Sean T. Hawkey Photography

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  • 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
  • Landscape near San Nicolás, Intibucá, Honduras.
    Honduras_Hawkey_20120106_010.jpg
  • The funeral of José de Los Santos Sevilla, a teacher and leader of the Tolupán indigenous people in Honduras who was assassinated at 6:30 in the morning on 17 February 2017, at his home in the remote area of Montaña de la Flor where he lived with his wife and six children. He was the eighth Tolupán leader to be assassinated in this small area of the country, the killings were linked to land tenure, as non-indigenous people try to take land from the Tolupán people and run mining and logging there. There are several Tolupan tribes in Honduras, split between Montaña de la Flor and Yoro.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Tolupanes__20170218_...jpg
  • Jumanne Abdallah's family in their kitchen garden on his farm in Tarime, Mara, Tanzania. Dolca carries her baby brother. Mr Abdallah has planted 1,700,000 trees, mainly Eucalyptus and Grevillea but also leguminous species for firewood, forage and nitrogen-fixing green manure.
    Tanzania_Hawkey_World_Renew_20180702...jpg
  • Dolca. She stands in front of a wood that her father planted. Mr Abdallah has planted 1,700,000 trees, mainly Eucalyptus and Grevillea but also leguminous species for firewood, forage and nitrogen-fixing green manure.
    Tanzania_Hawkey_World_Renew_20180702...jpg
  • The road into Montaña de la Flor, Tolupán indigenous reserve, Honduras
    Honduras_Hawkey_Tolupanes__20170218_...jpg
  • The funeral of José de Los Santos Sevilla, a teacher and leader of the Tolupán indigenous people in Honduras who was assassinated at 6:30 in the morning on 17 February 2017, at his home in the remote area of Montaña de la Flor where he lived with his wife and six children. He was the eighth Tolupán leader to be assassinated in this small area of the country, the killings were linked to land tenure, as non-indigenous people try to take land from the Tolupán people and run mining and logging there. There are several Tolupan tribes in Honduras, split between Montaña de la Flor and Yoro.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Tolupanes__20170218_...jpg
  • The funeral of José de Los Santos Sevilla, a teacher and leader of the Tolupán indigenous people in Honduras who was assassinated at 6:30 in the morning on 17 February 2017, at his home in the remote area of Montaña de la Flor where he lived with his wife and six children. He was the eighth Tolupán leader to be assassinated in this small area of the country, the killings were linked to land tenure, as non-indigenous people try to take land from the Tolupán people and run mining and logging there. There are several Tolupan tribes in Honduras, split between Montaña de la Flor and Yoro.
    Honduras_Hawkey_Tolupanes__20170218_...jpg
  • Iván Antonio Arana, in Los Encuentros, La Conquista, Carazo, Nicaragua. “We have level curves here with 30 pitahaya, we have watermelon, squash and yuca in this area too. We’re doing an experiment here, to see what works best. I have a little bit of woodland with madero, quebracho, brazil, chocoagua, Guanacaste, eucalypts, pochote, and others, and I want to plant more, to protect the river, the water source, that’s what we’ve been taught, that’s what I’m going to do. I’ve also planted a windbreak of oak, a big windbreak, and of course all the normal crops, but these are big changes”.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190614_969.jpg
  • Iván Antonio Arana, in Los Encuentros, La Conquista, Carazo, Nicaragua. “We have level curves here with 30 pitahaya, we have watermelon, squash and yuca in this area too. We’re doing an experiment here, to see what works best. I have a little bit of woodland with madero, quebracho, brazil, chocoagua, Guanacaste, eucalypts, pochote, and others, and I want to plant more, to protect the river, the water source, that’s what we’ve been taught, that’s what I’m going to do. I’ve also planted a windbreak of oak, a big windbreak, and of course all the normal crops, but these are big changes”.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190614_962.jpg
  • Iván Antonio Arana, in Los Encuentros, La Conquista, Carazo, Nicaragua. “We have level curves here with 30 pitahaya, we have watermelon, squash and yuca in this area too. We’re doing an experiment here, to see what works best. I have a little bit of woodland with madero, quebracho, brazil, chocoagua, Guanacaste, eucalypts, pochote, and others, and I want to plant more, to protect the river, the water source, that’s what we’ve been taught, that’s what I’m going to do. I’ve also planted a windbreak of oak, a big windbreak, and of course all the normal crops, but these are big changes”.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190614_949.jpg
  • Iván Antonio Arana, in Los Encuentros, La Conquista, Carazo, Nicaragua. “We have level curves here with 30 pitahaya, we have watermelon, squash and yuca in this area too. We’re doing an experiment here, to see what works best. I have a little bit of woodland with madero, quebracho, brazil, chocoagua, Guanacaste, eucalypts, pochote, and others, and I want to plant more, to protect the river, the water source, that’s what we’ve been taught, that’s what I’m going to do. I’ve also planted a windbreak of oak, a big windbreak, and of course all the normal crops, but these are big changes”.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190614_910.jpg
  • Iván Antonio Arana, in Los Encuentros, La Conquista, Carazo, Nicaragua. “We have level curves here with 30 pitahaya, we have watermelon, squash and yuca in this area too. We’re doing an experiment here, to see what works best. I have a little bit of woodland with madero, quebracho, brazil, chocoagua, Guanacaste, eucalypts, pochote, and others, and I want to plant more, to protect the river, the water source, that’s what we’ve been taught, that’s what I’m going to do. I’ve also planted a windbreak of oak, a big windbreak, and of course all the normal crops, but these are big changes”.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190614_893.jpg
  • Iván Antonio Arana, in Los Encuentros, La Conquista, Carazo, Nicaragua. “We have level curves here with 30 pitahaya, we have watermelon, squash and yuca in this area too. We’re doing an experiment here, to see what works best. I have a little bit of woodland with madero, quebracho, brazil, chocoagua, Guanacaste, eucalypts, pochote, and others, and I want to plant more, to protect the river, the water source, that’s what we’ve been taught, that’s what I’m going to do. I’ve also planted a windbreak of oak, a big windbreak, and of course all the normal crops, but these are big changes”.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190614_901.jpg
  • Iván Antonio Arana, in Los Encuentros, La Conquista, Carazo, Nicaragua. “We have level curves here with 30 pitahaya, we have watermelon, squash and yuca in this area too. We’re doing an experiment here, to see what works best. I have a little bit of woodland with madero, quebracho, brazil, chocoagua, Guanacaste, eucalypts, pochote, and others, and I want to plant more, to protect the river, the water source, that’s what we’ve been taught, that’s what I’m going to do. I’ve also planted a windbreak of oak, a big windbreak, and of course all the normal crops, but these are big changes”.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190614_895.jpg
  • Iván Antonio Arana, in Los Encuentros, La Conquista, Carazo, Nicaragua. “We have level curves here with 30 pitahaya, we have watermelon, squash and yuca in this area too. We’re doing an experiment here, to see what works best. I have a little bit of woodland with madero, quebracho, brazil, chocoagua, Guanacaste, eucalypts, pochote, and others, and I want to plant more, to protect the river, the water source, that’s what we’ve been taught, that’s what I’m going to do. I’ve also planted a windbreak of oak, a big windbreak, and of course all the normal crops, but these are big changes”.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190614_918.jpg