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  • Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    DUKAS_186638240_NUR
    Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    Medical personnel at the Maternal and Child Hospital in the Tlahuac municipality of Mexico City provide free subdermal hormonal implant placement, which prevents ovulation by blocking sperm from entering the uterus, on July 3, 2025. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    DUKAS_186638237_NUR
    Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    Medical personnel at the Maternal and Child Hospital in the Tlahuac municipality of Mexico City provide free subdermal hormonal implant placement, which prevents ovulation by blocking sperm from entering the uterus, on July 3, 2025. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    DUKAS_186638208_NUR
    Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    Medical personnel at the Maternal and Child Hospital in the Tlahuac municipality of Mexico City provide free subdermal hormonal implant placement, which prevents ovulation by blocking sperm from entering the uterus, on July 3, 2025. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    DUKAS_186638195_NUR
    Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    Medical personnel at the Maternal and Child Hospital in the Tlahuac municipality of Mexico City provide free subdermal hormonal implant placement, which prevents ovulation by blocking sperm from entering the uterus, on July 3, 2025. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    DUKAS_186638192_NUR
    Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    Medical personnel at the Maternal and Child Hospital in the Tlahuac municipality of Mexico City provide free subdermal hormonal implant placement, which prevents ovulation by blocking sperm from entering the uterus, on July 3, 2025. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    DUKAS_186638191_NUR
    Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    Medical personnel at the Maternal and Child Hospital in the Tlahuac municipality of Mexico City provide free subdermal hormonal implant placement, which prevents ovulation by blocking sperm from entering the uterus, on July 3, 2025. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    DUKAS_186638190_NUR
    Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    Medical personnel at the Maternal and Child Hospital in the Tlahuac municipality of Mexico City provide free subdermal hormonal implant placement, which prevents ovulation by blocking sperm from entering the uterus, on July 3, 2025. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    DUKAS_186638108_NUR
    Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    Medical personnel at the Maternal and Child Hospital in the Tlahuac municipality of Mexico City provide free subdermal hormonal implant placement, which prevents ovulation by blocking sperm from entering the uterus, on July 3, 2025. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    DUKAS_186638107_NUR
    Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    Medical personnel at the Maternal and Child Hospital in the Tlahuac municipality of Mexico City provide free subdermal hormonal implant placement, which prevents ovulation by blocking sperm from entering the uterus, on July 3, 2025. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    DUKAS_186638096_NUR
    Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    Medical personnel at the Maternal and Child Hospital in the Tlahuac municipality of Mexico City provide free subdermal hormonal implant placement, which prevents ovulation by blocking sperm from entering the uterus, on July 3, 2025. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    DUKAS_186638083_NUR
    Tláhuac Municipality And Maternal And Child Hospital In Mexico City Conduct Free Subdermal Hormonal Implant Campaign
    Medical personnel at the Maternal and Child Hospital in the Tlahuac municipality of Mexico City provide free subdermal hormonal implant placement, which prevents ovulation by blocking sperm from entering the uterus, on July 3, 2025. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto)

     

  • Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank Opening Ceremony
    DUKAS_186067626_NUR
    Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank Opening Ceremony
    Chairman of the Hong Kong Hospital Authority, Henry Fan Hung-ling, speaks at the opening ceremony of the Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank in Hong Kong, on June 16, 2025. The Hospital Authority holds an opening ceremony for its Breast Milk Bank. (Photo by Vernon Yuen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank Opening Ceremony
    DUKAS_186067614_NUR
    Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank Opening Ceremony
    Chairman of the Hong Kong Hospital Authority, Henry Fan Hung-ling, speaks at the opening ceremony of the Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank in Hong Kong, on June 16, 2025. The Hospital Authority holds an opening ceremony for its Breast Milk Bank. (Photo by Vernon Yuen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank Opening Ceremony
    DUKAS_186067551_NUR
    Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank Opening Ceremony
    Hong Kong Secretary for Health, Lo Chung Mau, speaks at the opening ceremony of the Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank in Hong Kong, on June 16, 2025. The Hospital Authority holds an opening ceremony for its Breast Milk Bank. (Photo by Vernon Yuen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank Opening Ceremony
    DUKAS_186067505_NUR
    Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank Opening Ceremony
    Hong Kong Secretary for Health, Lo Chung Mau, speaks at the opening ceremony of the Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank in Hong Kong, on June 16, 2025. The Hospital Authority holds an opening ceremony for its Breast Milk Bank. (Photo by Vernon Yuen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank Opening Ceremony
    DUKAS_186067504_NUR
    Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank Opening Ceremony
    Chairman of the Hong Kong Hospital Authority, Henry Fan Hung-ling, speaks at the opening ceremony of the Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank in Hong Kong, on June 16, 2025. The Hospital Authority holds an opening ceremony for its Breast Milk Bank. (Photo by Vernon Yuen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank Opening Ceremony
    DUKAS_186067644_NUR
    Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank Opening Ceremony
    Chairman of the Hong Kong Hospital Authority, Henry Fan Hung-ling, speaks at the opening ceremony of the Hong Kong Breast Milk Bank in Hong Kong, on June 16, 2025. The Hospital Authority holds an opening ceremony for its Breast Milk Bank. (Photo by Vernon Yuen/NurPhoto)

     

  • World Immunization Week 2025 In Lagos, Nigeria
    DUKAS_184119970_NUR
    World Immunization Week 2025 In Lagos, Nigeria
    Oluremi Hamzat, wife of the Deputy Governor of Lagos State, speaks during an advocacy walk, titled ''A Walk for the Future,'' organized by the Lagos State Primary Health Care Board in conjunction with UNICEF to commemorate World Immunization Week 2025 in Alausa, Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria, on April 29, 2025. (Photo by Adekunle Ajayi)

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_046
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar at school in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344539
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_042
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar with her boyfriend Rubén in her bedroom at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344541
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_040
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar with her boyfriend Rubén, during an ultra sound, at the Mexfam's clinic in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344547
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_038
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar at school in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344534
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_037
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar with her boyfriend Rubén in her bedroom at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344540
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_032
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xhunaxhi Rosalía Santiago López (R) portrayed with her mother Antonia López Guerra (L) at their home in Santa María Xadani, Oaxaca, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Xhunaxhi – her name means “virgin” in Zapotec – is 14 and lives with her 18-year-old partner and her mother, who had her own first child aged 17, in the town of Santa María Xadani in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Xhunaxhi, who speaks little Spanish, is painfully shy and childlike and punctuates her comments with giggles. She is five months pregnant, but seems not to really understand – she has to ask her mother when her baby is due. She left school at 10 to travel with her family to Tepic, in the western state of Nayarit, for six-month stints working cutting sugar cane. She met her boyfriend last year, keeping the relationship secret from her mother, and was “stolen”, according to the Zapotec tradition. She plans to marry legally at 18. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344536
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_031
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar portrayed in her bedroom at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344548
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_030
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar at school in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344533
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_028
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xhunaxhi Rosalía Santiago López (C) portrayed with her partner Rolando Luis López (L) and her mother Antonia López Guerra (R) at their home in Santa María Xadani, Oaxaca, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Xhunaxhi – her name means “virgin” in Zapotec – is 14 and lives with her 18-year-old partner and her mother, who had her own first child aged 17, in the town of Santa María Xadani in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Xhunaxhi, who speaks little Spanish, is painfully shy and childlike and punctuates her comments with giggles. She is five months pregnant, but seems not to really understand – she has to ask her mother when her baby is due. She left school at 10 to travel with her family to Tepic, in the western state of Nayarit, for six-month stints working cutting sugar cane. She met her boyfriend last year, keeping the relationship secret from her mother, and was “stolen”, according to the Zapotec tradition. She plans to marry legally at 18. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344530
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_027
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar at school in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344538
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_026
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar at school in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344537
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_020
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar portrayed in her bedroom at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344543
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_013
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xhunaxhi Rosalía Santiago López (C) portrayed with her partner Rolando Luis López (L) and her mother Antonia López Guerra (R) at their home in Santa María Xadani, Oaxaca, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Xhunaxhi – her name means “virgin” in Zapotec – is 14 and lives with her 18-year-old partner and her mother, who had her own first child aged 17, in the town of Santa María Xadani in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Xhunaxhi, who speaks little Spanish, is painfully shy and childlike and punctuates her comments with giggles. She is five months pregnant, but seems not to really understand – she has to ask her mother when her baby is due. She left school at 10 to travel with her family to Tepic, in the western state of Nayarit, for six-month stints working cutting sugar cane. She met her boyfriend last year, keeping the relationship secret from her mother, and was “stolen”, according to the Zapotec tradition. She plans to marry legally at 18. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344531
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_011
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar portrayed in her bedroom at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344546
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_009
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar with her boyfriend Rubén, during an ultra sound, at the Mexfam's clinic in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344545
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_007
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar with her boyfriend Rubén, during an ultra sound, at the Mexfam's clinic in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344549
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_003
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar with her boyfriend Rubén in her bedroom at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344542
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_002
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar at school in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344535
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_050
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar and her mother Concepción Escobar Gómez, at their home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 17, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344532
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_049
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Luz Betsaida Orozco Pineda and her new born baby at their home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 17, 2016. Now 14, Luz became pregnant when she was 13 after being “stolen” according to the Zapotec Indigenous tradition. Considered a traditional kind of marriage – Luz is too young to wed legally – the custom dictates that the couple go to the young man’s house and announce their plans to marry. While the family waits, the couple go to a room together; he emerges later with a blood-stained handkerchief to prove his bride’s virginity. Luz, who started going out with the father of her baby when she was 10, lives with her in-laws in the 6 de noviembre neighbourhood on the outskirts of Juchitán in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Her baby was born on January 13, 2016. Despite following tradition, she speaks little Zapotec – the language of her husband and his family – she follows tradition, wearing a headscarf to protect her health as she is still observing the 40-days quarantine period after giving birth, during which she stays in the house. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344503
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_048
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Luz Betsaida Orozco Pineda (L) and her new born baby at their home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 17, 2016. Now 14, Luz became pregnant when she was 13 after being “stolen” according to the Zapotec Indigenous tradition. Considered a traditional kind of marriage – Luz is too young to wed legally – the custom dictates that the couple go to the young man’s house and announce their plans to marry. While the family waits, the couple go to a room together; he emerges later with a blood-stained handkerchief to prove his bride’s virginity. Luz, who started going out with the father of her baby when she was 10, lives with her in-laws in the 6 de noviembre neighbourhood on the outskirts of Juchitán in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Her baby was born on January 13, 2016. Despite following tradition, she speaks little Zapotec – the language of her husband and his family – she follows tradition, wearing a headscarf to protect her health as she is still observing the 40-days quarantine period after giving birth, during which she stays in the house. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344517
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_047
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Luz Betsaida Orozco Pineda and her new born baby at their home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 17, 2016. Now 14, Luz became pregnant when she was 13 after being “stolen” according to the Zapotec Indigenous tradition. Considered a traditional kind of marriage – Luz is too young to wed legally – the custom dictates that the couple go to the young man’s house and announce their plans to marry. While the family waits, the couple go to a room together; he emerges later with a blood-stained handkerchief to prove his bride’s virginity. Luz, who started going out with the father of her baby when she was 10, lives with her in-laws in the 6 de noviembre neighbourhood on the outskirts of Juchitán in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Her baby was born on January 13, 2016. Despite following tradition, she speaks little Zapotec – the language of her husband and his family – she follows tradition, wearing a headscarf to protect her health as she is still observing the 40-days quarantine period after giving birth, during which she stays in the house. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344513
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_045
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    María José Guerra Santiago washes dishes at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 17, 2016. María José, 17, proudly wears a wedding ring – she got married in January, and is five-months pregnant. She looks forward to the respect she says being a married woman – a señora - and having a baby will bring her in the eyes of others. Unlike her husband, she used to love going dancing but now she lives with her in-laws in Juchitán in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. “I won’t be able to play like I did before,” she laments. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344526
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_044
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    María José Guerra Santiago washes dishes at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 17, 2016. María José, 17, proudly wears a wedding ring – she got married in January, and is five-months pregnant. She looks forward to the respect she says being a married woman – a señora - and having a baby will bring her in the eyes of others. Unlike her husband, she used to love going dancing but now she lives with her in-laws in Juchitán in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. “I won’t be able to play like I did before,” she laments. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344524
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_043
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Luz Betsaida Orozco Pineda and José Manuel Regalado López, her 17-year-old husband, with their new born baby at their home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 17, 2016. José Manuel gets up at 3 am to collect scrap and fish; their home is around 15 minutes from the beach. He speaks little Spanish. Now 14, Luz became pregnant when she was 13 after being “stolen” according to the Zapotec Indigenous tradition. Considered a traditional kind of marriage – Luz is too young to wed legally – the custom dictates that the couple go to the young man’s house and announce their plans to marry. While the family waits, the couple go to a room together; he emerges later with a blood-stained handkerchief to prove his bride’s virginity. Luz, who started going out with the father of her baby when she was 10, lives with her in-laws in the 6 de noviembre neighbourhood on the outskirts of Juchitán in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Her baby was born on January 13, 2016. Despite following tradition, she speaks little Zapotec – the language of her husband and his family – she follows tradition, wearing a headscarf to protect her health as she is still observing the 40-days quarantine period after giving birth, during which she stays in the house. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344519
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_041
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Luz Betsaida Orozco Pineda and José Manuel Regalado López, her 17-year-old husband, with their new born baby at their home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 17, 2016. José Manuel gets up at 3 am to collect scrap and fish; their home is around 15 minutes from the beach. He speaks little Spanish. Now 14, Luz became pregnant when she was 13 after being “stolen” according to the Zapotec Indigenous tradition. Considered a traditional kind of marriage – Luz is too young to wed legally – the custom dictates that the couple go to the young man’s house and announce their plans to marry. While the family waits, the couple go to a room together; he emerges later with a blood-stained handkerchief to prove his bride’s virginity. Luz, who started going out with the father of her baby when she was 10, lives with her in-laws in the 6 de noviembre neighbourhood on the outskirts of Juchitán in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Her baby was born on January 13, 2016. Despite following tradition, she speaks little Zapotec – the language of her husband and his family – she follows tradition, wearing a headscarf to protect her health as she is still observing the 40-days quarantine period after giving birth, during which she stays in the house. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344520
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_039
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Luz Betsaida Orozco Pineda and her new born baby at their home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 17, 2016. Now 14, Luz became pregnant when she was 13 after being “stolen” according to the Zapotec Indigenous tradition. Considered a traditional kind of marriage – Luz is too young to wed legally – the custom dictates that the couple go to the young man’s house and announce their plans to marry. While the family waits, the couple go to a room together; he emerges later with a blood-stained handkerchief to prove his bride’s virginity. Luz, who started going out with the father of her baby when she was 10, lives with her in-laws in the 6 de noviembre neighbourhood on the outskirts of Juchitán in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Her baby was born on January 13, 2016. Despite following tradition, she speaks little Zapotec – the language of her husband and his family – she follows tradition, wearing a headscarf to protect her health as she is still observing the 40-days quarantine period after giving birth, during which she stays in the house. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344506
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_036
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Luz Betsaida Orozco Pineda and her new born baby at their home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 17, 2016. Now 14, Luz became pregnant when she was 13 after being “stolen” according to the Zapotec Indigenous tradition. Considered a traditional kind of marriage – Luz is too young to wed legally – the custom dictates that the couple go to the young man’s house and announce their plans to marry. While the family waits, the couple go to a room together; he emerges later with a blood-stained handkerchief to prove his bride’s virginity. Luz, who started going out with the father of her baby when she was 10, lives with her in-laws in the 6 de noviembre neighbourhood on the outskirts of Juchitán in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Her baby was born on January 13, 2016. Despite following tradition, she speaks little Zapotec – the language of her husband and his family – she follows tradition, wearing a headscarf to protect her health as she is still observing the 40-days quarantine period after giving birth, during which she stays in the house. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344507
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_035
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Luz Betsaida Orozco Pineda at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 17, 2016. Now 14, Luz became pregnant when she was 13 after being “stolen” according to the Zapotec Indigenous tradition. Considered a traditional kind of marriage – Luz is too young to wed legally – the custom dictates that the couple go to the young man’s house and announce their plans to marry. While the family waits, the couple go to a room together; he emerges later with a blood-stained handkerchief to prove his bride’s virginity. Luz, who started going out with the father of her baby when she was 10, lives with her in-laws in the 6 de noviembre neighbourhood on the outskirts of Juchitán in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Her baby was born on January 13, 2016. Despite following tradition, she speaks little Zapotec – the language of her husband and his family – she follows tradition, wearing a headscarf to protect her health as she is still observing the 40-days quarantine period after giving birth, during which she stays in the house. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344510
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_034
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Luz Betsaida Orozco Pineda and José Manuel Regalado López, her 17-year-old husband, with their new born baby at their home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 17, 2016. José Manuel gets up at 3 am to collect scrap and fish; their home is around 15 minutes from the beach. He speaks little Spanish. Now 14, Luz became pregnant when she was 13 after being “stolen” according to the Zapotec Indigenous tradition. Considered a traditional kind of marriage – Luz is too young to wed legally – the custom dictates that the couple go to the young man’s house and announce their plans to marry. While the family waits, the couple go to a room together; he emerges later with a blood-stained handkerchief to prove his bride’s virginity. Luz, who started going out with the father of her baby when she was 10, lives with her in-laws in the 6 de noviembre neighbourhood on the outskirts of Juchitán in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Her baby was born on January 13, 2016. Despite following tradition, she speaks little Zapotec – the language of her husband and his family – she follows tradition, wearing a headscarf to protect her health as she is still observing the 40-days quarantine period after giving birth, during which she stays in the house. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344518
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_025
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Luz Betsaida Orozco Pineda stays at her home, during the 40-days quarantine period after giving birth, in Juchitán, Mexico on February 17, 2016. Now 14, Luz became pregnant when she was 13 after being “stolen” according to the Zapotec Indigenous tradition. Considered a traditional kind of marriage – Luz is too young to wed legally – the custom dictates that the couple go to the young man’s house and announce their plans to marry. While the family waits, the couple go to a room together; he emerges later with a blood-stained handkerchief to prove his bride’s virginity. Luz, who started going out with the father of her baby when she was 10, lives with her in-laws in the 6 de noviembre neighbourhood on the outskirts of Juchitán in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Her baby was born on January 13, 2016. Despite following tradition, she speaks little Zapotec – the language of her husband and his family – she follows tradition, wearing a headscarf to protect her health as she is still observing the 40-days quarantine period after giving birth, during which she stays in the house. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344511
    (c) Dukas

     

  • REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    DUK10054417_024
    REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
    Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 17, 2016.
    Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344528

    (c) Dukas

     

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