Sean T. Hawkey Photography

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  • Oscar Gómez, bus driver of the bus drivers' union called La Bombilla, in San José Petare, Caracas. The area is an informal barrio built on a steep hillside.
    venezuela_hawkey_20130925_1536.jpg
  • Bareback horse races at Mauro Cueva's farm near Copán Ruinas
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180317_034.jpg
  • Marco Rosalio Duarte laughs "Get that horse out of my picture!" <br />
<br />
Marco Rosalio is one of the leaders of the Federation of Pech Tribes in Honduras, I interview him in Pueblo Nuevo Subirana, an hour from Dulce Nombre de Culmí, Olancho, Honduras.<br />
<br />
The village has 850 inhabitants, almost all of them are indigenous Pech. There are only 6,000 Pech people. <br />
<br />
"About a quarter of the people in the village speak Pech as their mother tongue, everyone speaks a bit. Pech is taught now in the schools, but most people communicate with Spanish, particularly the young people."<br />
<br />
"The village is surrounded by forest, mainly broadleaf but some pine. The area is now a protected area, the National Congress recently approved it."<br />
<br />
"There are flaws in the reservation agreement. There are 16 white ladino families inside this new anthropological reservation, they have a bit of money too, and it's harder to move rich people than poor people in this country. It will be very hard to move them."<br />
<br />
"For protecting our area, we are threatened. Some families have entered our territory recently and have cut down forest and burned the trees to make pastures for cattle. Their intention is to make money. Our intention is to protect the environment, the forest, the water. We've made declarations to the police, and those people will go to court. This isn't the normal way of doing things here, a lot of violence is used, that's the mentality here. Berta Cáceres is just one of hundreds of people who've been killed for protecting the environment and indigenous rights. At the moment we have death threats against us for trying to protect the environment and our territory. We insist on the use of law to resolve these problems."
    honduras_hawkey_20170814_402.jpg
  • Marco Rosalio Duarte is one of the leaders of the Federation of Pech Tribes in Honduras, I interview him in Pueblo Nuevo Subirana, an hour from Dulce Nombre de Culmí, Olancho, Honduras.<br />
<br />
The village has 850 inhabitants, almost all of them are indigenous Pech. There are only 6,000 Pech people. <br />
<br />
"About a quarter of the people in the village speak Pech as their mother tongue, everyone speaks a bit. Pech is taught now in the schools, but most people communicate with Spanish, particularly the young people."<br />
<br />
"The village is surrounded by forest, mainly broadleaf but some pine. The area is now a protected area, the National Congress recently approved it."<br />
<br />
"There are flaws in the reservation agreement. There are 16 white ladino families inside this new anthropological reservation, they have a bit of money too, and it's harder to move rich people than poor people in this country. It will be very hard to move them."<br />
<br />
"For protecting our area, we are threatened. Some families have entered our territory recently and have cut down forest and burned the trees to make pastures for cattle. Their intention is to make money. Our intention is to protect the environment, the forest, the water. We've made declarations to the police, and those people will go to court. This isn't the normal way of doing things here, a lot of violence is used, that's the mentality here. Berta Cáceres is just one of hundreds of people who've been killed for protecting the environment and indigenous rights. At the moment we have death threats against us for trying to protect the environment and our territory. We insist on the use of law to resolve these problems."
    honduras_hawkey_20170814_403.jpg
  • Bareback horse races at Mauro Cueva's farm near Copán Ruinas
    Honduras_Hawkey_20180317_027.jpg
  • A young man in a red FMLN T-shirt sat on the front of a vehicle as people celebrated the FLMN electoral win in El Salvador
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_148.jpg
  • Lilian Mutheu (centre with red shirt) is a mentor in the Dreams project in Nairobi, Kenya. Here she sits with other mentors of the programme in the street in Pipeline district of Nairobi.<br />
<br />
DREAMS is an acronym for Determined, Resilient, Empowered, AIDS-free, Mentored, and Safe women. The project aims to empower girls and young women between 10 and 24 years around issues including HIV prevention, contraceptive methods, health, education and social economic intervention.<br />
<br />
Lilian, who is mother, is familiar with some of the issues through her own personal experience and provides guidance and support to hundreds of young women and girls in the extensive slum of Makuru Kwa Njenga in Nairobi.
    Kenya_Hawkey_AP-ACT_20191009_703.jpg
  • A couple in clothing celebrated the FMLN electoral win.
    elsalvador_hawkey_20090316_144.jpg