AURÉLIE MARRIER-D’UNIENVILLE
  • Photography Projects
    • Devils Gold - Indonesia's sulphur miners
    • After ISIS - Iraq's Christians in Limbo
    • Stateless - Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh
    • Lost at sea - Indonesia’s Bajau Laut in transition
    • Epidemic - Ebola in Sierra Leone
    • Dreams of the forest - Uganda's Batwa Pygmies
    • Saving Stone Town
    • El Niño - Drought in Somalia & Mozambique
    • Behind the reef - Aquaculture in Zanzibar
  • Published Work
  • NGO photos
  • About
  • Photography Projects
    • Devils Gold - Indonesia's sulphur miners
    • After ISIS - Iraq's Christians in Limbo
    • Stateless - Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh
    • Lost at sea - Indonesia’s Bajau Laut in transition
    • Epidemic - Ebola in Sierra Leone
    • Dreams of the forest - Uganda's Batwa Pygmies
    • Saving Stone Town
    • El Niño - Drought in Somalia & Mozambique
    • Behind the reef - Aquaculture in Zanzibar
  • Published Work
  • NGO photos
  • About
Two decades ago Batwa pygmies were thrown out of their native forests in Uganda to make way for the country's mountain gorilla tourism industry. The Batwa were the original inhabitants of this part of central Africa and lived for centuries in a symbiotic relationship with the forest which provided their every need. Without ever being compensated for their land, the group now lives in abject poverty, begging and dancing for tourists in order to survive. 

Contact 
m: +27  61 180 2029
        e: [email protected] 

All images  ©  Aurélie Marrier d'Unienville 2014
  • Photography Projects
    • Devils Gold - Indonesia's sulphur miners
    • After ISIS - Iraq's Christians in Limbo
    • Stateless - Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh
    • Lost at sea - Indonesia’s Bajau Laut in transition
    • Epidemic - Ebola in Sierra Leone
    • Dreams of the forest - Uganda's Batwa Pygmies
    • Saving Stone Town
    • El Niño - Drought in Somalia & Mozambique
    • Behind the reef - Aquaculture in Zanzibar
  • Published Work
  • NGO photos
  • About