mall Terror Attack, Nairobi, Kenya - 23 Sep 2013
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
DUKAS_20247002_POL
70 die in Kenya petrol pipeline explosion
September 12, 2011, Nairobi, Kenya: At least 70 people have been killed in a petrol pipeline explosion and subsequent fire in the Lunga-Lunga township area in the industrial part of Nairobi, Kenya. According to firefighters, people had apparently been siphoning off petrol from a burst main.///Aftermath of pipeline explosion. Credit: George Philipas / Polaris (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_20246975_POL
70 die in Kenya petrol pipeline explosion
September 12, 2011, Nairobi, Kenya: At least 70 people have been killed in a petrol pipeline explosion and subsequent fire in the Lunga-Lunga township area in the industrial part of Nairobi, Kenya. According to firefighters, people had apparently been siphoning off petrol from a burst main.///Aftermath of pipeline explosion. Credit: George Philipas / Polaris (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_20246974_POL
70 die in Kenya petrol pipeline explosion
September 12, 2011, Nairobi, Kenya: At least 70 people have been killed in a petrol pipeline explosion and subsequent fire in the Lunga-Lunga township area in the industrial part of Nairobi, Kenya. According to firefighters, people had apparently been siphoning off petrol from a burst main.///Aftermath of pipeline explosion. Credit: George Philipas / Polaris (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_20246971_POL
70 die in Kenya petrol pipeline explosion
September 12, 2011, Nairobi, Kenya: At least 70 people have been killed in a petrol pipeline explosion and subsequent fire in the Lunga-Lunga township area in the industrial part of Nairobi, Kenya. According to firefighters, people had apparently been siphoning off petrol from a burst main.///Aftermath of pipeline explosion. Credit: George Philipas / Polaris (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_20246970_POL
70 die in Kenya petrol pipeline explosion
September 12, 2011, Nairobi, Kenya: At least 70 people have been killed in a petrol pipeline explosion and subsequent fire in the Lunga-Lunga township area in the industrial part of Nairobi, Kenya. According to firefighters, people had apparently been siphoning off petrol from a burst main.///Aftermath of pipeline explosion. Credit: George Philipas / Polaris (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_20246964_POL
70 die in Kenya petrol pipeline explosion
September 12, 2011, Nairobi, Kenya: At least 70 people have been killed in a petrol pipeline explosion and subsequent fire in the Lunga-Lunga township area in the industrial part of Nairobi, Kenya. According to firefighters, people had apparently been siphoning off petrol from a burst main.///Aftermath of pipeline explosion. Credit: George Philipas / Polaris (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_20246954_POL
70 die in Kenya petrol pipeline explosion
September 12, 2011, Nairobi, Kenya: At least 70 people have been killed in a petrol pipeline explosion and subsequent fire in the Lunga-Lunga township area in the industrial part of Nairobi, Kenya. According to firefighters, people had apparently been siphoning off petrol from a burst main.///Aftermath of pipeline explosion. Credit: George Philipas / Polaris (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
DUKAS/POLARIS -
DUKAS_10759199_AFR
Samburu woman
11/2002, Wamba area, Samburu province, Kenya
\nThe Samburu people, a traditionally nomadic tribe in northern Kenya, like their cousins, the Maasai, have been slow to adopt global culture, clinging to their ancient ways. Two recent crises, however, have been eroding their traditional way of life. A three year drought, which began in 1998 decimated their livestock, cattle and goats, leaving them destitute. Livestock is the sign of their wealth and their means of survival. Secondly, their traditional culture which paves the way for sexual experimentation among the young, polygamy, wife sharing, and child brides, has made them especially vulnerable to HIV/AIDS which is claiming the lives of many young and old. Some measure of help has come from Edfri International based in Meru, several hundred kilometres to the South of Samburu. Part of Newfrontiers, a church planting movement which originated in the UK, Edfri International has been involved in providing famine relief, mobile clinics, and a water scheme
\nSamburu woman walking, Kenyan people, Kenya, rural, tribes, tribal
\n (FOTO: DUKAS/AFRICANPICTURES.NET)
DUKAS/AFRICANPICTURES.NET -
DUKAS_10761144_AFR
Tribesman comes up against modern technology: Kirana Lerimara, a young Samburu teenager looks through the wide-angle lens of my old Canon AE1 Program
The Samburu people, a traditionally nomadic tribe in northern Kenya, like their cousins, the Maasai, have been slow to adopt global culture, clinging to their ancient ways. Two recent crises, however, have been eroding their traditional way of life. A three year drought, which began in 1998 decimated their livestock, cattle and goats, leaving them destitute. Livestock is the sign of their wealth and their means of survival. Secondly, their traditional culture which paves the way for sexual experimentation among the young, polygamy, wife sharing, and child brides, has made them especially vulnerable to HIV/AIDS which is claiming the lives of many young and old. Some measure of help has come from Edfri International based in Meru, several hundred kilometres to the South of Samburu. Part of Newfrontiers, a church planting movement which originated in the UK, Edfri International has been involved in providing famine relief, mobile clinics, a water scheme to provide a reliable water supply, and restocking of livestock. Edfri International has seven indigenous churches run by Samburu serving the communities scattered around the town of Wamba (FOTO: DUKAS/AFRICANPICTURES.NET)
DUKAS/AFRICANPICTURES.NET -
DUKAS_10761142_AFR
Naked Samburu child follows his mother home. She holds a container of maize she has received from aid workers with EdFri International
The Samburu people, a traditionally nomadic tribe in northern Kenya, like their cousins, the Maasai, have been slow to adopt global culture, clinging to their ancient ways. Two recent crises, however, have been eroding their traditional way of life. A three year drought, which began in 1998 decimated their livestock, cattle and goats, leaving them destitute. Livestock is the sign of their wealth and their means of survival. Secondly, their traditional culture which paves the way for sexual experimentation among the young, polygamy, wife sharing, and child brides, has made them especially vulnerable to HIV/AIDS which is claiming the lives of many young and old. Some measure of help has come from Edfri International based in Meru, several hundred kilometres to the South of Samburu. Part of Newfrontiers, a church planting movement which originated in the UK, Edfri International has been involved in providing famine relief, mobile clinics, a water scheme to provide a reliable water supply, and restocking of livestock. Edfri International has seven indigenous churches run by Samburu serving the communities scattered around the town of Wamba (FOTO: DUKAS/AFRICANPICTURES.NET)
DUKAS/AFRICANPICTURES.NET -
DUKAS_10759192_AFR
Samburu people
Wamba Area, Kenya, 10/2002
\nThe Samburu people, a traditionally nomadic tribe in northern Kenya, like their cousins, the Maasai, have been slow to adopt global culture, clinging to their ancient ways. Two recent crises, however, have been eroding their traditional way of life. A three year drought, which began in 1998 decimated their livestock, cattle and goats, leaving them destitute. Livestock is the sign of their wealth and their means of survival. Secondly, their traditional culture which paves the way for sexual experimentation among the young, polygamy, wife sharing, and child brides, has made them especially vulnerable to HIV/AIDS which is claiming the lives of many young and old. Some measure of help has come from Edfri International based in Meru, several hundred kilometres to the South of Samburu. Part of Newfrontiers, a church planting movement which originated in the UK, Edfri International has been involved in providing famine relief, mobile clinics, a water scheme
\nSamburu people, Kenyan people, Kenya, rural, tribes, tribal (FOTO: DUKAS/AFRICANPICTURES.NET)
DUKAS/AFRICANPICTURES.NET