Tifariti - Gallery

Gallery

  • Outskirts of Tifariti

  • Moroccan Mirage F-1 attack aircraft shot down by SPLA forces during the Western Sahara War

  • Moroccan Northrop F-5 fighter aircraft shot down by SPLA guerrillas near Tifariti, during the 1991 Tifariti offensive

  • SPLA troops gathering in Tifariti during the 32nd anniversary of the Polisario Front (21 May 2005)

  • Sahrawi children from the Sahrawi refugee camps in Tifariti, during the "Summer University" (17 August 2009)

  • Eugenio Morales Agacino (on the right, Spanish entomologist and naturalist) and his aide, during a monitoring expedition on the desert locust. Tifariti, May 1942

  • Landmine Action signal warning that Western Sahara is one of the world's most contaminated places by the presence of landmines and UXOs. Tifariti, 13 August 2011

  • Sahrawi artist Mohamed Mouloud Yeslem with his work "Um Dreiga" at ARTifariti 2010

  • Entrance of the Navarra Hospital

  • Map of Western Sahara on a hill near Tifariti, 2009

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Famous quotes containing the word gallery:

    It doesn’t matter that your painting is small. Kopecks are also small, but when a lot are put together they make a ruble. Each painting displayed in a gallery and each good book that makes it into a library, no matter how small they may be, serves a great cause: accretion of the national wealth.
    Anton Pavlovich Chekhov (1860–1904)

    To a person uninstructed in natural history, his country or sea-side stroll is a walk through a gallery filled with wonderful works of art, nine-tenths of which have their faces turned to the wall. Teach him something of natural history, and you place in his hands a catalogue of those which are worth turning round.
    Thomas Henry Huxley (1825–95)

    I should like to have seen a gallery of coronation beauties, at Westminster Abbey, confronted for a moment by this band of Island girls; their stiffness, formality, and affectation contrasted with the artless vivacity and unconcealed natural graces of these savage maidens. It would be the Venus de’ Medici placed beside a milliner’s doll.
    Herman Melville (1819–1891)