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Papua New Guinea is home to one of the world's highest incidence of gender-based violence. Young, low-income women who work at night selling betel nuts are among the most vulnerable. Time now for ...
They have children at home. Selling betel nut — an addictive, natural chew — to passersby in mountain towns of Papua New Guinea is a good way to earn a living. But the extra income sometimes ...
On a tree-lined street in Papua New Guinea's capital, Ruth sits at a small table covered in rows of betel nuts and mustard sticks for sale. In Port Moresby, there is no shortage of buyers for the ...
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Papua New Guinea, where roughly half the population of 9 million people chews betel nut, has the world’s highest incidence of oral cancer, according to estimates. 4 In recent years, oral cancer ...
In particular, Papua New Guinea was badly hit, with 84 per cent of oral cancer diagnoses linked to betel nuts, according to ...
its streets full of bearded men from the Papua New Guinea highlands chewing and spitting betel nut, overlaid with the noise and fumes of revving minibuses, trucks and four-wheel drives.
Just before Pope Francis’ recent visit to Papua New Guinea, roadside stalls selling betel nut, a mild local intoxicant, were shut down. While this isn’t good for the many small stall holders ...