BONOUA, CÔTE D’IVOIRE – MARCH 13: Karim Bakary, 16, from Burkina Faso, photographed inside a hut out in
the woods near the cocoa farm where he works and sometimes take shelter in with other children seen on Wednesday, March 13, 2019, near Bonoua, Côte d’Ivoire. “There is no money in Burkina,” said Karim, who said he arrived here four years ago when he was 12. “We suffer a lot to get some money there. We came here to be able to have some money to eat.” (Photo by Salwan Georges/The Washington Post)
Nairobi, Kenya – February 29th, 2012: Unidentified boys take a water for drinking on a street of Kibera on February 29, 2012 in Kibera, Nairobi, Kenya.
KWAMANG, GHANA – NOVEMBER 10: Young girls carry water on their heads in their cocoa-producing village, on November 10, 2015 in Kwamang, Ghana. There is no running water in the village. Child labor in the cocoa fields was a problem for generations until activists educated farmers that the children should be in school. Now most families won’t let their children work on their cocoa farms except on weekends and holidays – and even then, they only help with easy chores. (Photo by Melanie Stetson Freeman/The Christian Science Monitor via Getty Images)
390479 06: Former RUF child soldiers grimly leave a ceremony that turned them over to the United Nations June 4, 2001 in the eastern provicial captial of Kaliahun, Sierra Leone. The RUF, infamous for their forced recruitment of child soldiers and maiming of civilians, is slowly starting to disarm and turn child soliders over to international aid groups. Sierra Leone, beset for the last ten years by a brutal civil war, is currently seeing the best prospects for peace in memory as the United Nations steps up its peacekeeping efforts. (Photo by Chris Hondros/Getty Images)
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