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  • Mochtar Riady, founder and chairman of multinational conglomerate Lippo Group, poses for a photo in the lobby of the Mochtar Riady Institute for Nanotechnology in Lippo Karawaci, outside Jakarta, Indonesia, on February 3, 2016. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez) (Shot for Business Life, Financial Times)
    RO.IDN.2016.02.03.0028.jpg
  • Sajid Ali, 23, stands for a photograph in Bogor, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on January 7, 2015. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)<br />
Asylum seekers and refugees from Afghanistan and Pakistan have found solace in playing cricket as they wait for the review of their applications, which may take years. Many thought their stay in Asia would be a temporary transit before being resettled to other countries, such as Australia.
    RO.IDN.2016.01.07.0069.jpg
  • Employees apply chemical products to a stained glass window in the form of a church at the Eztu Glass factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015. Indonesia is the country with the world's largest Muslim population, of about 205 million people. Roughly 88% of Indonesia's population is Muslim, and the nation is home to about 13% of the world's Muslims.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0057.jpg
  • Eztu Glass founder and CEO Brian Yaputra (left) talks to an employee about a stained glass window at his company's factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0041.jpg
  • Verónica, 8 (left), hands some lemons to her aunt Mónica Jiménez.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0192.jpg
  • Different types of plants and tubers are kept and displayed in the research and testing lab of the Martha Tilaar factory in East Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0110.jpg
  • An employee draws details on a piece of stained glass using ink in the design studio of the Eztu Glass factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015. Indonesia is the country with the world's largest Muslim population, of about 205 million people. Roughly 88% of Indonesia's population is Muslim, and the nation is home to about 13% of the world's Muslims.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0093.jpg
  • Mónica ‘Cori’ Jiménez is a single mother with five children. "I grew up alone, in the streets," she said. "I never stole anything and I never took drugs." She survives on government assistance and the community soup kitchen. "If it didn’t exist, I don’t know what would have happened to my life and to the lives of my children." <br />
She used to be a 'cartonera' in downtown Buenos Aires for 15 years. She used to take her children out to beg until, in an argument, her older daughter convinced her that it was wrong. Cori combed trash at the municipal trash dump for three months, but she says she stopped because police beat her often and once shot her in the leg with a rubber bullet. After a childhood of mistreatment, Cori hopes life in 8 de Mayo will offer something better to her kids. <br />
"I am 30 and I already want to die," she told a visitor, slowly and deliberately, with her eyes fixed on the ground. "I want my children to be someone in life."
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0183.jpg
  • Eztu Glass founder and CEO Brian Yaputra poses for a portrait holding a small stained glass window at his company's factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0052.jpg
  • Siblings Jessica, 10 (left), and Pablo, 8, arm-wrestle at their home in Ocho de Mayo. They are part of a family of seven children.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0136.jpg
  • Carlos Tolosa, a resident of Ocho de Mayo, worked in a metallurgic factory until 1989, when the company laid off some of its workers. "We are promised many things but never get anything, only the rich do."<br />
Informal settlements started to appear in the 1980s, coinciding with the end of full employment and the failure of the import substitution and industrialization model adopted by the Argentinean government
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0169.jpg
  • Employees assemble a stained glass window at the Eztu Glass factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0033.jpg
  • Child #34<br />
#8286<br />
Identity OK
    RO.MYS.2013.09.00649.jpg
  • Employees pack boxes of lipstick at the Martha Tilaar factory in East Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0120.jpg
  • An employee draws details on a piece of stained glass using ink in the design studio of the Eztu Glass factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015. Indonesia is the country with the world's largest Muslim population, of about 205 million people. Roughly 88% of Indonesia's population is Muslim, and the nation is home to about 13% of the world's Muslims.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0091.jpg
  • An employee wields a stained glass window of Jesus Christ at the Eztu Glass factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015. Indonesia is the country with the world's largest Muslim population, of about 205 million people. Roughly 88% of Indonesia's population is Muslim, and the nation is home to about 13% of the world's Muslims.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0036.jpg
  • Ocho de Mayo is crisscrossed overhead with electric wires tapping power from the few existing streetlights. The neighborhood lacks a reliable supply of electricity.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0220.jpg
  • Residents chat at the neighborhood's community center. <br />
People from Ocho de Mayo point out with pride the progress made since the settlement was created in1998. From the beginning, there was a deliberate planning. The first settlers left space for a community center. Each new family was given a plot of land arranged along wide streets. Planners did not want narrow alleys between houses as in Brazilian favelas. A commission, with a delegate representing each block, made rules. Nearby settlements now use 8 de Mayo as a model.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0112.jpg
  • Susana Giménez, 34, has two kids from a former marriage and is expecting a third one from her partner, Carlos Tolosa. She works from home, assembling paper bags.<br />
In Ocho de Mayo, 80 percent of the residents earn a small income as 'cartoneros', collecting cardboard and plastics in the street, or doing odd jobs.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0166.jpg
  • Martha Tilaar (left), founder of the Martha Tilaar Group, and her daughter Wulan Tilaar Widarto pose for a portrait at Martha Tilaar's office in East Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0145.jpg
  • An employee operates a machine used to make creams and other beauty products at the Martha Tilaar factory in East Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0116.jpg
  • An old line of Sari Ayu products is displayed at the Martha Tilaar museum in East Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0108.jpg
  • An employee draws details on a piece of stained glass using ink in the design studio of the Eztu Glass factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015. Indonesia is the country with the world's largest Muslim population, of about 205 million people. Roughly 88% of Indonesia's population is Muslim, and the nation is home to about 13% of the world's Muslims.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0098.jpg
  • Detail of a stained glass window design at the Eztu Glass factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0013.jpg
  • A boy steps on a puddle as he runs under the rain through the streets of Ocho de Mayo.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0228.jpg
  • Alberto, 9, plays with other children and looks through a hole in the wall of his home in Ocho de Mayo.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0205.jpg
  • Ferdinand Sadeli, Executive Director and CFO of Sinarmas Land Ltd.
    RO.IDN.2016.05.16.0011.jpg
  • Martha Tilaar (right), founder of the Martha Tilaar Group, and her daughter Wulan Tilaar Widarto pose for a portrait at Martha Tilaar's office in East Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0142.jpg
  • An employee applies chemical products to a stained glass window in the form of a church at the Eztu Glass factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015. Indonesia is the country with the world's largest Muslim population, of about 205 million people. Roughly 88% of Indonesia's population is Muslim, and the nation is home to about 13% of the world's Muslims.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0064.jpg
  • Eztu Glass founder and CEO Brian Yaputra poses for a portrait at his company's factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0047.jpg
  • An employee wields a dome that will hold stained glass at the Eztu Glass factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0045.jpg
  • Noelia, 15, rests on her bed, next to toys, old photographs and a broken telephone. Noelia does not go to school.<br />
For most inhabitants of Ocho de Mayo, dignity is the main goal. Many who have had to live in the streets now focus their energies on providing a better life for their children. They all agree on the need of education to get jobs.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0195.jpg
  • View from atop Borobudur temple at sunrise, featuring volcanoes and the landscape of Central Java, Indonesia. The top platform has 72 perforated stupas with seated Buddha statues inside.
    RO.IDN.2013.03.14.0010.jpg
  • Martha Tilaar (left), founder of the Martha Tilaar Group, and her daughter Wulan Tilaar Widarto pose for a portrait at Martha Tilaar's office in East Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0151.jpg
  • Employees at the Martha Tilaar factory in East Jakarta, Indonesia, walk down stairs and prepare to leave after the factory's bell system rings at the end of the work day on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0122.jpg
  • Employees work at the research and testing lab of the Martha Tilaar factory in East Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0117.jpg
  • An employee closes a cabinet keeping and displaying different types of plants and tubers in the research and testing lab of the Martha Tilaar factory in East Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0112.jpg
  • Eztu Glass founder and CEO Brian Yaputra poses for a portrait at his company's factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0076.jpg
  • At the Jiménez family's home, a photograph hanging on the wall shows the past of the building, which used to host the community-run soup kitchen.<br />
In a place ignored by politicians, the community group has taken charge of services that should be provided by the government. Each morning, four people collect the trash with horse carts. The group also organizes training programs, health counseling and micro-enterprise initiatives. Most notably, a community-run soup kitchen feeds children and destitute families. The community center they run also serves as a social meeting point.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0200.jpg
  • Community leader Lorena Pastoriza drinks coffee and smokes a cigarette at her home in Ocho de Mayo. Lorena was 23 when she moved in, among the first settlers to arrive here on the 8th of May of 1998. They took land in what used to be an illegal dump. The area was heaped with garbage up to 20 feet high. Snakes and rats nested in dismantled cars and scrap piles. "For us, now, this is a paradise."
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0206.jpg
  • Ariel Barrios (right) plays electric guitar while Facundo, 9, looks out of a window.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0088.jpg
  • A family watches television at their home in Ocho de Mayo.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0119.jpg
  • A dead kitten lays on the mud, tangled on a piece of fabric. Ocho de Mayo lacks a reliable supply of water and electricity. Some residents have perforated a nearby water main. This water supply is highly contaminated, and some people suffer from dysentery, leukemia and other diseases related to malnutrition and environmental contamination.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0100.jpg
  • Milagros, 6, sits at the back of a wrecked pickup truck parked in front of her home.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0131.jpg
  • Eztu Glass founder and CEO Brian Yaputra examines a small stained glass window at his company's factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0059.jpg
  • Víctor Morel (left) lays bricks for a new construction. In Ocho de Mayo, precarious houses with brick walls stand next to shacks of wood planks and asbestos.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0149.jpg
  • General view of the market in the town of Abyei.
    RO.SDN.2008.02.0055.jpg
  • Martha Tilaar, founder of the Martha Tilaar Group, poses for a portrait at her office in East Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0135.jpg
  • Eztu Glass founder and CEO Brian Yaputra (left) inspect the work of employees at his company's factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0105.jpg
  • An employee draws details on a piece of stained glass using ink in the design studio of the Eztu Glass factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015. Indonesia is the country with the world's largest Muslim population, of about 205 million people. Roughly 88% of Indonesia's population is Muslim, and the nation is home to about 13% of the world's Muslims.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0101.jpg
  • Eztu Glass founder and CEO Brian Yaputra (right) examines a stained glass window design at his company's factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0088.jpg
  • Eztu Glass founder and CEO Brian Yaputra (right) inspects pieces of stained glass at his company's factory in Tangerang, near Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 2, 2015.
    RO.IDN.2015.07.02.0014.jpg
  • Children play in a pool in the backyard of a house at Ocho de Mayo.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0202.jpg
  • Ariel Barrios (left) solves a puzzle with Facundo, 9 (center), and Alberto, 9. In the background is community leader Lorena Pastoriza.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0207.jpg
  • Simón Areco (center) and his wife Mari Carmen Espinola (right) are Paraguayan and run a grocery shop in Ocho de Mayo.<br />
About 65 percent of the population of Ocho de Mayo is from Paraguay.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0157.jpg
  • Raúl Moyano (right) and his wife Lidia Barrios stand in front of their home in Ocho de Mayo.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0173.jpg
  • General view of one of the main streets of Ocho de Mayo, an informal settlement in the district of General Saint Martín, Buenos Aires, Argentina, in January 2006. The neighborhood is named after the date in which the first settlers moved in, on the 8th of May of 1998. <br />
Today, Ocho de Mayo is home to about 1,500 families, many of them young. Of the 5,000 residents, 3,000 are under 16. About 65 percent of the population is Paraguayan. The rest are from nearby towns or elsewhere in Argentina. This neighborhood does not look very different from the villas miseria —slums or shantytowns— that ring the Argentine capital.
    RO.ARG.2006.01.0225.jpg
  • A local tapper climbs a sugar palm tree to collect sap in East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. Planted around the perimeter of the Samboja Lestari rainforest is a belt of sugar palm trees, which serve both as a protective barrier against fires and as a source of income for local families. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0118.jpg
  • Cars drive through young forests in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0024.jpg
  • Isabella Freire Vitali, Brazil Manager and Latin America Coordinator at Proforest, presents during a session on the Brazil Initiative at the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 10, 2016. In these working sessions participants established the 2016-18 strategy for TFA 2020's initiatives in priority countries and regions. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.10.0174.jpg
  • Marco Albani, Director of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 at the World Economic Forum, delivers the welcome address during the opening session of the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 10, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.10.0037.jpg
  • Detail of the bark of a 100-year-old Agathis tree (Agathis borneensis), the biggest in Indonesia, at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0084.jpg
  • Justin Adams, Global Managing Director for Lands at The Nature Conservancy, makes closing remarks at the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 11, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.11.0273.jpg
  • Environmental economist Pavan Sukhdev takes part in the discussion about the China/India Demand Markets initiative at the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 11, 2016. In this working session participants reviewed the scope, objectives, partners and milestones of this strategic initiative. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.11.0216.jpg
  • Niki Mardas (right), Executive Director of the Global Canopy Programme (GCP), presents during a knowledge exchange session on the supply chain approach at the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 11, 2016. His presentation focused on the use of Transformative Transparency for a deforestation-free economy. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.11.0150.jpg
  • General view of the panel discussion during the opening session of the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 10, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.10.0061.jpg
  • The Executive Director of The Union, José Luis Castro, speaks at the opening of the global summit on diabetes and tuberculosis in Bali, Indonesia, on November 2, 2015.<br />
The increasing interaction of TB and diabetes is projected to become a major public health issue. The summit gathered a hundred public health officials, leading researchers, civil society representatives and business and technology leaders, who committed to take action to stop this double threat. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez for The Union)
    RO.IDN.2015.11.02.0018.jpg
  • Dr Sharon Chan, Head of China for AERAS, speaks about the development of a TB vaccine at the global summit on diabetes and tuberculosis in Bali, Indonesia, on November 3, 2015.<br />
The increasing interaction of TB and diabetes is projected to become a major public health issue. The summit gathered a hundred public health officials, leading researchers, civil society representatives and business and technology leaders, who committed to take action to stop this double threat. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez for The Union)
    RO.IDN.2015.11.03.0007.jpg
  • A local tapper holds a glass filled with freshly collected sap from a sugar palm tree in East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. This liquid can be drunk directly as a juice with high sugar content or processed to produce sugar. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0125.jpg
  • View of forests and tree canopies at Samboja Lestari, a reclaimed tropical forest conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0071.jpg
  • Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan, Indonesia's Coordinating Minister of Political, Legal and Security Affairs, delivers the opening address at the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 11, 2016. He spoke about Indonesia's preventive actions to avoid major forest fires. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.11.0026.jpg
  • The Executive Director of The Union, José Luis Castro, speaks at the opening of the global summit on diabetes and tuberculosis in Bali, Indonesia, on November 2, 2015.<br />
The increasing interaction of TB and diabetes is projected to become a major public health issue. The summit gathered a hundred public health officials, leading researchers, civil society representatives and business and technology leaders, who committed to take action to stop this double threat. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez for The Union)
    RO.IDN.2015.11.02.0012.jpg
  • The Chairman of the World Diabetes Foundation, Dr Anil Kapur (right), answers a question at the global summit on diabetes and tuberculosis in Bali, Indonesia, on November 2, 2015.<br />
The increasing interaction of TB and diabetes is projected to become a major public health issue. The summit gathered a hundred public health officials, leading researchers, civil society representatives and business and technology leaders, who committed to take action to stop this double threat. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez for The Union)
    RO.IDN.2015.11.02.0058.jpg
  • Michelle Tanmizi (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.22.0020.jpg
  • Visitors listen to a briefing at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0102.jpg
  • Herry Purnomo, Scientist at the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), speaks during a knowledge exchange session on the topic "Assessing and addressing forest fire propagation in Indonesia: The root causes, impact and solutions", at the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 11, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.11.0090.jpg
  • The Executive Director of The Union, José Luis Castro (background, center), participates in an interactive discussion to identify specific actions to fight the co-epidemic at the global summit on diabetes and tuberculosis in Bali, Indonesia, on November 3, 2015.<br />
The increasing interaction of TB and diabetes is projected to become a major public health issue. The summit gathered a hundred public health officials, leading researchers, civil society representatives and business and technology leaders, who committed to take action to stop this double threat. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez for The Union)
    RO.IDN.2015.11.03.0050.jpg
  • Participants discuss specific actions to fight the co-epidemic at the global summit on diabetes and tuberculosis in Bali, Indonesia, on November 3, 2015.<br />
The increasing interaction of TB and diabetes is projected to become a major public health issue. The summit gathered a hundred public health officials, leading researchers, civil society representatives and business and technology leaders, who committed to take action to stop this double threat. (Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez for The Union)
    RO.IDN.2015.11.03.0043.jpg
  • Visitors walk on an elevated footbridge over the enclosure at the Sun Bear Sanctuary run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation in the Samboja Lestari conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0021.jpg
  • A sun bear rests under the shade of a fenced area at the Sun Bear Sanctuary run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation in the Samboja Lestari conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. Sun bears (Helarctos malayanus) are classified as Vulnerable by IUCN, since large-scale deforestation in Southeast Asia has dramatically reduced their natural habitat. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0019.jpg
  • A sun bear sucks a paw, a stress response to human presence, at the Sun Bear Sanctuary run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation in the Samboja Lestari conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. Sun bears (Helarctos malayanus) are classified as Vulnerable by IUCN, since large-scale deforestation in Southeast Asia has dramatically reduced their natural habitat. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0010.jpg
  • Justin Adams, Global Managing Director for Lands at The Nature Conservancy, enjoys the panoramic view of forests and tree canopies at the Arsari Lestari conservation area in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0054.jpg
  • General view of trees at the Arsari Lestari conservation area in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0050.jpg
  • A man stands on a jetty near Balikpapan, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0003.jpg
  • Saah A. David, Jr (right), National REDD+ Project Coordinator at Liberia's Forestry Development Authority (FDA), presents during a session on the Africa Palm Oil Initiative at the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 10, 2016. In these working sessions participants established the 2016-18 strategy for TFA 2020's initiatives in priority countries and regions. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.10.0186.jpg
  • Jeff Seabright, Chief Sustainability Officer at Unilever, speaks at a panel discussion during the opening session of the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 10, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.10.0090.jpg
  • Visitors walk up the stairs of a forest fire lookout tower at Samboja Lestari, a reclaimed tropical forest conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. Because of logging and fires, this area used to be covered by grassland vegetation (Imperata cylindrica) but the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation started buying land and replanting local species of tress to bring forests back. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0053.jpg
  • An orangutan eats food provided by the keepers at the sanctuary run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation in the Samboja Lestari conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. This sanctuary offers a natural environment to orangutans that cannot be returned to the wild because of their severe disabilities or because they were raised in captivity and can no longer learn forest skills. Bornean Orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus) are classified as Endangered by IUCN because of the loss of rainforests to agriculture or fires, poaching and the pet trade. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0042.jpg
  • A sun bear rests under the shade of a fenced area at the Sun Bear Sanctuary run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation in the Samboja Lestari conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. Sun bears (Helarctos malayanus) are classified as Vulnerable by IUCN, since large-scale deforestation in Southeast Asia has dramatically reduced their natural habitat. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0028.jpg
  • A sun bear rests under the shade of a fenced area at the Sun Bear Sanctuary run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation in the Samboja Lestari conservation area in Kutai Kartanegara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 13, 2016. Sun bears (Helarctos malayanus) are classified as Vulnerable by IUCN, since large-scale deforestation in Southeast Asia has dramatically reduced their natural habitat. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.13.0016.jpg
  • Panoramic view of forests and tree canopies at the Samboja Lestari conservation area in East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0143.jpg
  • Metal tag attached to a tree at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0098.jpg
  • Visitors walk at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0086.jpg
  • Ishak Yassir (right), Forestry Manager and Co-Founder of Samboja Lestari, briefs visitors at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. The plan for the Arsari Lestari conservation area is to preserve the virgin rainforest while creating value for ICTI and local people in a production-protection system that reduces emissions. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0083.jpg
  • Local staff members measure the diameter of a timber tree (Shorea laevis) at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. The plan for the Arsari Lestari conservation area is to preserve the virgin rainforest while creating value for ICTI and local people in a production-protection system that reduces emissions. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0065.jpg
  • Local staff members measure the diameter of a timber tree (Shorea laevis) at the Arsari Lestari conservation forest in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. The plan for the Arsari Lestari conservation area is to preserve the virgin rainforest while creating value for ICTI and local people in a production-protection system that reduces emissions. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0060.jpg
  • Justin Adams (center), Global Managing Director for Lands at The Nature Conservancy, asks a question during a briefing about the Arsari Lestari conservation area in Penajam Paser Utara district, East Kalimantan, Indonesia, on March 12, 2016. The plan for the Arsari Lestari conservation area is to preserve the virgin rainforest while creating value for ICTI and local people in a production-protection system that reduces emissions. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.12.0046.jpg
  • Marco Albani, Director of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 at the World Economic Forum, speaks at the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 11, 2016. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.11.0247.jpg
  • David Hoyle, Associate Director at Proforest, delivers a presentation about the Africa Palm Oil Initiative at the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 11, 2016. His presentation was about the results and the outlook of the Africa Palm Oil Initiative, the first signature initiative of TFA 2020. <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.11.0239.jpg
  • Panelists speak during a knowledge exchange session on the landscape approach at the General Assembly of the Tropical Forest Alliance 2020 in Jakarta, Indonesia, on March 11, 2016. From left to right are Frances Seymour, Senior Fellow at the Center for Global Development; Dharsono Hartono, ‎CEO of PT Rimba Makmur Utama; Emily Roynestad, Director of Business Development at Anthrotect; Sarah Price, Head of Projects and Development at the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC); and Kate Bottriell, Senior Programme Advisor at the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). <br />
(Photo: Rodrigo Ordonez)
    RO.IDN.2016.03.11.0169.jpg
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