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      <title>Magnum Blog / Field of Dreamers</title>
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      <copyright>Copyright 2008</copyright>
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         <title>Field of Dreamers</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<img alt="Kyampure Bates takes a short break from tilling to feed her 3 month old daughter Alnebyona Fortunate. Her son Ahsimbisbwe Naboth, 3 years old, sleeps in front of her. Chien-Chi Chang/Magnum on Malaria" src="http://blog.magnumphotos.com/images/malaria_0416_pic05.jpg" width="536" /><span class="captions">Kyampure Bates takes a short break from tilling to feed her 3 month old daughter Alnebyona Fortunate. Her son Ahsimbisbwe Naboth, 3 years old, sleeps in front of her. Chien-Chi Chang/Magnum on Malaria</span>

It’s 9:30 am when Chien-Chi and I hit the main road on our way to the fields where people are planting shrubs that when processed into a drug, is a proven life-saver. The plant is called artemisia and Africans are now producing it for themselves. It is the essential part of ACTs,or artemisinin combination therapy, the first line of defense against malaria which claims more than 3,000 children’s lives every day in sub-Saharan Africa.

<em><a href="https://secure.groundspring.org/dn/index.php?aid=17186" target="_blank">Donate money for bed nets as part of the Magnum on Malaria/Malaria No More partnership.</a></em>
<a href="http://blog.magnumphotos.com/2007/04/magnum_on_malaria.html" target="_blank">Read more about malaria and the Magnum on Malaria initiative with Malaria No More.</a>

We’re in Kabale which lies in the south western tip of Uganda. At this time in the morning a mist envelops the city like a halo, as if enshrining a holy land. Winding between giant green hills, I look over and see farmers buzzing with activity. Here are a few photos from the field, and the factory where they process the plant.]]></description>
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     <title>Tim Freh</title>
     <description>&lt;p&gt;Mooie impressie. De eerste en laatste foto zijn mijn favorieten!&lt;/p&gt;</description>
     <link>http://blog.magnumphotos.com/2007/04/field_of_dreamers.html#comment-1621</link>
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     <title>Johannes Maier ( Pharmacist )</title>
     <description>&lt;p&gt;I found the photos while searching for Artemisia annua . That herb can kill not only malaria. Questionable is why growing this malaria killer weed in Africa , then making extracts from it, then sending the pure Artemisinin to Europe and then send the there made pills againback to Africa. &lt;br /&gt;
Old Chinese people did use the herb itself as an tea infusion. It is very clear, that it makes sense to grow the herb in your own garden- that makes sense to me. Looking at the pictures I am sure no one of the peoples shown in the photos is capable to buy these pills . They are produced for the town inhabitants of Africa not for the majority in the countrysides. Well , there is a Germany based organisation headed by Dr. Martin Hirt and Keith Lindsey - they work hard for the propagation of the tea use against malaria as a first step for having the chance to go to a doctor or a hospital. So they held seminars in different countries in Africa for growing and using the Artemisia annua herb itself against malaria and in combination with Moringa oleifera leaves as a cure for AIDS. Have a look on their website www.anamed.net available in different languages.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
     <link>http://blog.magnumphotos.com/2007/04/field_of_dreamers.html#comment-4218</link>
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