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Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
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SUDAN 1962. FAO support to mother-of-pearl industry
March 1962 (exact date unknown). Donganab Bay, Sudan. Equipped with flippers, goggles and underwater breathing tube, Sudan’s Assistant Fisheries Officer, Sayed Mohamed Ali Awad (foreground), and a fisher prepare to dive in search of mother-of-pearl shells. FAO supported the mother-of-pearl industry, as an alternative to seasonal fishing.
01/01/1962
Credit
© FAO photo
UNFAO Source
FAO Photo Library
File size
512.60 KB
Unique ID
UF12P4Z
FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given.
Background Information
The Bay is the centre of a new mother-of- pearl industry initiated with the help of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) to provide a new source of income for the coastal Hadendowa people, as an alternative to the seasonal fishing industry. As a result of the cultivation of mother-of-pearl shells, a new. button factory has been opened in Port Sudan. Equipped with flippers, goggles and underwater breathing tube, the Sudan's Assistant Fisheries Officer Sayed Mohamed Ali Awad (foreground) and a fisherman prepare to dive into the waters of Donganab Bay, 100 miles north of Port Sudan, to search for mother-of-pearl shells.