The wife of a dairy farmer prepares lunch in her home in Tuoweiziran village, 120km north of Hohhot, the capital of the nothern Inner Mongolia region of China on October 8, 2008. The 200 farmers in this remote village say their standard of living has improved considerably after they bought cows from which they sell the milk to Yili, a huge dairy company but the tainted milk scandal that emerged in China last month when it was revealed that melamine, an industrial chemical normally used to make plastic, had been found in milk products, has cast a dark cloud over their livelihood.
A dairy farmer carries his young son in Tuoweiziran village, 120km north of Hohhot, the capital of the nothern Inner Mongolia region of China on October 8, 2008. The 200 farmers in this remote village say their standard of living has improved considerably after they bought cows from which they sell the milk to Yili, a huge dairy company but the tainted milk scandal that emerged in China last month when it was revealed that melamine, an industrial chemical normally used to make plastic, had been found in milk products, has cast a dark cloud over their livelihood.
"China-food-safety-child-farmer" by Marianne Barriaux Cows roam in the yard of a dairy farmers home in Tuoweiziran village, 120km north of Hohhot, the capital of the nothern Inner Mongolia region of China on October 8, 2008. The 200 farmers in this remote village say their standard of living has improved considerably after they bought cows from which they sell the milk to Yili, a huge dairy company but the tainted milk scandal that emerged in China last month when it was revealed that melamine, an industrial chemical normally used to make plastic, had been found in milk products, has cast a dark cloud over their livelihood.
China-food-safety-child-farmer" by Marianne Barriaux The wife of a dairy farmer prepares lunch in her home in Tuoweiziran village, 120km north of Hohhot, the capital of the nothern Inner Mongolia region of China on October 8, 2008. The 200 farmers in this remote village say their standard of living has improved considerably after they bought cows from which they sell the milk to Yili, a huge dairy company but the tainted milk scandal that emerged in China last month when it was revealed that melamine, an industrial chemical normally used to make plastic, had been found in milk products, has cast a dark cloud over their livelihood.
"China-food-safety-child-farmer" by Marianne Barriaux Cows roam in the yard of a dairy farmers home in Tuoweiziran village, 120km north of Hohhot, the capital of the nothern Inner Mongolia region of China on October 8, 2008. The 200 farmers in this remote village say their standard of living has improved considerably after they bought cows from which they sell the milk to Yili, a huge dairy company but the tainted milk scandal that emerged in China last month when it was revealed that melamine, an industrial chemical normally used to make plastic, had been found in milk products, has cast a dark cloud over their livelihood.
The baby son of a dairy farmer walks in Tuoweiziran village, 120km north of Hohhot, the capital of the nothern Inner Mongolia region of China on October 8, 2008. The 200 farmers in this remote village say their standard of living has improved considerably after they bought cows from which they sell the milk to Yili, a huge dairy company but the tainted milk scandal that emerged in China last month when it was revealed that melamine, an industrial chemical normally used to make plastic, had been found in milk products, has cast a dark cloud over their livelihood.
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