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  • A young woman makes a last-minute evening dash across Piccadilly, in front of oncoming buses and other traffic, on 3rd February 2021, in London, England.
    piccadilly_evening01-03-02-2021.jpg
  • Londoners have their umbrellas turned inside out or dash through seasonal rain showers and wind gusts in central London. In the foreground, a businessman runs into a strong wind that has brought a brief spell of bad weather into the capital's streets, catching out those with fragile brolleys or those without all-weather layers. The scene is in Cannon Street in the heart of London's financial centre and oldest historical part of the former Roman walled city dating from the first century.
    rain_city02-18-04-2013.jpg
  • Schoolchildren enjoy dashing through a London street during a brief but intense rain shower. As rain drops bounce off the pavement, the kids run to find shelter during their daytrip to the capital. With a mixture of delight at the adventure and horror of getting seriously wet, the class of young people of many ages have hoodies up to save their hair and faces. It is a days after the funeral of Margaret Thatcher and forklifts are still in the background to remove heavy security gates.
    group_rain02-18-04-2013_1.jpg
  • Ignoring a red pedestrian light, a schoolboy dashes out into commuter traffic at dawn on a foggy morning in south London. Despite the dangers of negotiating a busy road, the lad runs off the pavement and into the path of the oncoming cars. It is dawn at around 8.45 on this winter morning, a dark and miserable time of day in this south London suburb from where Londoners start their journeys north into the City. Cars and trucks wait for the lights to change, their headlights shining in the dispersing fog on Denmark Hill.
    foggy_commuters08-11-12-2013_1.jpg
  • With most Londoners still working at home, a solitary pedestrian dashes out to cross the road where a yellow grid box junction remains empty during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 22 February 2021, in London, England.
    bus_journey02-22-02-2021.jpg
  • Police officers on duty including  Islamiedin second Lieutenant and Abdullah second Lieutenant. They are not permitted to talk to the press. <br />
<br />
One of the main problems for the police force, is overcoming corruption. Just before this photograph was taken a man pulled over and handed six rolls of toilet paper to the commander. The police hadn’t been paid for two months, so from the very smallest amounts to much larger sums, corruption is a way of getting by.<br />
<br />
 Experienced fixer, Zia Haidary elaborates: “If he had not been paid for two months, why is he still doing his job? He was fooling around, doing nothing then stopping people and cashing in on the bribes. My neighbour was arrested, he is a drug dealer. The police found 6kg of heroin and an AK47 in his house. The next day he is out of police custody -  How? It is corrupt.  The police here are uneducated boys who cannot find work. If you ask them to write their name, they can’t do it –they’re just really good at shooting.”
    afghan_04_1.jpg
  • A man struggles through sudden heavy rain in Trafalgar Square, on 13th August 2018, in London, England.
    trafalgar_square-09-13-08-2018.jpg
  • City of London office workers dodge the rain under umbrellas in a darkening street, on 22nd March 1993, in London, England.
    rain_people-22-03-1993.jpg
  • City workers cross Leadenhall in the City of London, the capitals financial district aka the Square Mile, on 10th July 2019, in London England.
    city_people-17-10-07-2019.jpg
  • Police officers on duty including Commander Salah Mohamed, Islamiedin second Lieutenant and Abdullah second Lieutenant. They are not permitted to talk to the press. <br />
<br />
One of the main problems for the police force, is overcoming corruption. Just before this photograph was taken a man pulled over and handed six rolls of toilet paper to the commander. The police hadn’t been paid for two months, so from the very smallest amounts to much larger sums, corruption is a way of getting by.<br />
<br />
Experienced fixer, Zia Haidary elaborates: “If he had not been paid for two months, why is he still doing his job? He was fooling around, doing nothing then stopping people and cashing in on the bribes. My neighbour was arrested, he is a drug dealer. The police found 6kg of heroin and an AK47 in his house. The next day he is out of police custody -  How? It is corrupt.  The police here are uneducated boys who cannot find work. If you ask them to write their name, they can’t do it –they’re just really good at shooting.”
    afghan_03_1.jpg
  • On a night out with friends, a group of five ladies are queuing for screen 2 in a Croydon cinema, South  London to see a Bollywood romantic film. On a poster behind, a giant movie hero's face looks towards the viewer with a hand raised in a salute. The man is of a dashing, handsome character  whose dark skin looks like a tanned European person. The women are in good spirits before their favourite film and gather together in the cinema's foyer in expectation. One lady is dressed in a long, smart dress and is staring with wide open eyes. She has a large handbag over the left shoulder and her long hair is spilling down her back.<br />
<br />
.
    london_asians01-30-08-2007.jpg
  • 13 year-old Adam leader celebrates his Bar Mitzvah by holding a lavish party in Borehamwood in north London, England. Paid for by his parents, the celebration took place in a hotel off the A1 road and here Adam can be seen surrounded like a celebrity by a gaggle of teenage girl friends, one of whom is dressed in a thin-strapped dress and pendant, giggling at a joke and all enjoying the occasion. Adam looks dashing in a rented dinner jacket complete with bow-tie. He is fresh-faced and clean-cut, cutting a handsome figure much-admired by his female friends.
    bar_mitvah01_1.jpg
  • Dancing in front of Shepard Fairey Obey posters in the Hell arena, Shangri La field, Glastonbury Festival 2016. The Glastonbury Festival is the largest greenfield festival in the world, and is now attended by around 175,000 people. Its a five-day music festival that takes place near Pilton, Somerset, United Kingdom. In addition to contemporary music, the festival hosts dance, comedy, theatre, circus, cabaret, and other arts. Held at Worthy Farm in Pilton, leading pop and rock artists have headlined, alongside thousands of others appearing on smaller stages and performance areas.
    _F3A4703_1.jpg
  • Dancing in front of Shepard Fairey Obey posters in the Hell arena, Shangri La field, Glastonbury Festival 2016. The Glastonbury Festival is the largest greenfield festival in the world, and is now attended by around 175,000 people. Its a five-day music festival that takes place near Pilton, Somerset, United Kingdom. In addition to contemporary music, the festival hosts dance, comedy, theatre, circus, cabaret, and other arts. Held at Worthy Farm in Pilton, leading pop and rock artists have headlined, alongside thousands of others appearing on smaller stages and performance areas.
    _F3A4701_1.jpg
  • A puppy sits next to a statue of Mao Zedong at the home of a "Red" memorabilia collector and manufacturer, near Mao's birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan099.jpg
  • Solar panels not yet installed and calor gas. Reclaim the Power camp is set up in a field near Balcombe. The site is squatted but so far nor the owner nor police has made any moves to stop the camp from setting up. It is organised by the environmental group No Dash for Gas and the movement is protesting against the company Cuadrilla's fracking testing near Balcombe and have come to Balcombe to lend its support to the local protests against the drilling for gas.
    IMG_6819_1_1.jpg
  • A young skateboarder makes a dash across Fenchurch Street where an electric rental Freebike stands on the pavement in reflected light, in the City of London, the capitals financial district, on 20th July 2020, in London, England.
    lime_bike01-20-07-2020.jpg
  • Women office workers dash through a City of London street, the heart of the capital's financial district. Carrying an armful of paper files and folders, clasped in their arms that make their way across the city en route to a meeting with associates. Their education and careers have taken them to positions of influence and success, still hard to do in 90s Britain.
    city_people03-20-03-1993_1.jpg
  • A man rides past unfinished statues of Mao Zedong at the workshop of a "Red" memorabilia collector and manufacturer, near Mao's birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009. The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan131.jpg
  • A workers looks up at a statue of Mao Zedong at the workshop of a "Red" memorabilia collector and manufacturer, near Mao's birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The workers were once electricians. The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan122.jpg
  • Workers move a statue of Mao Zedong at the workshop of a "Red" memorabilia collector and manufacturer, near Mao's birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The workers were once electricians. The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan120.jpg
  • Workers craft a statue of Mao Zedong out of resin at the workshop of a "Red" memorabilia collector and manufacturer, near Mao's birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The workers were once electricians.The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan108.jpg
  • Mao statues and souvenirs stands in the home of a "Red" memorabilia collector and manufacturer near the birthplace of Mao Zedong, in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan094.jpg
  • Mao statues and souvenirs stands in the home of a "Red" memorabilia collector and manufacturer near the birthplace of Mao Zedong, in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan092.jpg
  • Visitors offer a flower reef to a statue of Mao Zedong at the Statue Square near Mao's birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan075.jpg
  • Visitors kowtow to a statue of Mao Zedong at the Statue Square near Mao's birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan070.jpg
  • Visitors at the Statue Square near Mao's birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan068.jpg
  • Tang Ruiren, founder of Mao's Family Restaurant chain, shows off some Mao souvenirs in one of her restaurants near the birthplace of Mao Zedong, in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan045.jpg
  • Visitors at the Statue Square near Mao's birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan050.jpg
  • Tang Ruiren, founder of Mao's Family Restaurant chain, shows off some Mao souvenirs in one of her restaurants near the birthplace of Mao Zedong, in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan048.jpg
  • Mao souvenirs in one of Tang Ruiren's Mao Family   Restaurants near the birthplace of Mao Zedong, in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan042.jpg
  • Mao souvenirs in one of Tang Ruiren's Mao Family  Restaurants near the birthplace of Mao Zedong, in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan040.jpg
  • Visitors outside of  Mao's birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan024.jpg
  • A stall owner stands next to Mao memorabilia on sale outside of  Mao's birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan022.jpg
  • An elderly woman touches a door ornament for supposed good fortune at Mao Zedong's former home and birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan017.jpg
  • Mao memorabilia on sale outside of  Mao's birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan020.jpg
  • Visitors walk past a picture of Mao Zeming, Mao Zedong's younger brother, in Zeming's bedroom at their former home and birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan014.jpg
  • A view of Mao Zedong's former home and birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan010.jpg
  • A picture of Mao Zeming, Mao Zedong's younger brother, hangs in Zeming's bedroom at their former home and birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan013.jpg
  • Visitors walk through Mao Zedong's bedroom at his former home and birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan007.jpg
  • A picture of Mao Zedong and other Chinese Communist Party leaders hang on the Chairman's former bedroom at his home and birthplace in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds to conquer China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan006.jpg
  • Danny Chivers from No Dash for Gas speaks to the crowd outside the gates to the Cuadrilla fracking site. Thousands turned out for a march of solidarity against fracking in Balcombe. The village Balcombe in Sussex is the  centre of fracking by the company Cuadrilla. The march saw anti-fracking movements from the Lancashire and the North, Wales and other communities around the UK under threat of gas and oil exploration by fracking.
    IMG_7448_1_1.jpg
  • Reclaim the Power camp is set up in a field near Balcombe. The site is squatted but so far nor the owner nor police has made any moves to stop the camp from setting up. It is organised by the environmental group No Dash for Gas and the movement is protesting against the company Cuadrilla's fracking testing near Balcombe and have come to Balcombe to lend its support to the local protests against the drilling for gas.
    IMG_6823_1_1.jpg
  • A small poster in a hedge. Reclaim the Power camp is set up in a field near Balcombe. The site is squatted but so far nor the owner nor police has made any moves to stop the camp from setting up. It is organised by the environmental group No Dash for Gas and the movement is protesting against the company Cuadrilla's fracking testing near Balcombe and have come to Balcombe to lend its support to the local protests against the drilling for gas.
    IMG_6855_1_1.jpg
  • Reclaim the Power camp is set up in a field near Balcombe. The site is squatted but so far nor the owner nor police has made any moves to stop the camp from setting up. It is organised by the environmental group No Dash for Gas and the movement is protesting against the company Cuadrilla's fracking testing near Balcombe and have come to Balcombe to lend its support to the local protests against the drilling for gas.
    IMG_6793_1_1.jpg
  • Dame Vivienne Westwood gives her oppinion on fracking and environmental issues. Reclaim the Power camp is set up in a field near Balcombe. The site is squatted but so far nor the owner nor police has made any moves to stop the camp from setting up. It is organised by the environmental group No Dash for Gas and the movement is protesting against the company Cuadrilla's fracking testing near Balcombe and have come to Balcombe to len its support to the local protests against the drilling for gas.
    IMG_6776_1_1.jpg
  • Reclaim the Power camp is set up in a field near Balcombe. The site is squatted but so far nor the owner nor police has made any moves to stop the camp from setting up. It is organised by the environmental group No Dash for Gas and the movement is protesting against the company Cuadrilla's fracking testing near Balcombe and have come to Balcombe to len its support to the local protests against the drilling for gas.
    IMG_6726_1_1.jpg
  • A yurt goes up to make room for various work shops.  Reclaim the Power camp is set up in a field near Balcombe. The site is squatted but so far nor the owner nor police has made any moves to stop the camp from setting up. It is organised by the environmental group No Dash for Gas and the movement is protesting against the company Cuadrilla's fracking testing near Balcombe and have come to Balcombe to lend its support to the local protests against the drilling for gas.
    IMG_6719_1_1.jpg
  • A pre-fab compost toilet is build to accomodate 100s of activists. Reclaim the Power camp is set up in a field near Balcombe. The site is squatted but so far nor the owner nor police has made any moves to stop the camp from setting up. It is organised by the environmental group No Dash for Gas and the movement is protesting against the company Cuadrilla's fracking testing near Balcombe and have come to Balcombe to lend its support to the local protests against the drilling for gas.
    IMG_6683_1_1.jpg
  • The farmer rentimng and running the field lives in the red house behind the camp.Reclaim the Power camp is set up in a field near Balcombe. The site is squatted but so far nor the owner nor police has made any moves to stop the camp from setting up. It is organised by the environmental group No Dash for Gas and the movement is protesting against the company Cuadrilla's fracking testing near Balcombe and have come to Balcombe to len its support to the local protests against the drilling for gas.
    IMG_6652_1_1.jpg
  • The camp is split into sections of different colors. Reclaim the Power camp is set up in a field near Balcombe. The site is squatted but so far nor the owner nor police has made any moves to stop the camp from setting up. It is organised by the environmental group No Dash for Gas and the movement is protesting against the company Cuadrilla's fracking testing near Balcombe and have come to Balcombe to len its support to the local protests against the drilling for gas.
    IMG_6633_1_1.jpg
  • Dish washing and laughter in the open. Reclaim the Power camp is set up in a field near Balcombe. The site is squatted but so far nor the owner nor police has made any moves to stop the camp from setting up. It is organised by the environmental group No Dash for Gas and the movement is protesting against the company Cuadrilla's fracking testing near Balcombe and have come to Balcombe to len its support to the local protests against the drilling for gas.
    IMG_6629_1_1.jpg
  • The camp was only set up over night but already the camp kitchen can feed numerous hungry people. Reclaim the Power camp is set up in a field near Balcombe. The site is squatted but so far nor the owner nor police has made any moves to stop the camp from setting up. It is organised by the environmental group No Dash for Gas and the movement is protesting against the company Cuadrilla's fracking testing near Balcombe and have come to Balcombe to len its support to the local protests against the drilling for gas.
    IMG_6609_1_1.jpg
  • The water is run from a tap high up the field and crafty activists work on plumbing the cmap with running water. Reclaim the Power camp is set up in a field near Balcombe. The site is squatted but so far nor the owner nor police has made any moves to stop the camp from setting up. It is organised by the environmental group No Dash for Gas and the movement is protesting against the company Cuadrilla's fracking testing near Balcombe and have come to Balcombe to len its support to the local protests against the drilling for gas.
    IMG_6588_1_1.jpg
  • Reclaim the Power camp is set up in a field near Balcombe. The site is squatted but so far nor the owner nor police has made any moves to stop the camp from setting up. It is organised by the environmental group No Dash for Gas and the movement is protesting against the company Cuadrilla's fracking testing near Balcombe and have come to Balcombe to len its support to the local protests against the drilling for gas.
    IMG_6562_1_1.jpg
  • Camp Cooks team of outrageous 50's-style drag queens tour the nation serving tasty retro and mouth watering cuisine. With a sprinkle of Carry On Camping and a dash of tongue in cheek humour, Wynnie, Lucy, Cleo and Taylor bring a touch of Trailer Trash to the Shangri-La field.<br />
Shangri-La is the after-hours epicentre of the Glastonbury Festival 2013. The theme for 2013 is Afterlife with the visiters choice between heavan and hell. Glastonbury is the world's biggest greenfield festival with nearly 200,000  visiters camping in the dairy farm of Michael Evis in Somerset, UK.<br />
The first festival was in 1970 and was influenced by hippie ethics and the free festival movement. The festival retains vestiges of this tradition such as the Green Fields area which includes the Green Futures and Healing Field.
    153ShangriLa_1.jpg
  • Camp Cooks team of outrageous 50's-style drag queens tour the nation serving tasty retro and mouth watering cuisine. With a sprinkle of Carry On Camping and a dash of tongue in cheek humour, Wynnie, Lucy, Cleo and Taylor bring a touch of Trailer Trash to the Shangri-La field.<br />
Shangri-La is the after-hours epicentre of the Glastonbury Festival 2013. The theme for 2013 is Afterlife with the visiters choice between heavan and hell. Glastonbury is the world's biggest greenfield festival with nearly 200,000  visiters camping in the dairy farm of Michael Evis in Somerset, UK.<br />
The first festival was in 1970 and was influenced by hippie ethics and the free festival movement. The festival retains vestiges of this tradition such as the Green Fields area which includes the Green Futures and Healing Field.
    151ShangriLa_1.jpg
  • Mao statues and souvenirs stands in the home of a "Red" memorabilia collector and manufacturer near the birthplace of Mao Zedong, in Shaoshan, Hunan Province, China on 12 August 2009.  The village of Shaoshan, in rural Hunan Province, is tiny in size but big in name. It was the childhood home for Mao Zedong, the controversial revolutionary who came from obscurity but eventually defied all odds conquered China in the name of communism. Now his home, a sacred place among China's official propaganda, is in reality a microcosm of the country itself: part commercialism, part superstition, with a dash of communist ideological flavor.
    QS090812Shaoshan093.jpg
  • Reclaim the Power camp is set up in a field near Balcombe. The site is squatted but so far nor the owner nor police has made any moves to stop the camp from setting up. It is organised by the environmental group No Dash for Gas and the movement is protesting against the company Cuadrilla's fracking testing near Balcombe and have come to Balcombe to lend its support to the local protests against the drilling for gas.
    IMG_6798_1_1.jpg
  • Pro-Democracy protesters with a Free Southern Cameroon group are tackled by Metropolitan police officers after dashing out from behind barriers outside Westminster Abbey during the Commonwealth Day service lead by the Queen and including members of the British royal family and Commonwealth ambassadors and dignitaries. They are holding placards saying Free President Ayuktabe Julius' (an Ambazonian separatist leader) and 'Justice for Babanki' (referring to allegations of soldier killings on villagers), on 9th March 2020, in London, England. At this, their last royal duty before stepping down for private careers, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex will remain president and vice-president of the Queen's Commonwealth Trust, respectively.
    commonwealth_day-09-09-03-2020.jpg
  • A woman pedestrian runs through green reflected light shining from a City of London office building. Dashing over the road during a break in traffic, the lady runs through the pool of bright reflective lighting the City of London, known as the Square Mile after its ancient Roman walled past. They will continue through Royal Exchange Buildings in EC2, the heart of the capital's financial district.
    city_road06-21-02-2014.jpg
  • A Londoner dashes to a bus beneath a marketing billboard for The Levers - a new apartment development on the Walworth Road at Elephant And castle, on 25th September 2018, in Southwark, London, England. The Levers A Peabody development will be a complex of 1,2,and 3 bed flats close to Elephant & Castle and Elephant Park - both undergoing major redevelopment.
    city_people-03-25-09-2018.jpg
  • Pricilla, a waitress at the renowned Smokey Joe’s café, dashes into the kitchen to collect another order on 05th June 2008 in Blackwater in the United Kingdom. Smokey Joe’s is a renowned cafe off the A30 in the South West of England. Set in the beautiful Cornish countryside, Smokey Joe’s has been trading for 65 years.
    SM_RoadsideBritain_008.jpg
  • A boy plays snowballs at night during heavy snow showers in central London - a rare event for an inner-city. Snowflakes are falling in large amounts settling on this street in Herne Hill, South London. The lad is in his element by going outdoors at night as the showers are falling everywhere about him. He dashes across the picture, running through thousands of snowflakes armed with a snowball destined for his elder sister's head. Relishing the hide and seek game they're playing and the prospect of landing the snow as a direct hit makes him look mischievous and excited.
    london_snow10-01-02_2009.jpg
  • Wearing beachwear and topless in shorts are the beautiful people of Los Angeles’ famous Venice Beach. A dashing athletic male specimen, all six-pack muscles, a dark tan with white trainers, socks and leaning on a bike, flirts with a young woman whose perfect body is facing away from us, allowing us a peek at her bottom and long, slender legs and rollerblades. She wears a very small pink bikini and a tiny back-pack in the west coast sunshine. There is sexuality and machismo here between the sexes where exhibitionists and extroverts display their confidence and talents, the guy’s body language showing and facial expression giving off a keen interest in this woman’s female form.
    LA_flirting-18-05-1996.jpg
  • Pro-Democracy protesters with a Free Southern Cameroon group are tackled by Metropolitan police officers after dashing out from behind barriers outside Westminster Abbey during the Commonwealth Day service lead by the Queen and including members of the British royal family and Commonwealth ambassadors and dignitaries. They are holding placards saying Free President Ayuktabe Julius' (an Ambazonian separatist leader) and 'Justice for Babanki' (referring to allegations of soldier killings on villagers), on 9th March 2020, in London, England. At this, their last royal duty before stepping down for private careers, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex will remain president and vice-president of the Queen's Commonwealth Trust, respectively.
    commonwealth_day-10-09-03-2020.jpg
  • Pro-Democracy protesters with a Free Southern Cameroon group are tackled by Metropolitan police officers after dashing out from behind barriers outside Westminster Abbey during the Commonwealth Day service lead by the Queen and including members of the British royal family and Commonwealth ambassadors and dignitaries. They are holding placards saying Free President Ayuktabe Julius' (an Ambazonian separatist leader) and 'Justice for Babanki' (referring to allegations of soldier killings on villagers), on 9th March 2020, in London, England. At this, their last royal duty before stepping down for private careers, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex will remain president and vice-president of the Queen's Commonwealth Trust, respectively.
    commonwealth_day-08-09-03-2020.jpg
  • Pro-Democracy protesters with a Free Southern Cameroon group are tackled by Metropolitan police officers after dashing out from behind barriers outside Westminster Abbey during the Commonwealth Day service lead by the Queen and including members of the British royal family and Commonwealth ambassadors and dignitaries. They are holding placards saying Free President Ayuktabe Julius' (an Ambazonian separatist leader) and 'Justice for Babanki' (referring to allegations of soldier killings on villagers), on 9th March 2020, in London, England. At this, their last royal duty before stepping down for private careers, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex will remain president and vice-president of the Queen's Commonwealth Trust, respectively.
    commonwealth_day-07-09-03-2020.jpg
  • Pro-Democracy protesters with a Free Southern Cameroon group are tackled by Metropolitan police officers after dashing out from behind barriers outside Westminster Abbey during the Commonwealth Day service lead by the Queen and including members of the British royal family and Commonwealth ambassadors and dignitaries. They are holding placards saying Free President Ayuktabe Julius' (an Ambazonian separatist leader) and 'Justice for Babanki' (referring to allegations of soldier killings on villagers), on 9th March 2020, in London, England. At this, their last royal duty before stepping down for private careers, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex will remain president and vice-president of the Queen's Commonwealth Trust, respectively.
    commonwealth_day-02-09-03-2020.jpg
  • Pro-Democracy protesters with a Free Southern Cameroon group are tackled by Metropolitan police officers after dashing out from behind barriers outside Westminster Abbey during the Commonwealth Day service lead by the Queen and including members of the British royal family and Commonwealth ambassadors and dignitaries. They are holding placards saying Free President Ayuktabe Julius' (an Ambazonian separatist leader) and 'Justice for Babanki' (referring to allegations of soldier killings on villagers), on 9th March 2020, in London, England. At this, their last royal duty before stepping down for private careers, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex will remain president and vice-president of the Queen's Commonwealth Trust, respectively.
    commonwealth_day-05-09-03-2020.jpg
  • A woman pedestrian runs through green reflected light shining from a City of London office building. Dashing over the road during a break in traffic, the lady runs through the pool of bright reflective lighting the City of London, known as the Square Mile after its ancient Roman walled past. They will continue through Royal Exchange Buildings in EC2, the heart of the capital's financial district.
    city_road06-21-02-2014 1.jpg
  • An office worker dashes across a road in the City of London, narrowly avoiding a motorbike and car in his urgency to get across to a meeting with associates with his armful of paperwork in files and ring binders. His safety far outweighs the risks of colliding with traffic.
    city_people07-20-03-1993_1.jpg
  • A lady office worker dashes through a City of London street, the heart of the capital's financial district. Carrying an armful of paper files and folders, clasped in her arms that makes her way across the city en route to a meeting with associates. Their education and careers have taken her to positions of influence and success, still hard to do in 90s Britain.
    city_people02-20-03-1993_1.jpg
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