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Palm Jumeirah artificial island, Dubai, United Arab Emirates (25°07’ N, 55°08’ E).Iguazu waterfalls, Misiones province, Argentina and Brazil (25°41’ S, 54°26’ W).Cotton harvesting around Banfora, Burkina Faso (10°36’ N, 4°47’ W).
Cattle grazing in the Pantanal, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil (17°36’ S, 57°30’ W).Elephants in a swamp, Okavango delta, Botswana (19°25’ S, 23°14’ E).River channel in the Okavango delta, Botswana (18°58’ S, 22°29’ E).
Rano Kau volcano in Rapa Nui national park, Easter Island, Chile (27°11’ S, 109°26’ W).Residential area, Changping District, Beijing, People’s Republic of China (40°13’ N - 116°13’ E).Glacial rill on the Greenland ice sheet near Nordlit Sermiat, Greenland (61°05’ N – 46°27’ W).
Solar houses in the Vauban ecoquarter in Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany (47°58’ N, 7°50’ E).Herd of reindeer near Ivituut, Greenland (61°05’ N, 46°10’ W).Greenhouses in San Augustin near Almería, Andalusia, Spain (36°42’ N, 2°44’ W).
Oil tanker of society Euronav, Le NAMUR, Ushant, Finistère (48°32’ N, 5°16’ W).The trawler Caraïbes in the Iroise Sea off Ouessant Island, Finistère, France (48°25’ N, 5°05’ W).Lumber yard in Port-Gentil, Ogooué-Maritime Province, Gabon (0°43’ S, 8°47’ E).
Djidji waterfalls, Ivindo National Park, Ogooué-Ivindo province, Gabon (0°01’ N, 12°27’ E).Lumber yard in Port-Gentil, Ogooué-Maritime Province, Gabon (0°43’ S, 8°47’ E).Whale off Port-Gentil, Ogooué-Maritime province, Gabon (0°31’ S, 8°52’ E).
Seta Valley devastated by a fire in August 2007, Island of Euboea, Greece (38°32’ N, 23°56’ E).Well at Pali, Rajasthan, India (25°57’ N, 73°19’ E).Women at a wellnear Khudiala, Rajasthan, India (26°26’ N, 72°40’ E).
Drawings in the courtyard of a house in Khudiala, Rajasthan, India (26°31’N, 72°41’E).The Svartsengi Geothermal Power Plant, the blue lagoon, near Grindavík, Reykjanes peninsula, Iceland (63°53’ N, 22°26’ W).Volcanic chain, Lakagigar, Iceland (64°07’ N, 18°14’ W).
Ulsan shipyard, South Korea (35°32’ N, 129°19’ E).Workers spraying pesticide on a field, Jeju-Do, South Korea (33°27’ N, 126°34’ E).“Sand diggers” boats in Kalaban Koro, outskirts of Bamako, Mali (12°34’ N, 8°02’ W).




Young girls carrying buckets in the Dogon region, near Bandiagara, Mali (14°20’ N, 3°37’ W).

During Africa’s dry season, women and girls often travel 7 miles (10 kilometers) on foot to collect water for household tasks. In Sub-Saharan Africa, it is estimated that this task takes up 40 billion hours a year. To carry out these water chores, girls abandon their studies. In the Dogon region, illiteracy affects women more than men and polygamy and female genital mutilation (FGM) is justified by a number of social and religious reasons like in all the communities where they still exist. Statistics show that in Mali, over 92% of women are circumcised (sometimes at the age of four) in all regions, in towns and in the countryside and in different ethnic groups. Moreover, over 80% of Malians (men and women) think this practice should be maintained and see all arguments against it as an attack on their identity and their culture. These mutilations are therefore still considered necessary so that young girls will be “well brought up” and apt to marry. In Africa, 3 million young girls are circumcised per year. In the world, the regions that are most affected by these practices are Africa (28 countries) as well as a few regions in the Near East and South and East Asia (Yemen, Indonesia and Malaysia). However, the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 5% (6.5 million) of female genital mutilation victims live in Northern countries. In 2008, according to the WHO, between 100 and 140 million women were victims of these barbaric practices.

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