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Rwanda-2017 { 34 images } Created 27 Oct 2017

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  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 11:  A young boy in the Rwandan countryside. Rwanda is the most densely populated country in Africa. There are an estimated 352 people per square kilometer.  35 percent of the population engage in subsistence agriculture and live under the poverty line.  But with a growth rate of 6-8 percent  since 2003 the poverty rate is declining. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_034.jpg
  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 11:  A group of women in the Rwandan countryside. Rwanda is the most densely populated country in Africa. There are an estimated 352 people per square kilometer.  35 percent of the population engage in subsistence agriculture and live under the poverty line.  But with a growth rate of 6-8 percent  since 2003 the poverty rate is declining. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_035.jpg
  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 13:  Rural Rwandan countryside. Rwanda is the most densely populated country in Africa. There are an estimated 352 people per square kilometer.  35 percent of the population engage in subsistence agriculture and live under the poverty line.  But with a growth rate of 6-8 percent  since 2003 the poverty rate is declining. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_033.jpg
  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 11:  Rural Rwandan countryside. Rwanda is the most densely populated country in Africa. There are an estimated 352 people per square kilometer.  35 percent of the population engage in subsistence agriculture and live under the poverty line.  But with a growth rate of 6-8 percent  since 2003 the poverty rate is declining. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_031.jpg
  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 11:  A young woman and her baby in the Rwandan countryside. Rwanda is the most densely populated country in Africa. There are an estimated 352 people per square kilometer.  35 percent of the population engage in subsistence agriculture and live under the poverty line.  But with a growth rate of 6-8 percent  since 2003 the poverty rate is declining. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_036.jpg
  • KIGALI, RWANDA-OCT 15:  New homes and new metal roofs on homes in the Kanomyi Sector of real Rwanda. The building reflects the improved economy that has seen a 6-8 per cent growth rate since 2003. 35 per cent of the population still live under the poverty line. .  (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_024.jpg
  • GASEKE, RWANDA-OCT 11: A cow calf raised by one poor family is presented to another poor family as part of Rwanda's One Cow Per Poor Family program to help reduce poverty in the real areas.The cow was given to another poor family in the Gaseke Cell of the Kayumbu Sector.  When a poor family receives a cow they pass on the first born calf to another poor family. The program is part of Rwanda's Rwanda Vision 2020 program. 90% of Rwanda's cattle were killed in the 1994 genocide. The target is for 350,000 poor households to received a cow by the end of 2017. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_025.jpg
  • GASEKE, RWANDA-OCT 11: A cow calf raised by one poor family is presented to another poor family as part of Rwanda's One Cow Per Poor Family program to help reduce poverty in the real areas.The cow was given to another poor family in the Gaseke Cell of the Kayumbu Sector.  When a poor family receives a cow they pass on the first born calf to another poor family. The program is part of Rwanda's Rwanda Vision 2020 program. 90% of Rwanda's cattle were killed in the 1994 genocide. The target is for 350,000 poor households to received a cow by the end of 2017. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_026.jpg
  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 12: Market day in the Giko Cell of Kayumbu Sector.  Rwanda is the most densely populated country in Africa. There are an estimated 352 people per square kilometer.  35 percent of the population engage in subsistence agriculture and live under the poverty line.  But with a growth rate of 6-8 percent  since 2003 the poverty rate is declining. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_039.jpg
  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 12:  A group of men on bicycles hitch a ride behind a truck on a new road. Rwanda is the most densely populated country in Africa. There are an estimated 352 people per square kilometer.  35 percent of the population engage in subsistence agriculture and live under the poverty line.  But with a growth rate of 6-8 percent  since 2003 the poverty rate is declining. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_037.jpg
  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 11: Primary school children wave after school in the Kyaumbu Sector of Rwanda. In Rwanda 96.5 percent of primary school age children are enrolled in  school. The highest enrollment in Africa. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_041.jpg
  • KAMONYI, RWANDA-OCT 12:  New homes and new metal roofs on homes in the Kamonyi Sector of real Rwanda. The building reflects the improved economy that has seen a 6-8 per cent growth rate since 2003. 35 per cent of the population still live under the poverty line. .  (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_022.jpg
  • KAMONYI, RWANDA-OCT 11:  New homes and new metal roofs on homes in the Kamonyi Sector of real Rwanda. The building reflects the improved economy that has seen a 6-8 per cent growth rate since 2003. 35 per cent of the population still live under the poverty line. .  (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_023.jpg
  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 11:  Rural Rwandan countryside. Rwanda is the most densely populated country in Africa. There are an estimated 352 people per square kilometer.  35 percent of the population engage in subsistence agriculture and live under the poverty line.  But with a growth rate of 6-8 percent  since 2003 the poverty rate is declining. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_029.jpg
  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 11:  Rural Rwandan countryside. Rwanda is the most densely populated country in Africa. There are an estimated 352 people per square kilometer.  35 percent of the population engage in subsistence agriculture and live under the poverty line.  But with a growth rate of 6-8 percent  since 2003 the poverty rate is declining. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_030.jpg
  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 13:  Rural Rwandan countryside. Rwanda is the most densely populated country in Africa. There are an estimated 352 people per square kilometer.  35 percent of the population engage in subsistence agriculture and live under the poverty line.  But with a growth rate of 6-8 percent  since 2003 the poverty rate is declining. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_032.jpg
  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 13: A collective trauma healing session for survivors and perpetrators of the 1994 genocide at the Giko Cell in the Kayumbu sector. The pilot Community Healing program is run by the Ubuntu Center for Peace which was founded by Rwandan doctors. The healing sessions employ bodywork like yoga, group story telling sessions, and local rituals. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_042.jpg
  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 13: A collective trauma healing session for survivors and perpetrators of the 1994 genocide at the Giko Cell in the Kayumbu sector. The pilot Community Healing program is run by the Ubuntu Center for Peace which was founded by Rwandan doctors. The healing sessions employ bodywork like yoga, group story telling sessions, and local rituals. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_044.jpg
  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 13: A collective trauma healing session for survivors and perpetrators of the 1994 genocide at the Giko Cell in the Kayumbu sector. The pilot Community Healing program is run by the Ubuntu Center for Peace which was founded by Rwandan doctors. The healing sessions employ bodywork like yoga, group story telling sessions, and local rituals. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_045.jpg
  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 13: A collective trauma healing session for survivors and perpetrators of the 1994 genocide at the Giko Cell in the Kayumbu sector. The pilot Community Healing program is run by the Ubuntu Center for Peace which was founded by Rwandan doctors. The healing sessions employ bodywork like yoga, group story telling sessions, and local rituals. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_046.jpg
  • KAYUMBU RWANDA-OCT 13: A collective trauma healing session for survivors and perpetrators of the 1994 genocide at the Giko Cell in the Kayumbu sector. The pilot Community Healing program is run by the Ubuntu Center for Peace which was founded by Rwandan doctors. The healing sessions employ bodywork like yoga, group story telling sessions, and local rituals. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_047.jpg
  • KIGALI, RWANDA-OCT 16:  Overview of Kigali the capital of Rwanda.  Since the 1994 genocide that killed at least 800,000 Rwanda has experienced unprecedented development with a major building boom in the capital. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_013.jpg
  • KIGALI, RWANDA-OCT 16:  New apartments and houses in the Kimihurura section of Kigali, the capital of Rwanda.  Since the 1994 genocide that killed at least 800,000 Rwanda has experienced unprecedented development with a major building boom in the capital. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_010.jpg
  • KIGALI, RWANDA-OCT 16: New buildings in downtown Kigali, the capital of Rwanda. Since the 1994 genocide that killed at least 800,000 Rwanda has experienced unprecedented development with a major building boom in the capital. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_002.jpg
  • KIGALI, RWANDA-OCT 16:  Clean streets in downtown Kigali, the capital of Rwanda. Kigali is one of the cleanest cities in the world. Plastic bags are banned. Streets are cleaned daily. Since the 1994 genocide that killed at least 800,000 Rwanda has experienced unprecedented development with a major building boom in the capital. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_006.jpg
  • KIGALI, RWANDA-OCT 16:  Moto taxi drivers are connected with cell data in downtown Kigali, the capital of Rwanda. The country has almost universal cell overage Since the 1994 genocide that killed at least 800,000 Rwanda has experienced unprecedented development with a major building boom in the capital. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_007.jpg
  • KIGALI, RWANDA-OCT 16: New buildings in downtown Kigali, the capital of Rwanda. Since the 1994 genocide that killed at least 800,000 Rwanda has experienced unprecedented development with a major building boom in the capital. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_008.jpg
  • KIGALI, RWANDA-OCT 16: New buildings in downtown Kigali, the capital of Rwanda. Since the 1994 genocide that killed at least 800,000 Rwanda has experienced unprecedented development with a major building boom in the capital. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_005.jpg
  • KIGALI, RWANDA-OCT 16: New buildings in downtown Kigali, the capital of Rwanda. Since the 1994 genocide that killed at least 800,000 Rwanda has experienced unprecedented development with a major building boom in the capital. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_009.jpg
  • KIGALI, RWANDA-OCT 16:  Chinese construction workers at a high rise building site in Kigali, the capital of Rwanda. Chinese companies are involved in major building and road projects in Rwanda. Since the 1994 genocide that killed at least 800,000 Rwanda has experienced unprecedented development with a major building boom in the capital. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_014.jpg
  • KIGALI, RWANDA-OCT 15:  The Mille Collines hotel famous from the film Hotel Rwanda in the capital of Kigali. It has been refurbished since the 1994 genocide that killed at least 800,000. Rwanda has experienced unprecedented development with a major building boom in the capital. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_017.jpg
  • KIGALI, RWANDA-OCT 16:  The Mille Collines hotel famous from the film Hotel Rwanda in the capital of Kigali. It has been refurbished since the 1994 genocide that killed at least 800,000. Rwanda has experienced unprecedented development with a major building boom in the capital. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_020.jpg
  • KIGALI, RWANDA-OCT 15:  The Mille Collines hotel famous from the film Hotel Rwanda in the capital of Kigali. It has been refurbished since the 1994 genocide that killed at least 800,000. Rwanda has experienced unprecedented development with a major building boom in the capital. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_018.jpg
  • KIGALI, RWANDA-OCT 16:  The Mille Collines hotel famous from the film Hotel Rwanda in the capital of Kigali. It has been refurbished since the 1994 genocide that killed at least 800,000. Rwanda has experienced unprecedented development with a major building boom in the capital. (Photo by William Campbell-Corbis via Getty Images)
    Rwanda_2017_019.jpg