Oumar Mamoudu Ba

Oumar Mamoudou Ba

The nearest well to Oumar’s village is seven kilometres away

Joao Kinoa

João Kanoa

Blinded by an accident ten years ago, João still teaches capoeira

Chan Daravy

Chan Daravy

Radio star Chan informs young people about HIV/AIDS

Adalton Santiago Binas

Adalton Santiago Binas

With help from Brazil’s MST movement, Adalton now has a home and some land to farm

Harvesting fruit from mango trees
Youmaissy champions the cause for planting mango trees

 

Youmaissy Diack
Age: 16
Home: Seroume, Senegal
In Youmaissy Diack’s village in northern Senegal, mango trees give shade from the blistering sun and shelter from the desert winds. They also bear enough fruit for the villagers to sell and have helped to slow soil erosion.
filed in Filed in: AfricaClimate Change

Climate change in Senegal

  • Seroume village is in northern Senegal, next to the River Senegal and close to the Mauritanian border
  • In the 1960s the Senegalese government allowed people to cut down trees to make and sell charcoal. But there was little regeneration and whole forests in the north of the country have been devastated
  • Most people in northern Senegal are involved in nomadic herding – following the rains with their livestock
  • Overgrazing, deforestation, a rise in temperatures and unpredictable rains have caused desertification – it is estimated that the desert is encroaching by 300 metres a year

filed in Filed in: AfricaClimate Change

Senegal

Senegal
population: 11.4 million
population living on less than $2 a day: 63%
female adult literacy rate: 29.2%

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