A day in the life of an Angolan school girl Rosalia Zita’s life
so far is typical for many 13-year-old Angolans. Her family was displaced during
the war and she lost her father to malaria. She missed years of schooling due to
destroyed infrastructures. But the recent renovation of her school building in
São João, Huambo, brings hope for more stability and a better
future.
A day in the life of a girl in Papua New Guinea Emily
Olto’s family is too poor to pay school fees and, like many girls in the area,
Emily almost had to drop out. Thanks to a government scholarship, she can stay
in school.
I
Have a Story to Tell A selection of images from Mark Read's work for
CAMFED. Limited-edition, signed prints are available for purchase.
Southern Sudan: Changing the Odds for Girls Only one per
cent of girls complete primary school in southern Sudan, a legacy of poverty,
two decades of conflict and a tradition of early marriage.
A
day in the life of a Senegalese schoolgirl Aminata Kâ, 14, pictured here
with her mother, lives outside Dakar, Senegal. Many girls in her neighbourhood
can’t finish primary school because they have to support their families
Community funds girls' education In Papua New Guinea's
isolated highlands, where Tine Samson, 16, lives, many people survive as
subsistence farmers and lack the cash for their children’s school fees
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