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The task facing the de-miners is a complex one. In wars around the world, mine clearing is often part of the post-war cleanup. But the conflict between the Senegalese government and the MFDC – while far from its peak in the 80s and 90s – still limps on 40 years later. Children go to school, farmers tend their fields, tourists zip to the beaches of Cap Skirring – but some 2 square kilometers  (1.6 square miles) of land, pockmarked among Ziguinchor’s 7,352 square kilometres (4,568sq miles), remain at risk of “contamination,” in de-mining parlance.

And the rebels still have a few holdouts in the forest – as Fatou Diaw can attest. Nine years ago, she and a group of her colleagues were kidnapped on a de-mining mission. After government negotiations, she and the other women were released a month later. It took another month for the rest of her colleagues to be freed.

Fully de-mining all of the Casamance will likely take a total, or near total, defeat of the fractured rebel groups who remain – and who, despite their diminished capacity for war and stature among a conflict-wary populace, continue to hold out in the margins.

Yet despite the danger, Diaw continues to suit up for missions like those in Basséré.“I have a cousin who was a mine victim – and he died,” she says. “It’s a risky job … but it’s a career that I like.”