Sean T. Hawkey Photography

  • About
  • Contact
  • Photo Library
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Video
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
83 images found
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • Isabel Gutierrez, 42, with her daughter Nubia Milena Chávez, 11, in their garden surrounded by maize that is nearly ready to harvest. The maize and other food are part of a productive project to help some 55 women IDPs in the Silvania district, to grow food for their families and for sale. The project is supported by ACT-member LWF.
    colombia_hawkey_20101125_348.jpg
  • Martha Marak at home in her kitchen. Martha built her house herself, she lives here with her children. Typical of kitchens in the region, she cooks on a floor-level stove that is closed at the back and open at the front. This type of stove has several advantages. It has two hobs, one for a large pan, the other for a kettle. This stove can accept long pieces of firewood without the need for them to be chopped up. For Martha, who has a heavy routine of manual labour, this is a significant saving of her time and energy. While the smoke can be bothersome it keeps the insects out of the house. Martha gets up at 4am, and without electicity she depends on the light from the stove in the early-morning darkness. Here, Martha is preparing a snack of mini-popcorn made from millet that she has grown herself. Martha's daughter Critika watches her mum.
    India_Hawkey_Meghalaya_20170406_101.jpg
  • Cristobal Coc with his daughter Stefanie in Concepción Actelá.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_Alta_Verapaz_201607...jpg
  • Supporters of the FMLN celebrate the signing of the peace agreement in San Salvador, January 1992
    El_Salvador_Hawkey_Peace_20090329_01...jpg
  • Ruth Maydelín Sobalvarro (10) with Arlen Ruth Chaverría Lazo, Marisol (9 months) and Merline de los Angeles (8), family of an UCA Pantasma member. UCA Unidad Santa Maria de Pantasma, Jinotega, Nicaragua, is a Fairtrade-certified coop.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_UCA_Pantasma_201112...jpg
  • Sebastiana Vásquez García with Maria Zulena Castillo Vásquez, 7, in a field of two-year old coffee plants. CIASFA, formerly CECAPRO, is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer in La Unión, Zacapa, Guatemala.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_CECAPRO_20120307_03...jpg
  • Pouch Channa, 43, Community Based Organisation (CBO) leader (R) in Takéo province, Cambodia. World Renew gives opportunities for community leadership roles that they would normally not hold. World Renew works through its partners across rural Cambodia on community development projects.
    Cambodia_Hawkey_World_Renew_2015_050...jpg
  • People gather to fill mater vessels near one of the taps in Dadaab. Dadaab is the biggest refugee camp in the world, housing nearly 300,000 refugees, mainly from Somalia.
    kenya_hawkey_20100111_198.jpg
  • Katy Valeska Paguaga Salinas and her father Don Pedro Antonio Paguaga Miranda work on their diversified farm that has several acres of coffee. Katy and her father are members of the Caja Rural Coop, San Juan de Rio Coco, Nicaragua. The coop is Fairtrade-certified.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_Caja_Rural_20111119...jpg
  • Panadero, Marvin Alonso Vaca Matute, 28 años, Santa Clara, Juticalpa<br />
<br />
Estoy parado de trabajar mientras busco la solución de cómo volver a hacer funcionar el horno. Necesito trabajar, tengo una niña que mantener, y una mujer. Cuando uno no esta trabajando varias cosas se paran. La casa la hice sin ningún préstamo, pero el solar si lo estoy pagando. Todas las tierras aquí son de Pepe Lobo. <br />
<br />
Fui hasta Mexico. <br />
<br />
Antes de hacer la casa mi anhelo fue tener mi casa, estaba alquilando. En esos momentos no tenía una entrada de dinero, un trabajo. Pués en eso apareció una persona que conocí, que llevaba personas para Estados Unidos, coyote, y pués yo le dije verdad que yo quería irme, pero no tenía dinero porque se ocupa mucho dinero. Siete mil dólares. Se le da la mitad antes, y la mitad al llegar. Pero yo no tenía verdad, dinero para pagarle. Entonces le dije, y me dijo que me llevaba pero si le iba ayudando con las personas, y a mi me iba a llevar de gratis. Pués decidimos salir. Ya entrando Guatemala el coyote nos llevaba a un hotel pero el hotel era ruin, con un colchón muy delgado que era como dormir en el mero suelo. Pero como iba como de regalado, verdad. Pero salía, y a veces de madrugada llegaba tomado. Y cuando preguntábamos por la comida de nosotros? Nada. Después de tres días nos llevó para la capital de Guatemala, y después de un día agarramos para la frontera con México, en Tecún Umán, y luego entramos en Tapachula. Y nos dejaba en un hotel hasta por dos días, se perdía, y apenas unos burritos de comida nos traía, no me parecía mucho. Varios días sin comida. Pero las ganas de llegar a los Estados Unidos era tanto que no importaba, el sacrificio. Pasaron varias semanas allí en Tapachula. Y llegó un momento que nos dimos cuenta que se perdió. Y yo cuidando a una mujer. No teníamos para comer. Le hablé a mi mamá y me mandó un dinerito, y con eso compraba un poquito de comida para mi y para la mujer. No la podía dejar sola
    Honduras_Hawkey_returned_migrants_20...jpg
  • senegal_hawkey_20121211_065.jpg
  • A Maya Chortí woman and her daughters at a standpipe in the Copán region of Honduras
    honduras_hawkey_20031013_077.jpg
  • Angie Mercado, 17, lives in El Playón, Carepa, Urabá, Colombia. She has a daughter - Nicole - of 7 months. El Playón is a highly vulnerable neighbourhood on the edge of the river that is subject to rapid erosion by the river, flooding and some houses are on the verge of collapse into the river.<br />
<br />
"When it rains hard the river rises, the water comes quickly. There’s no time to get up and get out when a big part of the river bank drops into the river in a storm. If you are there, it can take your house and everyone who is in it. We get scared at night, we can’t sleep, I’ve had to get up when the river is bad, and run out with my daughter, I had to run out when she was just born. It’s very scary. When the riverbank collapses it makes a big noise. There were two small collapses last night, it was really loud, and the river, it’s getting closer and closer. A big collapse will take houses." <br />
<br />
"At the same time the water supply from the municipality is broken, we don't get any water."
    Colombia_Hawkey_water_20170910_468.jpg
  • Angie Mercado, 17, lives in El Playón, Carepa, Urabá, Colombia. She has a daughter - Nicole - of 7 months. El Playón is a highly vulnerable neighbourhood on the edge of the river that is subject to rapid erosion by the river, flooding and some houses are on the verge of collapse into the river.<br />
<br />
"When it rains hard the river rises, the water comes quickly. There’s no time to get up and get out when a big part of the river bank drops into the river in a storm. If you are there, it can take your house and everyone who is in it. We get scared at night, we can’t sleep, I’ve had to get up when the river is bad, and run out with my daughter, I had to run out when she was just born. It’s very scary. When the riverbank collapses it makes a big noise. There were two small collapses last night, it was really loud, and the river, it’s getting closer and closer. A big collapse will take houses." <br />
<br />
"At the same time the water supply from the municipality is broken, we don't get any water."
    Colombia_Hawkey_water_20170910_434.jpg
  • 'Bertita' Cáceres, daughter of assassinated environmentalist leader Berta Cáceres of the indigenous Lenca organisation COPINH in La Esperanza, Intibucá, Honduras. Speaking shortly before the first anniversary of the assassination of her mother, Bertita spoke about the persistent threats against her mother and family, and the pain of losing their mother. She says that the assassination is a political crime, covered up by the state, and is part of a policy that has seen 123 defenders of land and environment assassinated in Honduras since the coup. Bertita is currently one of the leaders of COPINH, that is campaigning against the construction of a dam on sacred Lenca land.
    Honduras_Hawkey_COPINH_20170213_046.jpg
  • Meily Youna de Jesusa Marcos Ramírez, 3, coffee-farmer's daughter. CODECH is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer in Concepción Huista, Huehuetenango, Guatemala.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_CODECH_20120314_144.jpg
  • A mother and daughter at the El Chapparal camp for asylum seekers, Tijuana
    Mexico_migration_Hawkey_20210615_904.jpg
  • Olga Alvarado, coffee producer with COAQUIL Coop in Quiragüira, Intibucá, Honduras, pictured here with her daughter Genesis. Olga migrated to the US for eight years, working in McDonalds and Wendy’s burger joints to save up enough to buy a small plot of land in Honduras and return to grow coffee.
    Honduras_Hawkey_20190623_488.jpg
  • Alejandra Ahurto López, daughter of farmer Iván Antonio Arana, doing homework with her little brother in Santa Elena, La Conquista, Carazo, Nicaragua
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190614_880.jpg
  • Belkis Ahurto López, daughter of Ivan Antonio Arana in Santa Elena, La Conquista, rides her horse Tequila.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190614_778.jpg
  • Francy 14 is the daughter of Yohanna de Socorro Calderón Flores in Los Chilamates, Carazo, Nicaragua,
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190613_1684.jpg
  • Sabina's daughter
    Tanzania_Hawkey_World_Renew_20180702...jpg
  • Sonal Charda, 10, daughter of a Fairtrade-certified cotton farmer in Rapar district, Gujarat, India.<br />
<br />
Fairtrade Australia and New Zealand support cotton producer groups in India. Fairtrade-certified groups benefit from Fairtrade through guaranteed prices for their produce, technical assistance to improve quality and output, and the Fairtrade premium which the producer groups decide what to do with, often using it for education and health care for their members' communities.<br />
<br />
RDFC (formerly Agrocel) is a Fairtrade-certified group of thousands of farmers who grow cotton in the Rapar, Kutch region of Gujarat in western India
    India_Hawkey_Gujarat_20170109_064.jpg
  • Ruben de Jesús Castellón Núñez. “I had a drug problem. I’ve been in rehab for five months. It’s a six-month programme. When I finish the process I need to get out and start work. I have a six-year-old daughter, Victoria Sofia. My family knew I had a problem, eventually I booked myself in, voluntarily. My old boss has told me that he’ll keep my job for me. I hope he keeps his word. If he doesn’t, then I want to make a small chicken business, in the south of the country where I live. Coming into rehab is hard, it’s boom, a big change, no cocaine or cigarettes, new place and people, you feel like leaving. But bit by bit, you get used to it. I blew a load of money a few days before I came in, thousands of lempiras, I knew I had to get treatment, I was out of control. I went home on a weekend with a permit recently, but I didn’t smoke or take cocaine. There’s always the temptation, but no, not any more, I remember how bad it was, being out of control.”
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180820_5687.jpg
  • Bertha Zúñiga Cáceres, daughter of assassinated Honduran leader on indigenous and environmental rights, Berta Cáceres. Bertha continues to work for indigenous rights leading the Lenca organisation COPINH.
    Honduras_Hawkey_migrants_20190205_96...jpg
  • Laura Zúñiga Cáceres, Berta Cáceres daughter, swims in the Gualquarque river in Intibucá. Her mother campaigned and organised indigenous communities in Intibucá to defend the river valley from being used for a hydroelectric dam. The dam construction that was begun at this site was stopped, but Berta Cáceres - campaigner for environmental and indigenous rights - was assassinated as the leader of opposition to the dam.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Amnesty_20190207_106...jpg
  • Laura Zuñiga Cáceres, daughter of Berta Cáceres who was assassinated on 3 March 2016: "We think that if we take on a role of repressed and depressed victims, it will strengthen the terror and fear that the assassinations bring, of course it affects us sometimes, but we are conscious of what we want to achieve, and we want to break this role. We want to revindate life. We want to revindicate the work of my mum and everything that her lifelong and collective struggles meant. We are strong and we have justice in our hands and we will continue working like she worked, we are continuing her stuggle."
    Honduras_Hawkey_COPINH_20170214_136.jpg
  • Aboubacar Sylla, aged 79, lost 4 members of his family in the Ebola outbreak of 2014-15. <br />
<br />
His daughter M’Mah was one of the lucky ones. As soon as she started showing symptoms of the deadly disease, her father made sure that she was taken straight to hospital where early treatment helped save her life. <br />
<br />
Surrounded by multiple generations of his large family at their home in the district of Dixinn Port, Conakry, Sylla tells how the family was shunned by their own community when Ebola struck his family.<br />
<br />
“Before the Ebola outbreak, everyone talked to one another here. Then suddenly we weren’t even allowed to leave our house,” he said.<br />
<br />
People stopped using the well in the open area in front of their home for fear of contamination and the children were forbidden to step out past the boundary of their front courtyard where they were used to playing.<br />
<br />
M’Mah was not living in the family house when she got sick, but her brother Aboubacar was the one who went to her house where she was living with her husband and took her to the Ebola treatment centre in Nongo. <br />
<br />
“Everyone was so scared of Ebola but I couldn’t just abandon my sister. She would have died,” he said, telling how his decision to ride in the ambulance with her caused division within the family.<br />
Since then, even though he never got sick, Aboubacar has suffered stigma from his contact with Ebola and has found it difficult to get work anymore. <br />
<br />
As soon as M’Mah arrived at the Ebola treatment centre, the disease surveillance system alerted the vaccine trial team of this new case. The team sent two local social mobilizers, trained specifically by WHO for this delicate role, to visit the family and to ask if they would agree to participate in a research trial to help develop a vaccine against Ebola. <br />
The Guinea vaccine trial, led by WHO, used a method called ring vaccination. This method, used to eradicate smallpox, aims to vaccinate a “ring” of all the people who had close contact with the pe
    Guinea_Hawkey_Ebola_WHO_20170503_133.jpg
  • Aboubacar Sylla, aged 79, lost 4 members of his family in the Ebola outbreak of 2014-15. <br />
<br />
His daughter M’Mah was one of the lucky ones. As soon as she started showing symptoms of the deadly disease, her father made sure that she was taken straight to hospital where early treatment helped save her life. <br />
<br />
Surrounded by multiple generations of his large family at their home in the district of Dixinn Port, Conakry, Sylla tells how the family was shunned by their own community when Ebola struck his family.<br />
<br />
“Before the Ebola outbreak, everyone talked to one another here. Then suddenly we weren’t even allowed to leave our house,” he said.<br />
<br />
People stopped using the well in the open area in front of their home for fear of contamination and the children were forbidden to step out past the boundary of their front courtyard where they were used to playing.<br />
<br />
M’Mah was not living in the family house when she got sick, but her brother Aboubacar was the one who went to her house where she was living with her husband and took her to the Ebola treatment centre in Nongo. <br />
<br />
“Everyone was so scared of Ebola but I couldn’t just abandon my sister. She would have died,” he said, telling how his decision to ride in the ambulance with her caused division within the family.<br />
<br />
Since then, even though he never got sick, Aboubacar has suffered stigma from his contact with Ebola and has found it difficult to get work anymore. <br />
<br />
As soon as M’Mah arrived at the Ebola treatment centre, the disease surveillance system alerted the vaccine trial team of this new case. The team sent two local social mobilizers, trained specifically by WHO for this delicate role, to visit the family and to ask if they would agree to participate in a research trial to help develop a vaccine against Ebola. <br />
The Guinea vaccine trial, led by WHO, used a method called ring vaccination. This method, used to eradicate smallpox, aims to vaccinate a “ring” of all the people who had close contact with the p
    Guinea_Hawkey_Ebola_WHO_20170503_123.jpg
  • Tiburcia Perez with her daughter Virgilia Ramirez Perez, members of the Cuna Chorti coffee farming coop. The Cuna Chorti cooperative is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer based in Chiquimula, Guatemala.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_CunaChorti_20120307...jpg
  • Belkis Ahurto López, daughter of Ivan Antonio Arana in Santa Elena, La Conquista, rides her horse Tequila.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190614_807.jpg
  • Faustino de Jesús Cortés Cortés is from La Vainilla, La Conquista, Carazo, Nicaragua. In this picture he is with his daughter and grandson. “I’ve been working with CIEETS, and they’ve helped us with fruit trees, mangos, papaya and other fruits, they’re just maturing and we’ll get some fruit from them soon. We have citrus fruits, we’ve built level curves, barriers, we have natural medicines like lemon grass, we have pitahayas, achiote – which is good for the bees, but it’s also good for cooking, we use it ourselves, and it’s better than what you find in the shops. We have ornamental plants too, flowering plants for the bees. All this is good for us, for the family. We haven’t had a lot of success with the Meliponas, yet, but we will, we’ll keep trying. We have planted a lot of achiote, the bees love it. We have papaya, plenty of yuca, and plenty of quequisque that’s good for the nutrition, it’s the basics, and we have coconut, and peaches, star fruit. As all this goes up, we are creating the best conditions for the family to live well, it’s all new, we planted it all with CIEETS. What we want is to carry on improving, and all this will strengthen us. CIEETS has helped us move forwards”.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190614_690.jpg
  • Francy 14 is the daughter of Yohanna de Socorro Calderón Flores in Los Chilamates, Carazo, Nicaragua,
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190613_1488.jpg
  • Maiingrwoth Sandrah, daughter of Pimer Oliver. Oliver takes part in a women's self-help group led by the Kucwiny Integrated Food Security Project and supported by World Renew.
    Uganda_Hawkey_World_Renew_20180625_2...jpg
  • Sabina's daughter drinking porridge in the morning. Sabina Makongo is a farmer in Nyamuhonda, Tarime district, northern Tanzania, who has adopted Conservation Agriculture techniques taught by World Renew partner AICT Mara Ukewere.
    Tanzania_Hawkey_World_Renew_20180703...jpg
  • Sabina's daughter drinking porridge in the morning. Sabina Makongo is a farmer in Nyamuhonda, Tarime district, northern Tanzania, who has adopted Conservation Agriculture techniques taught by World Renew partner AICT Mara Ukewere.
    Tanzania_Hawkey_World_Renew_20180703...jpg
  • Jumanne Abdallah's daughter -in-law and granddaughter
    Tanzania_Hawkey_World_Renew_20180702...jpg
  • Dajaben Charda, 16, daughter of a Fairtrade-certified cotton farmer helps irrigate a cotton field in Rapar district, Gujarat, India.<br />
<br />
Fairtrade Australia and New Zealand support cotton producer groups in India. Fairtrade-certified groups benefit from Fairtrade through guaranteed prices for their produce, technical assistance to improve quality and output, and the Fairtrade premium which the producer groups decide what to do with, often using it for education and health care for their members' communities.<br />
<br />
RDFC (formerly Agrocel) is a Fairtrade-certified group of thousands of farmers who grow cotton in the Rapar, Kutch region of Gujarat in western India
    India_Hawkey_Gujarat_20170109_665.jpg
  • Dajaben Charda, 16, daughter of a Fairtrade-certified cotton farmer helps irrigate a cotton field in Rapar district, Gujarat, India.<br />
<br />
Fairtrade Australia and New Zealand support cotton producer groups in India. Fairtrade-certified groups benefit from Fairtrade through guaranteed prices for their produce, technical assistance to improve quality and output, and the Fairtrade premium which the producer groups decide what to do with, often using it for education and health care for their members' communities.<br />
<br />
RDFC (formerly Agrocel) is a Fairtrade-certified group of thousands of farmers who grow cotton in the Rapar, Kutch region of Gujarat in western India
    India_Hawkey_Gujarat_20170109_336.jpg
  • Bharnabem Charda, daughter of a Fairtrade-certified cotton farmer helps irrigate a cotton field in Rapar district, Gujarat, India.<br />
<br />
Fairtrade Australia and New Zealand support cotton producer groups in India. Fairtrade-certified groups benefit from Fairtrade through guaranteed prices for their produce, technical assistance to improve quality and output, and the Fairtrade premium which the producer groups decide what to do with, often using it for education and health care for their members' communities.<br />
<br />
RDFC (formerly Agrocel) is a Fairtrade-certified group of thousands of farmers who grow cotton in the Rapar, Kutch region of Gujarat in western India
    India_Hawkey_Gujarat_20170109_107.jpg
  • Maude Paul with her daughter Uberlande.<br />
<br />
The Esperance family have four of their own children and have adpoted Coslina, whose parents died because of the earthquake. Uberlande was badly injured in the earthquake, losing an arm and all but one finger on the other hand. Mr Esperance, a teacher and pastor struggles to sustain the family on his income. He has taken leadership courses through World Renew.
    Haiti_Hawkey_WorldRenew_20170615_045.jpg
  • Bertha Zúñiga Cáceres, daughter of assassinated Honduran leader on indigenous and environmental rights, Berta Cáceres. Bertha continues to work for indigenous rights leading the Lenca organisation COPINH.
    Honduras_Hawkey_migrants_20190205_97...jpg
  • Laura Zúñiga Cáceres, Berta Cáceres daughter, producing a radio programme on Radio Opalaca . Berta Cáceres campaigned and organised communities in Intibucá and other areas of Honduras to defend indigenous rights and territories before her assassination.
    Honduras_Hawkey_migrants_20190204_80...jpg
  • Laura Zúñiga Cáceres, Berta Cáceres daughter, producing a radio programme on Radio Opalaca . Berta Cáceres campaigned and organised communities in Intibucá and other areas of Honduras to defend indigenous rights and territories before her assassination.
    Honduras_Hawkey_migrants_20190204_83...jpg
  • Laura Zúñiga Cáceres, Berta Cáceres daughter, in Intibucá where her mother was assassinated . Berta Cáceres campaigned and organised communities in Intibucá and other areas of Honduras to defend environmental, indigenous rights and territories before her assassination.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Amnesty_20190207_130...jpg
  • Laura Zúñiga Cáceres, Berta Cáceres daughter, swims in the Gualquarque river in Intibucá. Her mother campaigned and organised indigenous communities in Intibucá to defend the river valley from being used for a hydroelectric dam. The dam construction that was begun at this site was stopped, but Berta Cáceres - campaigner for environmental and indigenous rights - was assassinated as the leader of opposition to the dam.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Amnesty_20190207_121...jpg
  • Laura Zúñiga Cáceres, Berta Cáceres daughter, swims in the Gualquarque river in Intibucá. Her mother campaigned and organised indigenous communities in Intibucá to defend the river valley from being used for a hydroelectric dam. The dam construction that was begun at this site was stopped, but Berta Cáceres - campaigner for environmental and indigenous rights - was assassinated as the leader of opposition to the dam.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Amnesty_20190207_114...jpg
  • Laura Zúñiga Cáceres, Berta Cáceres daughter, swims in the Gualquarque river in Intibucá. Her mother campaigned and organised indigenous communities in Intibucá to defend the river valley from being used for a hydroelectric dam. The dam construction that was begun at this site was stopped, but Berta Cáceres - campaigner for environmental and indigenous rights - was assassinated as the leader of opposition to the dam.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Amnesty_20190207_112...jpg
  • Laura Zúñiga Cáceres, Berta Cáceres daughter, swims in the Gualquarque river in Intibucá. Her mother campaigned and organised indigenous communities in Intibucá to defend the river valley from being used for a hydroelectric dam. The dam construction that was begun at this site was stopped, but Berta Cáceres - campaigner for environmental and indigenous rights - was assassinated as the leader of opposition to the dam.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Amnesty_20190207_111...jpg
  • Laura Zúñiga Cáceres, Berta Cáceres daughter, swims in the Gualquarque river in Intibucá. Her mother campaigned and organised indigenous communities in Intibucá to defend the river valley from being used for a hydroelectric dam. The dam construction that was begun at this site was stopped, but Berta Cáceres - campaigner for environmental and indigenous rights - was assassinated as the leader of opposition to the dam.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Amnesty_20190207_109...jpg
  • Laura Zúñiga Cáceres, Berta Cáceres daughter, swims in the Gualquarque river in Intibucá. Her mother campaigned and organised indigenous communities in Intibucá to defend the river valley from being used for a hydroelectric dam. The dam construction that was begun at this site was stopped, but Berta Cáceres - campaigner for environmental and indigenous rights - was assassinated as the leader of opposition to the dam.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Amnesty_20190207_107...jpg
  • Laura Zúñiga Cáceres, Berta Cáceres daughter, swims in the Gualquarque river in Intibucá. Her mother campaigned and organised indigenous communities in Intibucá to defend the river valley from being used for a hydroelectric dam. The dam construction that was begun at this site was stopped, but Berta Cáceres - campaigner for environmental and indigenous rights - was assassinated as the leader of opposition to the dam.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Amnesty_20190207_102...jpg
  • Sobeida.<br />
<br />
Sobeida is given a hug by her granddaughter, the daughter of her son Ronal. Sobeida lives in a notorious neighbourhood of Catacamas, Olancho. Her son Ronald decided to migrate to escape the violence. Men were trying to kill him. His family got him out of Catacamas by using decoys to distract the men that were waiting for him at both ends of his street.<br />
<br />
During his journey up to the US, he lived numerous adventures, and was well liked for helping others on the journey up to the US, including saving others’ lives. One time, helping someone else escape from a criminal group he broke his ankle.<br />
<br />
After months of detention in the US, when he was deported, he came back to Olancho and became the coordinator of the LWF program of young returned migrants in Olancho. <br />
<br />
Shortly afterwards, Ronal Leonardo Rojas Castro was shot dead in Olancho by unknown assailants.<br />
<br />
LWF’s program for returned and deported migrants is supported by ELCA.
    Honduras_Hawkey_migrants_20190122_68...jpg
  • Yanina Avila, 18, daughter of assassinated Tolupán indigenous leader José de Los Santos Sevilla, in the remote area of Montaña de la Flor in Honduras.<br />
<br />
Yanina talks of her father's fear of encroaching mining and logging companies, and nearby ladinos who want to take Tolupán land, and how defenceless they are against them. While non-indigenous areas are deforested, the rivers dry or poisoned, the indigenous territories have woodland and fresh water in the rivers.<br />
<br />
Eight Tolupán leaders have been assassinated in this area. Others have been assassinated in another Tolupán area in Yoro.<br />
<br />
"My father died protecting this forest. They will carry on killing people who look after nature, maybe until we're all gone".
    Honduras_Hawkey_Tolupanes_20170220_3...jpg
  • Laura Zuñiga Cáceres, daughter of Berta Cáceres who was assassinated on 3 March 2016: "We think that if we take on a role of repressed and depressed victims, it will strengthen the terror and fear that the assassinations bring, of course it affects us sometimes, but we are conscious of what we want to achieve, and we want to break this role. We want to revindate life. We want to revindicate the work of my mum and everything that her lifelong and collective struggles meant. We are strong and we have justice in our hands and we will continue working like she worked, we are continuing her stuggle."<br />
<br />
"Pensamos que si tomamos un papel de victima reprimada y deprimida puede reforzar el terror y el miedo que traen los asesinatos, claro que nos afecta a veces, pero estamos conscientes de lo que queremos y queremos romper ese papel. Queremos reinvindicar la vida. Queremos reinvindicar el trabajo de mi mami y todo lo que significa el hecho de haber luchado toda su vida y haber trabajado en colectividad. Tenemos fuerza y tenemos la justicia en nuestras manos y seguiremos trabajando como ella trabajó, vamos a continuar la lucha de ella."
    Honduras_Hawkey_Jesus_20170214_066.jpg
  • Doña Berta, the mother of Berta Cáceres sits at home in front of an altar to her murdered daughter. <br />
<br />
The day after she was killed, the Pope sent me a letter. Berta had met him. His letter filled me with hope, it consoled me. It showed his commitment to the people that defend the environment, and his commitment to indigenous peoples and the defence of human rights.  <br />
<br />
But here, for the powerful, these messages seem to go in one ear and out the other. Even while we are suffering extreme poverty, nature is being sold and destroyed, even the fish are dying, we have poisoned water, full of chemicals, nothing can survive in this. We are defenceless now, even the ten commandments are not respected. The only way forward is by organised resistance to corruption and injustice, that's what Berta did, that's what we all have to do now.
    Honduras_Hawkey_COPINH_20170214_203.jpg
  • Erika Cáceres Díaz, with her daughter Madeline: I work making stickers and signs. A lot of our work comes from the transport sector, buses and taxis mainly. We also do signs for offices, emergency exits and so on, but we get less business from that, it’s mainly transport, public and private. God has given me a talent for this, I thank God for it. And we’ve done trainings, for how to run a business, and I’ve learned other things on YouTube too. When we started, we didn’t know how to use the computer, we hadn’t been able to study much at school, so we had to learn a lot. I’ve done distance study at the university now too, in graphic design. World Renew, through Christian Ministries, has given us economic support too, credit to buy the computer and materials, as well as the trainings. Training on how to run a business and control costs, and know how far down you can go with pricing, that’s been important, it’s a competitive business, and prices are changing, we’re buying products that come into the country, so we’re paying dollars but earning lempiras, you need to understand what you are doing.
    Honduras_Hawkey_WorldRenew_NuevaSuya...jpg
  • Erika Cáceres Díaz, with her daughter Madeline: I work making stickers and signs. A lot of our work comes from the transport sector, buses and taxis mainly. We also do signs for offices, emergency exits and so on, but we get less business from that, it’s mainly transport, public and private. God has given me a talent for this, I thank God for it. And we’ve done trainings, for how to run a business, and I’ve learned other things on YouTube too. When we started, we didn’t know how to use the computer, we hadn’t been able to study much at school, so we had to learn a lot. I’ve done distance study at the university now too, in graphic design. World Renew, through Christian Ministries, has given us economic support too, credit to buy the computer and materials, as well as the trainings. Training on how to run a business and control costs, and know how far down you can go with pricing, that’s been important, it’s a competitive business, and prices are changing, we’re buying products that come into the country, so we’re paying dollars but earning lempiras, you need to understand what you are doing.
    Honduras_Hawkey_WorldRenew_NuevaSuya...jpg
  • Lauri Gonzalez Vásquez, coffee farmer's daughter in La Paz.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Fairtrade_20190217_4...jpg
  • Fatoumata Binta, with her daughter, also called Fatoumata. First her husband got sick and died from Ebola, then she began showing symptoms, and then, one after the other, their four children all got sick from Ebola. Fatoumata and her children were all discharged from the Ebola treatment centre in Donka in April 2015.
    Guinea_Hawkey_Ebola_WHO_20170503_706.jpg
  • Meily Youna de Jesusa Marcos Ramírez, 3, coffee-farmer's daughter. CODECH is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer in Concepción Huista, Huehuetenango, Guatemala.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_CODECH_20120314_157.jpg
  • Jessica Loren López, 21, from El Poblado, is the daughter of coffee farmer and has trained as a coffee taster and now works in the Anserma Coop lab. Coffee from her father's farm has come into the lab and she is testing it. Max Havelaar Switzerland works with Colombian coffee producer Cooperativa de Caficultores de Anserma on Fairtrade-certified coffee production.
    Colombia_Hawkey_Anserma_Fairtrade_20...jpg
  • Alejandra Ahurto López, daughter of farmer Iván Antonio Arana, in the family kitchen in Santa Elena, La Conquista, Carazo, Nicaragua
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190614_865.jpg
  • Chepe's daughter, Rosa
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180317_2248.jpg
  • Laura Zúñiga Cáceres, Berta Cáceres daughter, producing a radio programme on Radio Opalaca . Berta Cáceres campaigned and organised communities in Intibucá and other areas of Honduras to defend indigenous rights and territories before her assassination.
    Honduras_Hawkey_migrants_20190204_78...jpg
  • Laura Zúñiga Cáceres, Berta Cáceres daughter, in Intibucá where her mother was assassinated . Berta Cáceres campaigned and organised communities in Intibucá and other areas of Honduras to defend environmental, indigenous rights and territories before her assassination.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Amnesty_20190207_131...jpg
  • Laura Zúñiga Cáceres, Berta Cáceres daughter, swims in the Gualquarque river in Intibucá. Her mother campaigned and organised indigenous communities in Intibucá to defend the river valley from being used for a hydroelectric dam. The dam construction that was begun at this site was stopped, but Berta Cáceres - campaigner for environmental and indigenous rights - was assassinated as the leader of opposition to the dam.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Amnesty_20190207_118...jpg
  • Maria, right, with her daughter Rosa and her youngest son.<br />
<br />
Maria, her 12-year-old son and her husband, were attacked by thugs with machetes while trying to stop the building of a dam on indigenous land.<br />
<br />
She was cut three times on the head with a machete and lost a finger. Her son had his ear and a large part of his face cut off, her husband was left for dead but survived, though his is no longer able to work.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Intibuca_20170216_06...jpg
  • Maria Isabel Escobar López, 12, daughter of coffee farmer and Andes coop member Germán Escobar, travels to Miguel Valencia school in Antioquia, Colombia on a 'chiva' bus that are typical in the region. Using the Fairtrade premium, over 3,500 school kits including a rucksack, exercise books and pens are given to the children of coop members each year.
    Colombia_Hawkey_FT_Antioquia_2017090...jpg
  • Flor Alvarado with her daughter Yosaris Fabiola, they live in Cabanas, Copan, Honduras. Their family takes part in a CASM-supported project on food security.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_77...jpg
  • Flor Alvarado with her daughter Yosaris Fabiola, they live in Cabanas, Copan, Honduras. Their family takes part in a CASM-supported project on food security.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_77...jpg
  • Flor Alvarado with her daughter Yosaris Fabiola, they live in Cabanas, Copan, Honduras. Their family takes part in a CASM-supported project on food security.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_77...jpg
  • Mother and daughter wait for flood waters to recede in Pimienta, Honduras. Their house is behind them in the photograph.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_28...jpg
  • Jesus the Midwife<br />
<br />
María de Jesús Pérez Vásquez<br />
Coalaca, Las Flores, Lempira<br />
<br />
"I’m 92, I was born in 1925. I had three of my own children, two boys and a girl. I spend most of my time in the house nowadays, with my daughter-in-law and grandchildren.<br />
<br />
There’s no one else my age around here. The secret to a long life is to rest enough but not too much, eat as little as a child eats and work hard. I still like to make tortillas, though my fingers are getting stiff now.<br />
<br />
My parents didn’t have money to send me to school, but I learned a few things. I worked as a midwife for 60 years. I delivered a lot of babies, attended a lot of women in birth. Everyone here knows me. Women still bring me little gifts to say thank you. When I walk down the road, most of the people I meet I saw them arrive in this world. I was the first person to hold them.<br />
<br />
My husband was a drunk. He died of a hangover in a field 12 years after we got married. I brought up the children on my own."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180316_2016.jpg
  • Jesus the Midwife<br />
<br />
María de Jesús Pérez Vásquez<br />
Coalaca, Las Flores, Lempira<br />
<br />
"I’m 92, I was born in 1925. I had three of my own children, two boys and a girl. I spend most of my time in the house nowadays, with my daughter-in-law and grandchildren.<br />
<br />
There’s no one else my age around here. The secret to a long life is to rest enough but not too much, eat as little as a child eats and work hard. I still like to make tortillas, though my fingers are getting stiff now.<br />
<br />
My parents didn’t have money to send me to school, but I learned a few things. I worked as a midwife for 60 years. I delivered a lot of babies, attended a lot of women in birth. Everyone here knows me. Women still bring me little gifts to say thank you. When I walk down the road, most of the people I meet I saw them arrive in this world. I was the first person to hold them.<br />
<br />
My husband was a drunk. He died of a hangover in a field 12 years after we got married. I brought up the children on my own."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180316_1963.jpg
  • Jesus the Midwife<br />
<br />
María de Jesús Pérez Vásquez<br />
Coalaca, Las Flores, Lempira<br />
<br />
"I’m 92, I was born in 1925. I had three of my own children, two boys and a girl. I spend most of my time in the house nowadays, with my daughter-in-law and grandchildren.<br />
<br />
There’s no one else my age around here. The secret to a long life is to rest enough but not too much, eat as little as a child eats and work hard. I still like to make tortillas, though my fingers are getting stiff now.<br />
<br />
My parents didn’t have money to send me to school, but I learned a few things. I worked as a midwife for 60 years. I delivered a lot of babies, attended a lot of women in birth. Everyone here knows me. Women still bring me little gifts to say thank you. When I walk down the road, most of the people I meet I saw them arrive in this world. I was the first person to hold them.<br />
<br />
My husband was a drunk. He died of a hangover in a field 12 years after we got married. I brought up the children on my own."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180316_1996.jpg
  • Reynaldo is from Copán. When I asked him why he had left Honduras as a migrant he explained it was because of his electric bill. Though he only has two light bulbs in his house, and no other electric consumption, he gets a big bill from the electricity company ENEE each month and is now 1200 Lps in arrears (50 USD). The ENEE employees have been theatening him with taking his house if he doesn't pay. He felt there was no alternative but to migrate to try to pay his bill before his house is taken. He has two daughters of 15 years old, he can't afford to send them to school because it costs 500 Lps each (20 USD each) to matriculate them. He has worked every day of his adult life.
    Mexico_migration_Hawkey_20210606_111.jpg
  • Jesus the Indigenous Leader<br />
<br />
Jesús Pérez, Corralito, Copán<br />
<br />
"I live here in Los Altos de Corralito, where I was born, high up in the mountains. I plant corn and beans, and sometimes I earn some money working as a labourer. I have six living daughters, and two living sons. And I have five or six grandchildren. <br />
<br />
Our community has a history of struggle for land and for recognition of our indigenous identity, and my family has paid dearly for it. Blood has been spilt for our indigenous rights.<br />
<br />
My nephew was Candido Amador. He was two days older than me. The Maya Chortí communities were marginalised by the big landowners, but thank God, now we have official recognition as an indigenous people, and we have a little bit of land. We’ve been here for thousands of years, but we only got recognition in the last twenty years.<br />
<br />
My nephew gave his life for our cause. They assassinated him.<br />
<br />
He had long hair, he dressed in indigenous clothes, and had very indigenous features. They thought he was the leader and representative of the indigenous movement, so they targeted him. In fact he wasn’t the representative. The person who represented our organisation was compañera María de Jesús Interiano. She was the first elected President of the Council, while we were preparing for the first Congress. But they thought that Candido was the leader and that’s why they assassinated him. <br />
He was beaten, he was cut with a machete on his hands, his neck, his head, and he was shot three times in the chest. And they scalped him. <br />
<br />
It was the night of the 11th of April 1997. He lived in my house, so they came here to get me to identify the body. He had been thrown on the side of the road. We brought him up here to the Catholic church to say prayers, for a wake. <br />
<br />
He is buried in Rincón del Buey. One of my own sons is buried next to him. He had a fall while he was working in the town, and died of the internal injuries later. We put flowers on both the graves at the same time."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180319_2708.jpg
  • Mr Abdallah's third wife with their daughters (Dolca is on the right)
    Tanzania_Hawkey_World_Renew_20180702...jpg
  • Jesus the Indigenous Leader<br />
<br />
Jesús Pérez, Corralito, Copán<br />
<br />
"I live here in Los Altos de Corralito, where I was born, high up in the mountains. I plant corn and beans, and sometimes I earn some money working as a labourer. I have six living daughters, and two living sons. And I have five or six grandchildren. <br />
<br />
Our community has a history of struggle for land and for recognition of our indigenous identity, and my family has paid dearly for it. Blood has been spilt for our indigenous rights.<br />
<br />
My nephew was Candido Amador. He was two days older than me. The Maya Chortí communities were marginalised by the big landowners, but thank God, now we have official recognition as an indigenous people, and we have a little bit of land. We’ve been here for thousands of years, but we only got recognition in the last twenty years.<br />
<br />
My nephew gave his life for our cause. They assassinated him.<br />
<br />
He had long hair, he dressed in indigenous clothes, and had very indigenous features. They thought he was the leader and representative of the indigenous movement, so they targeted him. In fact he wasn’t the representative. The person who represented our organisation was compañera María de Jesús Interiano. She was the first elected President of the Council, while we were preparing for the first Congress. But they thought that Candido was the leader and that’s why they assassinated him. <br />
He was beaten, he was cut with a machete on his hands, his neck, his head, and he was shot three times in the chest. And they scalped him. <br />
<br />
It was the night of the 11th of April 1997. He lived in my house, so they came here to get me to identify the body. He had been thrown on the side of the road. We brought him up here to the Catholic church to say prayers, for a wake. <br />
<br />
He is buried in Rincón del Buey. One of my own sons is buried next to him. He had a fall while he was working in the town, and died of the internal injuries later. We put flowers on both the graves at the same time."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180319_2750.jpg
  • Jesus the Indigenous Leader<br />
<br />
Jesús Pérez, Corralito, Copán<br />
<br />
"I live here in Los Altos de Corralito, where I was born, high up in the mountains. I plant corn and beans, and sometimes I earn some money working as a labourer. I have six living daughters, and two living sons. And I have five or six grandchildren. <br />
<br />
Our community has a history of struggle for land and for recognition of our indigenous identity, and my family has paid dearly for it. Blood has been spilt for our indigenous rights.<br />
<br />
My nephew was Candido Amador. He was two days older than me. The Maya Chortí communities were marginalised by the big landowners, but thank God, now we have official recognition as an indigenous people, and we have a little bit of land. We’ve been here for thousands of years, but we only got recognition in the last twenty years.<br />
<br />
My nephew gave his life for our cause. They assassinated him.<br />
<br />
He had long hair, he dressed in indigenous clothes, and had very indigenous features. They thought he was the leader and representative of the indigenous movement, so they targeted him. In fact he wasn’t the representative. The person who represented our organisation was compañera María de Jesús Interiano. She was the first elected President of the Council, while we were preparing for the first Congress. But they thought that Candido was the leader and that’s why they assassinated him. <br />
He was beaten, he was cut with a machete on his hands, his neck, his head, and he was shot three times in the chest. And they scalped him. <br />
<br />
It was the night of the 11th of April 1997. He lived in my house, so they came here to get me to identify the body. He had been thrown on the side of the road. We brought him up here to the Catholic church to say prayers, for a wake. <br />
<br />
He is buried in Rincón del Buey. One of my own sons is buried next to him. He had a fall while he was working in the town, and died of the internal injuries later. We put flowers on both the graves at the same time."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180319_2730.jpg
  • Jesus the Indigenous Leader<br />
<br />
Jesús Pérez, Corralito, Copán<br />
<br />
"I live here in Los Altos de Corralito, where I was born, high up in the mountains. I plant corn and beans, and sometimes I earn some money working as a labourer. I have six living daughters, and two living sons. And I have five or six grandchildren. <br />
<br />
Our community has a history of struggle for land and for recognition of our indigenous identity, and my family has paid dearly for it. Blood has been spilt for our indigenous rights.<br />
<br />
My nephew was Candido Amador. He was two days older than me. The Maya Chortí communities were marginalised by the big landowners, but thank God, now we have official recognition as an indigenous people, and we have a little bit of land. We’ve been here for thousands of years, but we only got recognition in the last twenty years.<br />
<br />
My nephew gave his life for our cause. They assassinated him.<br />
<br />
He had long hair, he dressed in indigenous clothes, and had very indigenous features. They thought he was the leader and representative of the indigenous movement, so they targeted him. In fact he wasn’t the representative. The person who represented our organisation was compañera María de Jesús Interiano. She was the first elected President of the Council, while we were preparing for the first Congress. But they thought that Candido was the leader and that’s why they assassinated him. <br />
He was beaten, he was cut with a machete on his hands, his neck, his head, and he was shot three times in the chest. And they scalped him. <br />
<br />
It was the night of the 11th of April 1997. He lived in my house, so they came here to get me to identify the body. He had been thrown on the side of the road. We brought him up here to the Catholic church to say prayers, for a wake. <br />
<br />
He is buried in Rincón del Buey. One of my own sons is buried next to him. He had a fall while he was working in the town, and died of the internal injuries later. We put flowers on both the graves at the same time."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180319_2710.jpg
  • Jesus the Indigenous Leader<br />
<br />
Jesús Pérez, Corralito, Copán<br />
<br />
"I live here in Los Altos de Corralito, where I was born, high up in the mountains. I plant corn and beans, and sometimes I earn some money working as a labourer. I have six living daughters, and two living sons. And I have five or six grandchildren. <br />
<br />
Our community has a history of struggle for land and for recognition of our indigenous identity, and my family has paid dearly for it. Blood has been spilt for our indigenous rights.<br />
<br />
My nephew was Candido Amador. He was two days older than me. The Maya Chortí communities were marginalised by the big landowners, but thank God, now we have official recognition as an indigenous people, and we have a little bit of land. We’ve been here for thousands of years, but we only got recognition in the last twenty years.<br />
<br />
My nephew gave his life for our cause. They assassinated him.<br />
<br />
He had long hair, he dressed in indigenous clothes, and had very indigenous features. They thought he was the leader and representative of the indigenous movement, so they targeted him. In fact he wasn’t the representative. The person who represented our organisation was compañera María de Jesús Interiano. She was the first elected President of the Council, while we were preparing for the first Congress. But they thought that Candido was the leader and that’s why they assassinated him. <br />
He was beaten, he was cut with a machete on his hands, his neck, his head, and he was shot three times in the chest. And they scalped him. <br />
<br />
It was the night of the 11th of April 1997. He lived in my house, so they came here to get me to identify the body. He had been thrown on the side of the road. We brought him up here to the Catholic church to say prayers, for a wake. <br />
<br />
He is buried in Rincón del Buey. One of my own sons is buried next to him. He had a fall while he was working in the town, and died of the internal injuries later. We put flowers on both the graves at the same time."
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180319_2692.jpg