1.2 Millions Lagosians Living With HIV- Daily Mail UK

A series of photographs taken in the slums of Lagos shows the faces of sex workers living in squalid conditions.
And the images have a tragic undercurrent, with tens of thousands of people in the sex trade diagnosed with HIV each year, and millions dying from AIDS across Nigeria.
A survey conducted last year has also highlighted that attitudes towards condom use is helping the spread of the condition, and research suggests that nearly a quarter of Nigerian sex workers have HIV.
A study in 2013 found that nearly a quarter of Nigerian sex workers have HIV
A study in 2013 found that nearly a quarter of Nigerian sex workers have HIV
The pictures were taken in a Lagos slum, where girls as young as 14 entertain up to five clients per day
The pictures were taken in a Lagos slum, where girls as young as 14 entertain up to five clients per day
The pictures were taken by photographer Ton Koene in Lagos, Nigeria's largest city
The pictures were taken by photographer Ton Koene in Lagos, Nigeria's largest city
A woman stands next to an advert encouraging condom use, in a country where researchers found more needs to be done to change attitudes toward safe sex
A woman stands next to an advert encouraging condom use, in a country where researchers found more needs to be done to change attitudes toward safe sex
The pictures were taken by photographer Ton Koeneon in a Lagos slum named Badia. 
There are currently an estimated 1.2million people in Lagos, Nigeria's largest city, living with HIV.
He said his driver had quipped: 'If you arrive by car, you can smell the HIV virus outside.'
A man speaks to a woman in the Badia slum in Lagos, where hundreds of women work in the sex trade in order to survive
A man speaks to a woman in the Badia slum in Lagos, where hundreds of women work in the sex trade in order to survive
Studies have raised concerns over attitudes toward condom use in Nigeria
Studies have raised concerns over attitudes toward condom use in Nigeria
A woman in the Badia slum in Lagos, where hundreds of women work in the sex trade in order to make ends meet
A woman in the Badia slum in Lagos, where hundreds of women work in the sex trade in order to make ends meet
Sex workers often entertain up to five clients per day in the impoverished slums in Lagos
Sex workers often entertain up to five clients per day in the impoverished slums in Lagos