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Edition

ZIMBABWE

Le Méjan, Rencontres d'Arles

01 Jul — 22 Sep 2013

The Cold Storage Commission in Bulawayo, where cattle were once slaughtered and butchered for export to Europe.

© Robin Hammond for Fondation Carmignac

Zimbabwe, formerly Rhodesia, has become a forgotten land. Today, with no light cast on the dark shadows of Robert Mugabe’s relentless tyranny, the downtrodden people of one of Africa’s most hauntingly beautiful nations rightfully feel abandoned by the world. Their modest hope devoured by the malice and greed of politicians, Zimbabwe’s people have nowhere to turn and—face with the brutality of the police and military— no strength to cry out in the dark. In "Zimbabwe", the New Zealander photojournalist Robin Hammond gives a critically needed voice to a lost generation of Africans who are dying of disease, poverty, and neglect. By bearing witness to a nation’s despair at great risk to himself and those brave enough to help him, he brings one of Africa’s most enduring and important crises back into the spotlight, into an unhindered space of free expression and protest where the voices of Zimbabwe’s dispossessed can once again be heard. Dan McDougall

Patrick, five, lives in a rubbish dump with his grandmother. They earn on average a month recycling waste from the dump.

© Robin Hammond for Fondation Carmignac