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Keywords
Aftermaths of war
Day
Destruction
Endangered species
Forests (campaign title)
Fur trade
Houses
Indoors
KWCI (GPI)
Damaged Building in Kisangani
The interior of a house situated in the city center of Kisangani, damaged year ago in the war. The living room has sofas covered in animal print. In 1999, Kisangani was the site of the first open fighting between Ugandan and Rwandan forces of the Second Congo War. Many people still live in destroyed houses and the memories of the war are still visible everywhere.
Containers
Shoot:
Democratic Republic Congo Forests Documentation 2006
The second largest rainforest in the world sits in the Congo basin of Africa. About half of this forest, still largely intact, lies in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and supports more species of birds and mammals than any other African region. The rainforests are also critical for its human inhabitants, who depend upon the rainforests to provide essential food, medicine, and other non-timber products, along with energy and building materials. The World Bank and other donors view logging as a way to alleviate poverty and promote economic development. In reality, expansion of logging into remaining areas of intact forests in the Democratic Republic of the Congo will destroy globally critical carbon reserves and impact biodiversity. Beyond environmental impacts, logging in the region exacerbates poverty and leads to social conflicts.
Conceptually similar
Unique identifier:
GP02RP
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
04/10/2006
Locations:
Africa
,
Central Africa
,
Democratic Republic of the Congo
,
Kisangani
Credit line:
© Greenpeace / Jan-Joseph Stok
Size:
4368px × 2912px 6.95 MB
Ranking:
★★★★ (E)