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Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
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A handful of "big beans", as they are called locally, valued at 600 Leones (approximately USD $0.20) at the Aberdeen Market, Freetown.
A handful of chili peppers valued at 800 Leones (approximately USD $0.27) at the Aberdeen Market, Freetown.
A handful of cowpeas valued at 1, 000 Leones (approximately USD $0.34) at the Aberdeen Market, Freetown.
A handful of yellow lentils valued at 1,000 Leones (approximately USD $0.34) at the Aberdeen Market, Freetown.
A handful of sesame seeds or "be-nee", as it called locally, valued at 1, 700 Leones (approximately USD $0.57) at the Aberdeen Market, Freetown.
A handful of millet, valued at 1, 000 Leones (approximately USD $0.34) at the Aberdeen Market, Freetown.
A handful of spelt, valued at 700 Leones (approximately USD $0.23) at the Aberdeen Market, Freetown.
A handful of imported rice worth 800 Leones (approximately USD $0.27) at the Aberdeen Market, Freetown. In Freetown, imported rice is often less expensive than locally grown rice.
A handful of shelled peanuts valued at 1, 000 Leones (approximately USD $0.34) at the Aberdeen Market, Freetown.
A handful of dried okra valued at 500 Leones (approximately USD $0.17) at the Aberdeen Market, Freetown.
A handful of locally grown rice valued at 1,000 Leones (approximately USD $0.34) at the Aberdeen Market, Freetown. In Freetown, imported rice is often less expensive than locally grown rice.
A handful of locally grown rice valued at 1,000 Leones (approximately USD $0.34) at the Aberdeen Market, Freetown. In Freetown, imported rice is often less expensive than locally grown rice.
A vendor displaying the beans she sells from her stall at Aberdeen Market. She is from Kabala, in northern Sierra Leone, but fled to Freetown during the country's civil war. She returns home every yea
Women shoppting at the open air market in Freetown.
A mix of peppers and onions and other goods for sale at Aberdeen Market. Sierra Leone has an abundance of food but prices have increased and many people cannot afford basic items.
A mother of three, attending her stall at Aberdeen Market. Like others at Aberdeen Market, she built her stall on her own. She has been working there for three years. She complains that this year, the
Daily life in Aberdeen, Freetown.
A young woman using a shard of glass as a mirror while preparing for a night out in a shanty town in Aberdeen, Freetown.
A father feeding his infant imported baby food in a shantytown in Aberdeen, Freetown.
Food sellers preparing cassava in Lumley, Freetown.
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A handful of pigeon peas or "konshu beans", as they are called locally, valued at 800 Leones (approximately USD $0.27) at the Aberdeen Market, Freetown.
11/16/2008
Credit
© FAO/Peter DiCampo
File size
1.19 MB
Unique ID
UF111OB
FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given.