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  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Celebrities and campaigners to animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_R.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Celebrities and campaigners to animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_Q.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Celebrities and campaigners to animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_O.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Celebrities and campaigners to animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_M.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Brian May and campaigners at an animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_L.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Brian May and campaigners at an animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_J.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Brian May and campaigners at an animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_I.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Brian May and campaigners at an animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_H.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Brian May and campaigners at an animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_G.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Brian May and campaigners at an animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_F.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Campaigners speak as Brian May looks on at an animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_E.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Campaigners speak as Brian May looks on at an animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_D.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Campaigners speak as Brian May looks on at an animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_C.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Campaigners speak as Brian May looks on at an animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_B.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Campaigners speak as Brian May looks on at an animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_A.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Celebrities and campaigners to animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_P.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Celebrities and campaigners to animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_N.jpg
  • London, UK, 23rd April 2015. Brian May and campaigners at an animal welfare General Election drive. A day of action including a march on Parliament marks the launch of the ‘Votes for Animals’ campaign to highlight the importance of animal welfare issues in the General Election.  The aim of the campaign is to help inform the public on where their local candidates stand on the issue of animal welfare and to take this into consideration when voting. The initiative is spearheaded by ethical cosmetic company Lush, and backed by animal protection organisations League Against Cruel Sports, Animal Aid and Brian May's Common Decency organization.
    20150423_votes for animals_K.jpg
  • People gathering to hang out, listen to bands and other activities at the Blue Ribbon Village. Kids interracting with farmyard animals. Totally Thames takes place over the whole month in September, combining arts, cultural and river events presented by Thames Festival Trust throughout the 42-mile stretch of the River Thames in London, UK.
    20140914_thames festival animals_L.jpg
  • People gathering to hang out, listen to bands and other activities at the Blue Ribbon Village. Kids interracting with farmyard animals. Totally Thames takes place over the whole month in September, combining arts, cultural and river events presented by Thames Festival Trust throughout the 42-mile stretch of the River Thames in London, UK.
    20140914_thames festival animals_K.jpg
  • People gathering to hang out, listen to bands and other activities at the Blue Ribbon Village. Kids interracting with farmyard animals. Totally Thames takes place over the whole month in September, combining arts, cultural and river events presented by Thames Festival Trust throughout the 42-mile stretch of the River Thames in London, UK.
    20140914_thames festival animals_J.jpg
  • People gathering to hang out, listen to bands and other activities at the Blue Ribbon Village. Kids interracting with farmyard animals. Totally Thames takes place over the whole month in September, combining arts, cultural and river events presented by Thames Festival Trust throughout the 42-mile stretch of the River Thames in London, UK.
    20140914_thames festival animals_I.jpg
  • People gathering to hang out, listen to bands and other activities at the Blue Ribbon Village. Kids interracting with farmyard animals. Totally Thames takes place over the whole month in September, combining arts, cultural and river events presented by Thames Festival Trust throughout the 42-mile stretch of the River Thames in London, UK.
    20140914_thames festival animals_H.jpg
  • People gathering to hang out, listen to bands and other activities at the Blue Ribbon Village. Kids interracting with farmyard animals. Totally Thames takes place over the whole month in September, combining arts, cultural and river events presented by Thames Festival Trust throughout the 42-mile stretch of the River Thames in London, UK.
    20140914_thames festival animals_G.jpg
  • People gathering to hang out, listen to bands and other activities at the Blue Ribbon Village. Kids interracting with farmyard animals. Totally Thames takes place over the whole month in September, combining arts, cultural and river events presented by Thames Festival Trust throughout the 42-mile stretch of the River Thames in London, UK.
    20140914_thames festival animals_F.jpg
  • People gathering to hang out, listen to bands and other activities at the Blue Ribbon Village. Kids interracting with farmyard animals. Totally Thames takes place over the whole month in September, combining arts, cultural and river events presented by Thames Festival Trust throughout the 42-mile stretch of the River Thames in London, UK.
    20140914_thames festival animals_E.jpg
  • People gathering to hang out, listen to bands and other activities at the Blue Ribbon Village. Kids interracting with farmyard animals. Totally Thames takes place over the whole month in September, combining arts, cultural and river events presented by Thames Festival Trust throughout the 42-mile stretch of the River Thames in London, UK.
    20140914_thames festival animals_D.jpg
  • People gathering to hang out, listen to bands and other activities at the Blue Ribbon Village. Kids interracting with farmyard animals. Totally Thames takes place over the whole month in September, combining arts, cultural and river events presented by Thames Festival Trust throughout the 42-mile stretch of the River Thames in London, UK.
    20140914_thames festival animals_C.jpg
  • People gathering to hang out, listen to bands and other activities at the Blue Ribbon Village. Kids interracting with farmyard animals. Totally Thames takes place over the whole month in September, combining arts, cultural and river events presented by Thames Festival Trust throughout the 42-mile stretch of the River Thames in London, UK.
    20140914_thames festival animals_B.jpg
  • People gathering to hang out, listen to bands and other activities at the Blue Ribbon Village. Kids interracting with farmyard animals. Totally Thames takes place over the whole month in September, combining arts, cultural and river events presented by Thames Festival Trust throughout the 42-mile stretch of the River Thames in London, UK.
    20140914_thames festival animals_A.jpg
  • The animal welfare team examines Kato, a large sedated male orang-utan after sedating him in Nyaru Menteng Rehabilitation Centre, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 22nd May 2017. Kato will be taken by road and river to a release site in Bukit Baka Bukit Raya National Park. The centre houses around 450 rescued orangutans who have been displaced from their habitats by human activity. Many of them will be reintroduced into the wild, but some animals have illnesses or injuries that means they have to remain in the sanctuary indefinitely.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-8425.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 15th June 2013. Protesters gather to demonstrate against cruelty to animals in Britain's slaughterhouses. Calling for a slaughterhouse ban and to look at the term 'humane slaughter' in abattoirs, they recount stories of how animals are mistreated.
    20130615slaughterhouse demoN.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 15th June 2013. Protesters gather to demonstrate against cruelty to animals in Britain's slaughterhouses. Calling for a slaughterhouse ban and to look at the term 'humane slaughter' in abattoirs, they recount stories of how animals are mistreated.
    20130615slaughterhouse demoM.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 15th June 2013. Protesters gather to demonstrate against cruelty to animals in Britain's slaughterhouses. Calling for a slaughterhouse ban and to look at the term 'humane slaughter' in abattoirs, they recount stories of how animals are mistreated.
    20130615slaughterhouse demoL.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 15th June 2013. Protesters wrapped in cellophane labelled HUMAN MEAT and covered in fake blood, to demonstrate against cruelty to animals in Britain's slaughterhouses. Calling for a slaughterhouse ban and to look at the term 'humane slaughter' in abattoirs, they recount stories of how animals are mistreated.
    20130615slaughterhouse demoK.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 15th June 2013. Protesters wrapped in cellophane labelled HUMAN MEAT and covered in fake blood, to demonstrate against cruelty to animals in Britain's slaughterhouses. Calling for a slaughterhouse ban and to look at the term 'humane slaughter' in abattoirs, they recount stories of how animals are mistreated.
    20130615slaughterhouse demoJ.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 15th June 2013. Protesters wrapped in cellophane labelled HUMAN MEAT and covered in fake blood, to demonstrate against cruelty to animals in Britain's slaughterhouses. Calling for a slaughterhouse ban and to look at the term 'humane slaughter' in abattoirs, they recount stories of how animals are mistreated.
    20130615slaughterhouse demoI.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 15th June 2013. Protesters wrapped in cellophane labelled HUMAN MEAT and covered in fake blood, to demonstrate against cruelty to animals in Britain's slaughterhouses. Calling for a slaughterhouse ban and to look at the term 'humane slaughter' in abattoirs, they recount stories of how animals are mistreated.
    20130615slaughterhouse demoH.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 15th June 2013. Protesters wrapped in cellophane labelled HUMAN MEAT and covered in fake blood, to demonstrate against cruelty to animals in Britain's slaughterhouses. Calling for a slaughterhouse ban and to look at the term 'humane slaughter' in abattoirs, they recount stories of how animals are mistreated.
    20130615slaughterhouse demoG.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 15th June 2013. Protesters wrapped in cellophane labelled HUMAN MEAT and covered in fake blood, to demonstrate against cruelty to animals in Britain's slaughterhouses. Calling for a slaughterhouse ban and to look at the term 'humane slaughter' in abattoirs, they recount stories of how animals are mistreated.
    20130615slaughterhouse demoF.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 15th June 2013. Protesters gather to demonstrate against cruelty to animals in Britain's slaughterhouses. Calling for a slaughterhouse ban and to look at the term 'humane slaughter' in abattoirs, they recount stories of how animals are mistreated.
    20130615slaughterhouse demoE.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 15th June 2013. Protesters gather to demonstrate against cruelty to animals in Britain's slaughterhouses. Calling for a slaughterhouse ban and to look at the term 'humane slaughter' in abattoirs, they recount stories of how animals are mistreated.
    20130615slaughterhouse demoD.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 15th June 2013. Protesters wrapped in cellophane labelled HUMAN MEAT and covered in fake blood, to demonstrate against cruelty to animals in Britain's slaughterhouses. Calling for a slaughterhouse ban and to look at the term 'humane slaughter' in abattoirs, they recount stories of how animals are mistreated.
    20130615slaughterhouse demoC.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 15th June 2013. Protesters gather to demonstrate against cruelty to animals in Britain's slaughterhouses. Calling for a slaughterhouse ban and to look at the term 'humane slaughter' in abattoirs, they recount stories of how animals are mistreated.
    20130615slaughterhouse demoB.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 15th June 2013. Protesters wrapped in cellophane labelled HUMAN MEAT and covered in fake blood, to demonstrate against cruelty to animals in Britain's slaughterhouses. Calling for a slaughterhouse ban and to look at the term 'humane slaughter' in abattoirs, they recount stories of how animals are mistreated.
    20130615slaughterhouse demoA.jpg
  • A sedated orang-utan is carried by wheel barrow before being transported to a pre-release site, in Nyaru Menteng Rehabilitation Centre, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 22nd May 2017. The centre houses around 450 rescued orangutans who have been displaced from their habitats by human activity. After extensive rehabilitation and preparation, many of them will be reintroduced into the wild, but some animals have illnesses or injuries that means they have to remain in the sanctuary indefinitely.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-9414_1.jpg
  • Technicians carry Kato, a large male orang-utan from his cage after sedating him in Nyaru Menteng Rehabilitation Centre, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 22nd May 2017. Kato will be taken by road and river to a release site in Bukit Baka Bukit Raya National Park. The centre houses around 450 rescued orangutans who have been displaced from their habitats by human activity. Many of them will be reintroduced into the wild, but some animals have illnesses or injuries that means they have to remain in the sanctuary indefinitely.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-8402.jpg
  • An adult orang-utan climbs a tree on Salat Island pre-release site, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation BOSF, in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 27th May 2017. In this last stage of rehabilitation, the animals are observed as they learn how to forage for their own food and live independently. The island was established in partnership between BOSF and PT SSMS, a local palm oil company, who are both members of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-9819.jpg
  • An adult orang-utan sits in a tree on Salat Island pre-release site, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation BOSF, in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 27th May 2017. In this last stage of rehabilitation, the animals are observed as they learn how to forage for their own food and live independently. The island was established in partnership between BOSF and PT SSMS, a local palm oil company, who are both members of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-9840.jpg
  • Mae Sumarnae talks to colleagues as they prepare to leave in convoy with 6 young adult orang-utans from Nyaru Menteng Rehabilitation Centre, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation BOSF, in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 27th May 2017. They will be taken to Salat Island pre-release site, where they will undergo the last stage of rehabilitation, during which the animals are observed as they learn how to forage for their own food and live independently. The island was established in partnership between BOSF and PT SSMS, a local palm oil company, who are both members of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-9478.jpg
  • An adult orang-utan sits in a tree on Salat Island pre-release site, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation BOSF, in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 27th May 2017. In this last stage of rehabilitation, the animals are observed as they learn how to forage for their own food and live independently. The island was established in partnership between BOSF and PT SSMS, a local palm oil company, who are both members of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-9702.jpg
  • A young adult orang-utan sits in a tree on Salat Island pre-release site, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation BOSF, in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 27th May 2017. In this last stage of rehabilitation, the animals are observed as they learn how to forage for their own food and live independently. The island was established in partnership between BOSF and PT SSMS, a local palm oil company, who are both members of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-9616.jpg
  • An orang-utan clings to the bars of its cage in Nyaru Menteng Rehabilitation Centre, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 22nd May 2017. The centre houses around 450 rescued orangutans who have been displaced from their habitats by human activity. After extensive rehabilitation and preparation, many of them will be reintroduced into the wild, but some animals have illnesses or injuries that means they have to remain in the sanctuary indefinitely.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-9364.jpg
  • Pick-up trucks carying six orang-utans to be released into the wild arrive in Tumbang Tundu village in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 22nd May 2017. The animals are being taken by road and river from Nyaru Menteng Rehabilitation Centre, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, to a release site in Bukit Baka Bukit Raya National Park. Their health is checked by vets every two hours, and they are kept sedated for the whole journey.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-8487.jpg
  • A large male orang-utan clings to the bars of his cage in Nyaru Menteng Rehabilitation Centre, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 22nd May 2017. The centre houses around 450 rescued orangutans who have been displaced from their habitats by human activity. After extensive rehabilitation and preparation, many of them will be reintroduced into the wild, but some animals have illnesses or injuries that means they have to remain in the sanctuary indefinitely.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-8134.jpg
  • Kato, a large male orang-utan sits in quarantine cage awaiting his imminent reintroduction to the wild, in Nyaru Menteng Rehabilitation Centre, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 22nd May 2017. Kato was rescued in 2003 after being kept illegally as a pet. He has undergone a long rehabiliation process that includes living on a pre-release island where orang-utans learn how to survive in the wild. The centre houses around 450 rescued orangutans who have been displaced from their habitats by human activity. Many of them will be reintroduced into the wild, but some animals have illnesses or injuries that means they have to remain in the sanctuary indefinitely.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-8215.jpg
  • Adult orang-utans climb in trees on Salat Island pre-release site, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation BOSF, in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 27th May 2017. In this last stage of rehabilitation, the animals are observed as they learn how to forage for their own food and live independently. The island was established in partnership between BOSF and PT SSMS, a local palm oil company, who are both members of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-9905.jpg
  • An adult orang-utan climbs through the trees on Salat Island pre-release site, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation BOSF, in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 27th May 2017. In this last stage of rehabilitation, the animals are observed as they learn how to forage for their own food and live independently. The island was established in partnership between BOSF and PT SSMS, a local palm oil company, who are both members of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-9703.jpg
  • Pick-up trucks carying six orang-utans to be released into the wild are carried across a river by a ferry boat in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 22nd May 2017. The animals are being taken by road and river from Nyaru Menteng Rehabilitation Centre, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, to a release site in Bukit Baka Bukit Raya National Park. Their health is checked by vets every two hours, and they are kept sedated for the whole journey.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-8438.jpg
  • A veterinarian holds the hand of an orang-utan in a cage in Nyaru Menteng Rehabilitation Centre, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 22nd May 2017. The centre houses around 450 rescued orangutans who have been displaced from their habitats by human activity. After extensive rehabilitation and preparation, many of them will be reintroduced into the wild, but some animals have illnesses or injuries that means they have to remain in the sanctuary indefinitely.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-8173.jpg
  • Staff feed fruit to orang-utans in cages in Nyaru Menteng Rehabilitation Centre, run by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, in Central Kalimantan, Borneo, Indonesia on 22nd May 2017. The centre houses around 450 rescued orangutans who have been displaced from their habitats by human activity. Many of them will be reintroduced into the wild, but some animals have illnesses or injuries that means they have to remain in the sanctuary indefinitely.
    Orangutan_Release_JPerugia-8186.jpg
  • PETA supporters, including one wearing a costume depicting a beaker of water in which a mouse is struggling to stay afloat, protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • A PETA supporter protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • A new billboard advertisement produced by PETA UK, a UK-based charity dedicated to establishing and protecting the rights of all animals, is pictured on 17th November 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The advertisement, which features an image of Max the Shelter Dog, is intended to highlight the issue of celebrities and influencers purchasing ‘pedigree’ and ‘designer’ puppies from breeders at a time when thousands of dogs are waiting to be adopted at local shelters and rescue groups, including many acquired during the first coronavirus lockdown and then abandoned.
    MK-20201117-London-PETA-Max-the-shel...jpg
  • PETA supporters, including one wearing a costume depicting a beaker of water in which a mouse is struggling to stay afloat, protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • A PETA supporter wearing a costume depicting a beaker of water in which a mouse is struggling to stay afloat protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • A PETA supporter protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • A PETA supporter protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • A PETA supporter protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • PETA supporters protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • PETA supporters protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • PETA supporters protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • A PETA supporter protests outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • PETA supporters, including one wearing a costume depicting a beaker of water in which a mouse is struggling to stay afloat, protest outside Eli Lilly’s R&D centre to call on the US pharmaceutical company to ban the forced swim test on 29 October 2020 in Bracknell, United Kingdom. Animal rights charity PETA UK contends that the forced swim test during which small animals are dosed with an anti-depressant drug, placed in inescapable beakers filled with water and forced to swim to keep from drowning has been widely discredited and that other pharmaceutical companies including Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Bayer, Roche and AstraZeneca have banned it.
    MK-20201029-PETA-forced-swim-test-El...jpg
  • Villagers wash their animals in volcanic crater, Lake Hora at Debre Zeit, Ethiopia
    MAA-10095011_1.jpg
  • Animals kept in appalling conditions at this snake farm on Khlong Bangkok Yai canal. Basing the ethos of the farm on snake conservation did not seem appropriate given the conditions that the snakes and other much larger anomals were kept. In unclean water, cages and tanks, with little vegatation and looking rarely cleaned, the animals had a palour of illness, exhaustion and in cases, madness. Snakes during the snake show were repeatedly provoked into attack by the snake handlers slapping, pinching and throwing the snakes.
    2006-11-22_Snake Farm_A_1.jpg
  • Farmers show off their prize winning heifer. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ?I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_4253_1.jpg
  • Anti animal testing street art graffiti at London Bridge on 27th November 2019 in London, England, United Kingdom. The mural suggests that each year 100 million animals are tortured and killed, tested upon for various industries.
    20191127_animal testing_001.jpg
  • Animal rights demonstrator holds up a placard suggesting we should live with animals not kill them for food, protests outside Burger King in central London, United Kingdom.
    20180721_animal rights_001.jpg
  • Imogen Sutcliffe with saddle back. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_4294_1.jpg
  • Jimmy Fitton stewards in the Heifer class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_4255_1.jpg
  • Martin Wall shows off his prize winning heifer. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ?I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_4236_1.jpg
  • Anna with a seven month old Holstein Heifer called Wiske Manor Outside Pansy. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_4215_1.jpg
  • Anna grooming a seven month old Holstein Heifer called Wiske Manor Outside Pansy..The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_4186_1.jpg
  • A young girl shows in the heifer class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ?I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_4154_1.jpg
  • A young girl preparing for the heifer class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ?I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_4146_1.jpg
  • A champion Bull. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3979_1.jpg
  • Showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3966_1.jpg
  • Prize winning bulls are prepared for the next class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3907_1.jpg
  • A young girl grooms one of her pigs prior to showing. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3844_1.jpg
  • Paul Harrison with a South Devon bull. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3817_1.jpg
  • Paul Harrison with a South Devon bull. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3810_1.jpg
  • Calumn Smith shows off his bull.  The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3790_1.jpg
  • Eileen Hallifield and her husband, Richard, own Dunstall Hector, a two-year-old Longhorn bull. He has had conditioner added to the last lot of water, to keep his coat from drying out. 'They come to like the grooming because it makes their coat so nice and clean,' Hallifield says. 'It would feel nice, wouldn't it? They are like one of the family, although they are not a pet like a cat or a dog because eventually they have to go,' Hallifield adds. Dunstall Hector has since been sold for breeding, but the Hallifields  will have a framed portrait of him in their living-room. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3333_1.jpg
  • Showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3102_1.jpg
  • Preparation for showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3066_1.jpg
  • Preparation for showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3029_1.jpg
  • Preparation for showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3007_1.jpg
  • Preparation for showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3003_1.jpg
  • Showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_2991_1.jpg
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