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  • An activist from the group Action for Climate Truth and Reparations (ACTR) climbs scaffolding to hang an open letter to the UK people from Africans Rising For Justice, Peace and Dignity from the Houses of Parliament on 12 November 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The letter, which launches Africans Rising’s ReRight History campaign, contains a plea to the UK people to start making amends for the harm caused by slavery and colonialism.
    MK-20201112-London-Parliament-ACTR-A...jpg
  • Activists from the group Action for Climate Truth and Reparations (ACTR) climb scaffolding to hang an open letter to the UK people from Africans Rising For Justice, Peace and Dignity from the Houses of Parliament on 12 November 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The letter, which launches Africans Rising’s ReRight History campaign, contains a plea to the UK people to start making amends for the harm caused by slavery and colonialism.
    MK-20201112-London-Parliament-ACTR-A...jpg
  • Activists from the group Action for Climate Truth and Reparations (ACTR) climb scaffolding to hang an open letter to the UK people from Africans Rising For Justice, Peace and Dignity from the Houses of Parliament on 12 November 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The letter, which launches Africans Rising’s ReRight History campaign, contains a plea to the UK people to start making amends for the harm caused by slavery and colonialism.
    MK-20201112-London-Parliament-ACTR-A...jpg
  • Activists from the group Action for Climate Truth and Reparations (ACTR) hang an open letter to the UK people from Africans Rising For Justice, Peace and Dignity from the Houses of Parliament on 12 November 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The letter, which launches Africans Rising’s ReRight History campaign, contains a plea to the UK people to start making amends for the harm caused by slavery and colonialism.
    MK-20201112-London-Parliament-ACTR-A...jpg
  • Activists from the group Action for Climate Truth and Reparations (ACTR) climb scaffolding to hang an open letter to the UK people from Africans Rising For Justice, Peace and Dignity from the Houses of Parliament on 12 November 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The letter, which launches Africans Rising’s ReRight History campaign, contains a plea to the UK people to start making amends for the harm caused by slavery and colonialism.
    MK-20201112-London-Parliament-ACTR-A...jpg
  • An activist from the group Action for Climate Truth and Reparations (ACTR) climbs scaffolding to hang an open letter to the UK people from Africans Rising For Justice, Peace and Dignity from the Houses of Parliament on 12 November 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The letter, which launches Africans Rising’s ReRight History campaign, contains a plea to the UK people to start making amends for the harm caused by slavery and colonialism.
    MK-20201112-London-Parliament-ACTR-A...jpg
  • An activist from the group Action for Climate Truth and Reparations (ACTR) climbs scaffolding to hang an open letter to the UK people from Africans Rising For Justice, Peace and Dignity from the Houses of Parliament on 12 November 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The letter, which launches Africans Rising’s ReRight History campaign, contains a plea to the UK people to start making amends for the harm caused by slavery and colonialism.
    MK-20201112-London-Parliament-ACTR-A...jpg
  • On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    haiti_82_1.jpg
  • Chaumone Auguste  mourns the loss of her mother, Mereille Jeudy at the main cemetery in Port Au Prince. Mereille was sixty-four when she died.
    haiti_59rt_1.jpg
  • Marie Ange St Laurent, (wearing white)  and her family, at the funeral of  Ronald St Laurent. "Ronald was thirty-one years old when he died. His home fell down on top on him during the earthquake We were all inside but Ronald did not have time to get out.  We must thank God for the opportunity at least, to bury him properly. I feel sorry for the thousands of families who do not have this chance, many cannot find their loved ones. It will be hard for them to move on, it's double the problem.  At least we can visit and put flowers on the grave.  After the quake, there were bodies everywhere many were burnt where they lay or carted off in huge trucks to mass graves."
    haiti_56_1.jpg
  • The City from the Hill leading into Petion-Ville. On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    haiti_81_1.jpg
  • Mourners at the main cemetery, Port Au Prince. On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    haiti_79_1.jpg
  • A Haitian carries a heavy coffin the mile or so to the central hospital morgue. On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    haiti_57_1.jpg
  • All around Port Au prince are the hand painted signs and banners shown in the pictures, such was the desperation shortly after the earth quake. Many went without food and water for several days or more. The tragedy is that  it seems many of these requests went largely ignored. Theo , like many haitians is bemused "We painted a sign saying we needed food and water in the hope that the aid agencies may be able to help, but no one has helped, not one person."
    haiti_53_1.jpg
  • All around Port Au prince are the hand painted signs and banners shown in the pictures, such was the desperation shortly after the earth quake. Many went without food and water for several days or more. The tragedy is that  it seems many of these requests went largely ignored. Theo , like many haitians is bemused "We painted a sign saying we needed food and water in the hope that the aid agencies may be able to help, but no one has helped, not one person."
    Haiti_32_1.jpg
  • A crushed car in down-town Port Au Prince, steel wreckage from this school is  a typical part of the visual language in Port Au Prince now . On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    Haiti_13_1.jpg
  • Alex is a co-director of 'Haitians helping Haitians' a charity that gives Haitians the means to help themselves, to improve their quality of life. (http://www.hhelpingh.org) Alex Juste was lying on his bed when the earthquake struck: "There was a big shuddering noise, I felt the bed shaking" he says. The walls started opening. I could see right into my neighbours' apartment. I had to see what had happened so I started running. I lost it totally. I was screaming, 'This is the end of the world!'  There were people under concrete,  saying, 'sir, help me,!' But I couldn't do anything." Alex's experience is typical. No Haitian has been left untouched.
    Haiti_09_1.jpg
  • On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    haiti_77_1.jpg
  • Daphene Louis, an accountant and her boyfriend Steve Babtiste  who works in  customer care at Digicel at the  Catrine -Flon Camp, Puit-Blain St, Delmar 75, Port Au Prince. "It was twenty-four hours after the quake before I saw my boyfriend. There were no communication networks and I had no way of knowing if he was dead or alive. When I saw him, I was so relieved I just jumped on him! Now we live in this camp under sheets held up with timber. It is very hard to get shelter from the sun,and when the rains come  there will be  no protection at all.  We need proper tents but even one month on we have been unable to get help. We have no privacy here, it's always noisy. We don't even have chance for a cuddle. It would be great to get a proper mattress, but we don't even have rice so that's not high up in our priorities."
    haiti_66_1.jpg
  • A sign in front of a mass grave containing hundreds of bodies at the main cemetery in Port Au Prince. The sign reads: "The hole is full. We have no more room for bodies".
    haiti_54_1.jpg
  • On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    haiti_51_1.jpg
  • All around Port Au prince are the hand painted signs and banners shown in the pictures, such was the desperation shortly after the earth quake. Many went without food and water for several days or more. The tragedy is that  it seems many of these requests went largely ignored. Theo , like many haitians is bemused "We painted a sign saying we needed food and water in the hope that the aid agencies may be able to help, but no one has helped, not one person."
    Haiti_46_1.jpg
  • Alex is a co-director of 'Haitians helping Haitians' a charity that gives Haitians the means to help themselves, to improve their quality of life. (http://www.hhelpingh.org) Alex Juste was lying on his bed when the earthquake struck: "There was a big shuddering noise, I felt the bed shaking" he says. The walls started opening. I could see right into my neighbours' apartment. I had to see what had happened so I started running. I lost it totally. I was screaming, 'This is the end of the world!'  There were people under concrete,  saying, 'sir, help me,!' But I couldn't do anything." Alex's experience is typical. No Haitian has been left untouched.
    Haiti_14_1.jpg
  • Ricardo Simeone, centre, from Ferret, Port Au Prince queues outside Muncheez restaurant to get a hot meal. Ricardo  was trying to get out of the house as the earthquake hit but was not quick enough. The house fell on him, he lost the tip of his fingers but he hasn't lost anybody. He is homeless, however and camping in Saint Pierre, and very pleased to be getting a daily meal at Muncheez. He queues every day for three or four hours. Gilbert Bailey, owner of Muncheez, who has been running the soup kitchen since the day after the earthquake was one of the few Haitians not to be directly affected and wants to give back.  He feeds one thousand Haitians every day.  He says, People can contribute directly themselves , search face book under "Muncheez Food Drive Haiti".
    haiti_84_1.jpg
  • Mourners at the main cemetery, Port Au Prince. On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    haiti_91_1.jpg
  • Sharline  Dagou, 24, was a secretary at a restaurant in Petion-Ville, she poses with her mother and brother outside her house. "I was in my bedroom with my family when the quake struck. "The first shock was smaller like a preview of the next one. The door was blocked, but we pushed and got out but my younger brother was caught. When we came out we saw our houses destroyed. Now we have nothing. I even lost my shoes and  have been barefoot for the last three weeks.  Most of the families who lost people have left, they cannot bare to stay. We pray to cope with our sadness. A Dominican missionary came to give us courage, he told us we have to accept because we love God. "I often cry, but I still smile as well. We have to, we have to hope for the future. Where there is life there is hope."
    haiti_86_1.jpg
  • Pictured are remains of a training centre for nurses next to Central Hospital. The building collapsed with an estimated 80 people still inside. Government buildings were particularly hard hit in the earthquake for example 87 percent of schools in Port Au Prince  are destroyed. In the foreground the remains of a person still lie. A month after the quake most remains but not all have been cleared from the streets. Inside the buildings very few bodies have been cleared such is the enormity of the task.
    Haiti_39_1.jpg
  • On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. .The impact of the disaster on a country already impoverished after years of political crisis, and previous natural disasters is huge. According to the DEC (Disasters Emergency Committee)'230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. The media response by the news agencies has been intense, and much imagery especially on the internet has been shocking, almost voyeuristic,  these pictures allow us to connect with the Haitians, with their  humanity and as equals.
    Haiti_27_1.jpg
  • During the evening rush-hour, an elegant lady walks southwards over London Bridge, on 14th May, in London, England.
    london_bridge-05-14-05-2019.jpg
  • South Sudan. Alvat Atuiai with her child  waiting forfood didstribution at a feeding centre.
    JMA-10126080.jpg
  • Young boy in the shade of the souk market of the 4 sq km Abu Shouk refugee camp which is (disputedly) home to 38,000 displaced persons and families on the outskirts of the front-line town of Al Fasher (also spelled, Al-Fashir) in north Darfur. The camp has 17 schools, clinics and commercial activity  based around a market, furniture manufacture and variety of cottage industries and a third of families in the camps are headed by women.
    sudan189-24-05-2009_1.jpg
  • A man sweeps his own area where he sells food in the 4 sq km Abu Shouk refugee camp which is (disputedly) home to 38,000 displaced persons and families on the outskirts of the front-line town of Al Fasher (also spelled, Al-Fashir) in north Darfur. The camp has 17 schools, clinics and commercial activity  based around a market, furniture manufacture and variety of cottage industries. The camp has 17 schools, clinics and commercial activity  based around a market, furniture manufacture and variety of cottage industries and a third of families in the camps are headed by women.
    sudan172-24-05-2009_1.jpg
  • A carer from an elderly peoples' residential home bends down to speak to an old lady who has been taken out for her daily walk in the fresh-air. The lady however cannot walk but seems to be enjoying her daily constitutional from the comfort of her wheelchair that the nursing specialist kindly pushes along a promenade in Frinton-on-Sea in Essex. With her hankie tucked in her sleeve she also seems to be slightly confused as if she might be suffering from a dementia or possibly just old and tired from the hardships after Britain at war. By 2050 the percentage of people worldwide over 65 years will have doubled.
    retirement_home06-12-1992.jpg
  • Seen from behind as they stop at dotted give-way lines on this empty road junction, we see a strange perspective of deserted housing and empty roads, Jen West and her elderly wheelchair-bound mother Margaret - both residents of the experimental community village of Poundbury, Dorset, England. As if they are pedestrians about cross a busy highway, it is an incongruous scene of irony. Poundbury is the visionary model village that Charles, Prince of Wales sought to develop in 1993 as a successful and pioneering town near Dorchester, built on land owned by his own Duchy of Cornwall, challenging otherwise poor post-war trends in town planning and to some extent following the New Urbanism concept from the US except that the design influences are European.
    poundbury05-07-06_2003.jpg
  • Razia and her wedding photo. Her husband disappeared in 1992 when he went to teach at the university. Razia has worked as a caretaker ever since in order to provide for her children.
    jm11.jpg
  • As a sleeping homeless man lies curled up in his sleeping bag on a central London pavement, two window cleaners have carefully placed their ladders at his feet to clean a Boots the chemist sign. Each wearing identical blue working overalls and each wiping the frontage with their left hands, the men are symbolic of the working man versus that of a homeless person without a job, prospects or perhaps a future. The wide gap between hopelessness and the pride of one's achievement is shown here on the sidewalk of modern-day Britain. London is home to some 50,000 homeless people whose place of rest can often be recesses and shop doorways where they seek sanctuary from the cold and street violence. On the opposite end of the wealth and social divides are those who seek work with a positive outlook on life.
    homeless_ladders03-16-1993_1.jpg
  • Making their way across a snow-swept road in Norwood, south London, an elderly couple tread warily as the snow turns to slush. It's a bleak, raw morning as the new snowfall has settled on this suburban street where cars are parked on icy kerbs. Wearing sensible hats and coats and non-slip boots the pensioners are vulnerable to icy black spots which may endanger their stability because old people are susceptible to falls and injury at these hazardous times. A very monochrome landscape, we see little colour. Instead it is a scene of jeopardy and of an uncaring society for its older generations.
    elderly_snow02-18-1991_1.jpg
  • Wearing braces, striped shirt and sitting on a block, a young lawyer studies a legal book during a mid-morning break in the Inner Temple in the historic City of London. The Honourable Society of the Inner Temple is one of the four Inns of Court around the Royal Courts of Justice which may call members to the Bar and so entitle them to practise as barristers. The Temple was occupied in the twelfth century by the Knights Templar, who gave the area its name but was heavily bombed during the Blitz of 1940-1 and the reclining marble memorial to predecessor, John Hiccocks who held the office of Master in Chancery between 1702 and 1723 (d 1726) behind the young law student is marked by the partially-demolished Goldsmiths Chambers on the north side of Temple Church where Hiccocks is buried. An assortment of potted red plants add to an otherwise dark courtyard
    city_resting02-16-1993_1.jpg
  • A husband and wife make their way along a pavement towards the entrance of the Ascot racecourse where the annual Ladies' Day event is held as part of the English social season calendar. Leading the way and carrying two walking sticks and in a polythene bag, his best jacket for the dress-code is important if one is allowed access to the private enclosures. He wears a top hat and waste coat as he hobbles along with wife in tow. She is behind him rummaging through her handbag perhaps looking for tickets or cash. Royal Ascot is held every June and is one of the main dates on the sporting calendar and social season.
    ascot_couple06-18-1992_1.jpg
  • Hundreds of Haitians pray at The Church of God, Rue de Centre 3, during the Sunday service ( 07/02/10) The church was damaged during the earthquake with  many  of the choir singers entombed. Sylvie Selde remembers "The entire group of singers practising were killed. We are still recovering the bodies now, only nine so far. When we recover them we take them to the mass grave or dig a hole and put them in. This is a message from  God, a  judgement,  do the right thing. Stop being wicked".  Many believe that in Port Au Prince one Haitian Alex K Juste is more positive "That day, there was no rich, no poor, no colour, no prejudice, no racism. We were equal, they knew that God existed and their hands were up in the air praising the Lord. We held hands, we cared for each other, we supported the sick.  What a beautiful thing to see us Haitians reunited, together as one".
    Untitled48_1.jpg
  • On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    Untitled47_1.jpg
  • A Mourner at the main cemetery, Port Au Prince stands next to a pile of human remains. At the time of the earthquake, bodies were piling up in the streets and  Haitians were so desperate to deal with the cadavers that they would bring them to the cemetery and burn them where ever they could find space.
    haiti_92_1.jpg
  • This lady preaching in down-town Port au Prince says, "you have to believe in God, this is God trying to send us a message." On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    haiti_90_1.jpg
  • Claudette, thirty-three has five kids. She is  photographed with her father, Crispin, sixty-six in their neighbourhood as it is now. She feels lucky to have escaped. "I was buying some drinking water with my son, Gito and was on the way back  when the ground started rumbling. I cried out, `wow an earthquake!` At that point I looked up to see a two- storey building falling down on me. Large blocks of masonry trapped my arm and fell on my son . My son got free and  went for help. Five men returned and tried to lift the masonry with a large stick but they couldn't do it, they left me. I was petrified, the house next door caught alight and I knew for sure I was going to die" Then I felt someone pulling my arm although no one was there. From that moment I struggled to free myself, I pulled so fiercely that I left my finger behind  It wasn't until two hours later that I realized."
    haiti_89_1.jpg
  • Nadine Pleato, opposite a collapsed building in down-town Port Au Prince . She is living in a garage at Latimer 54, near Paloma. She says: "I have just purchased this bag so I can pack a few things and leave Port Au Prince for the provinces. My house was completely destroyed and I lost all my clothes in the quake. All I have left is four pieces of clothing: a skirt and what I am wearing. I have to live and bathe in the street..I didn't know if my mother was alive for six days until she arrived from the provinces with supplies. I was so relieved but I still haven't seen my boyfriend since the morning of the quake. We were with each other a year. He must be dead but I will never know for sure. It's hard to carry on.  How can we be normal now?"
    haiti_76_1.jpg
  • Jocelyn Pierre, at the remains of his home, behind the US Consulate,  Port Au Prince. Jocelyn is retuning to rebuild his business and house.  He has four grown up children who all live in America but he wants to return to Haiti. He is a teacher, he is very proud of his son who is a surgeon in the Navy. "I love Haiti more than myself. America is not my country.  We will overcome this. When you have faith, determination and sacrifice, you can do anything and we will bring you a brand new Haiti one day..Most of the problems are not to do with nature: the trees are still standing , the roads are OK but a brand new nine-storey hospital collapsed; why?"
    Haiti_49_1.jpg
  • On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    Haiti_48_1.jpg
  • Livis, leaning against a tree at his neighbour Jocelyn's home near Cham de Mars,  Port au Prince. He is helping Jocelyn to rescue his belongings. Livis was not affected directly, he did not lose any family himself,  but his experiences were similar to those of many Haitians living in central Port Au Prince.  He is a Winnie the Pooh fan and reads it to his five children. He says, "If you're excited what is the point? You have no choice but to be calm. Captured in my mind are the scenes immediately after the earthquake: the collapsed buildings, the dead bodies and worst of all the cries for help from those under the debris. The cries that would go unanswered until eventually they stopped. They cried but we couldn't help"
    Haiti_45_1.jpg
  • Pictured are remains of a training centre for nurses next to Central Hospital. The building collapsed with an estimated 80 people still inside. Government buildings were particularly hard hit in the earthquake for example 87 percent of schools in Port Au Prince  are destroyed. In the foreground the remains of a person still lie. A month after the quake most remains but not all have been cleared from the streets. Inside the buildings very few bodies have been cleared such is the enormity of the task.
    Haiti_42_1.jpg
  • Geraldine Richards thirty-four, aid queue, Petion-Ville, with her sisters remaining child, Giodania. Geraldine is a jewellery seller. She has five kids, all boys  (twins and triplets), as did her sister prior to the earth quake but only one of her sister's children survived (Giodania, pictured) when their house collapsed in the earthquake. "My sister  is so depressed she hasn't eaten. She lost her husband and  all but one of her five  kids. She hasn't even recovered the bodies. It's necessary to bury our loved ones but the government cleared them away in huge trucks and dumped them in mass graves or they were burnt.  She  has no will to live, she is suicidal. I am looking after her and her kid, one of the bags of food I have is for my sister. I am lucky to get this, if you miss the card distribution you are lucky to get food and getting back with the food is difficult sometimes. The men take it or someone will cut the bag and catch the rice in a bucket, before you realise. All the same, we are thankful for the aid."
    Haiti_37_1.jpg
  • Sharline Dagou, 24, was a secretary at a restaurant in Petion-Ville, she poses with her mother and brother outside her house. "I was in my bedroom with my family when the quake struck. "The first shock was smaller like a preview of the next one. The door was blocked, but we pushed and got out but my younger brother was caught. When we came out we saw our houses destroyed. Now we have nothing. I even lost my shoes and  have been barefoot for the last three weeks.  Most of the families who lost people have left, they cannot bare to stay. We pray to cope with our sadness. A Dominican missionary came to give us courage, he told us we have to accept because we love God. "I often cry, but I still smile as well. We have to, we have to hope for the future. Where there is life there is hope."
    Haiti_30_1.jpg
  • Sharline Dagou, 24, was a secretary at a restaurant in Petion-Ville, she poses with her mother and brother outside her house. "I was in my bedroom with my family when the quake struck. "The first shock was smaller like a preview of the next one. The door was blocked, but we pushed and got out but my younger brother was caught. When we came out we saw our houses destroyed. Now we have nothing. I even lost my shoes and  have been barefoot for the last three weeks.  Most of the families who lost people have left, they cannot bare to stay. We pray to cope with our sadness. A Dominican missionary came to give us courage, he told us we have to accept because we love God. "I often cry, but I still smile as well. We have to, we have to hope for the future. Where there is life there is hope."
    Haiti_29_1.jpg
  • Marie Yolene, Bois De Fer, age 44,  and daughter Marie Geralda Auguste, 17, in a camp opposite the Palace, Cham de Mars.  Marie's son Emanuel was trapped for 12 days before he was eventually rescued ( the New York Times did a feature on him). The daughter recounts: "I was sitting down at the house when it started to rock then blocks and wood started falling, Romario broke his leg, Mum grabbed us all and we got out all except my oldest brother Emanual.  He was trapped. We weren't sure if he was alive or dead but we kept looking for him. Then my mother and Emanuel heard each other. He called out, 'Mamma I'm alive,' Mum told everybody she could find that he  was alive,  journalists, aid workers rescue workers, After 11 days rescuers ( an Israeli SAR) pulled him out, my mother collapsed from joy."
    Haiti_25_1.jpg
  • Ismael, thirty-five out side the ruins of The Tax Office. Most important government buildings have been destroyed including the Palace, Law courts, 87 percent of schools, even prisons leaving  the country with no means to govern. ."I am a steel worker by trade but right now I'm here recovering the bodies from the tax office. We use plastic gloves and put them in plastic body bags. It's not a nice job, the smell almost kills me. I have to drink to get through but I know I am helping the families. The parents are waiting for me each time I pull a body out so they can identify it. They buy me my rum.  I have pulled out one body today but twenty-five in total."
    Haiti_23_1.jpg
  • On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    Haiti_21 (1)_1.jpg
  • Janne Orelis, 26  is a Sales Woman with two children, Central Hospital Port Au Prince. "The house collapsed on top of me, crushing my right arm" she says. "I was rescued by my family. If it was not for my husband I would be dead,  but it was two days before I saw a doctor.  The pain was terrible, by the time I got to see a doctor there was no choice but to amputate. I can't stop thinking about my arm. But now I am worried sick about my six month old baby. My family have him with them in the provinces, but he has only ever had breast milk. He could be very hungry. As soon as I am able, I will go to him."
    Haiti_19_1.jpg
  • On the 10th consecutive day of protests around London by the climate change campaign Extinction Rebellion, police officers prepare to arrest campaigners under Section 14 of the Public Order Act, on 24th April 2019, at Marble Arch, London England.
    extinction_rebellion-28-24-04-2019.jpg
  • On the 10th consecutive day of protests around London by the climate change campaign Extinction Rebellion, acitivists bang drums on Oxford Street, on 24th April 2019, at Marble Arch, London England.
    extinction_rebellion-25-24-04-2019.jpg
  • A tourist is pushed up on to the plinth of one of four lions in Trafalgar Square, on 8th October 2018, in London, England. The lions are by Sir Edwin Henry Landseer RA, an English painter well known for his paintings of animals—particularly horses, dogs and stags. The best known of Landseers works, however, are these lions in Trafalgar Square.
    trafalgar_lion-01-08-10-2018.jpg
  • Carers and elderly people from a nearby residential home take a daily walk to the seafront in Frinton, UK. As part of a daily walk, some important exercise for these still active pensioners, the uniformed staff take their charges out towards the seafront from the warmth of their home left behind. Walking slowly towards the promenade in Frinton-on-Sea in Essex. Some may be just unfit and others perhaps slightly confused or suffering from dementia or possibly just old and tired from the hardships after Britain at war. By 2050 the percentage of people worldwide over 65 years will have doubled.
    elderly_care-12-06-1992_1.jpg
  • Bihar India March 2011. Akhand Jyoti Eye hospital, Mastichak. Patients the morning after their  cataract operation.
    b1_8147.jpg
  • As a young office worker sleeps incongruously on a marble pavement, a street sweeper nearby brushes away litter with a small dustpan. The manual labourer wears blue overalls, yellow gloves and keys in his back pocket while the man in a wastecoat and smart trousers and polished slip-on shoes appears to be fast asleep, his fingers across his chest. This scene suggests the social divisions of the working man: Of the young, educated post-war generation whose opportunities have afforded them a faster lifestyle, far removed from that of the physically-demanding job of a man whose life has been spent cleaning and sweeping. English social differences is clearly represented here as the harshness of the manual labourer versus a lazy youth of today, seen in the middle of the modern city.
    city_resting03-16-1997_1.jpg
  • Two young men dressed in office suits casually stuff their lunches during a hot lunchtime break in the Broadgate Estate in the City of London. Both with legs across knees, the lads in their 20s sit on a bench beneath a tree alongside the statue of a traditional gardener, slightly bent and equipped with hoe and wearing a wastecoat, hobnailed boots and flat cap, an iconic salt-of-the-earth workman. This scene suggests the social divisions of the working man: Of the young, educated post-war generation whose opportunities have afforded them a faster lifestyle, far removed from that of the physically-exhausted man whose life has been spent working the honest land.  The English social divide is clearly represented here as the harshness of the manual labourer versus the youth of today, seen in the middle of the modern city.
    city_resting01-16-1993_1.jpg
  • Phillip Acheles, 47, Main Street, artist. Phillip is a self-taught artist. He was selling this and other artists'  paintings in down-town Port Au Prince, a sign that the economy is moving again, albeit in a limited capacity. "Not since 2006 has there been any prosperity in this country," says Phillip. "It has been in a state of political crisis  for years now. Every time there is  a small recovery, something happens and now the earthquake means the chance of selling paintings to tourists is once more very low."
    Untitled51_1.jpg
  • A Haitian sees the bright side as she sits outside her shelter erected opposite the Palace in Cham De Mars. The  choice of cloth for her shack is symbolic and many Haitians are grateful for the aid and support from the US. some  commentators, however,  believe the relationship with the US two hundred miles away,  is what needs to be looked at if things are to improve. One Haitian, Jocelyn, tells me:  "They (The American government)  take with one hand and give with the other.  They swamped Haiti with cheap rice imports putting farmers out of business and forcing them into the capital's slums where they have been aid dependent ever since"
    Untitled17_1.jpg
  • A Mourner at the main cemetery, Port Au Prince stands next to a pile of human remains. At the time of the earthquake, bodies were piling up in the streets and  Haitians were so desperate to deal with the cadavers that they would bring them to the cemetery and burn them where ever they could find space.
    haiti_93_1.jpg
  • All around Port Au prince are the hand painted signs and banners shown in the pictures, such was the desperation shortly after the earth quake. Many went without food and water for several days or more. The tragedy is that  it seems many of these requests went largely ignored. Theo Wilder is bemused "We painted a sign saying we needed food and water in the hope that the aid agencies may be able to help, but no one has helped, not one person."
    haiti_88_1.jpg
  • Claudette, thirty-three has five kids. She is  photographed with her father, Crispin, sixty-six in their neighbourhood as it is now. She feels lucky to have escaped. "I was buying some drinking water with my son, Gito and was on the way back  when the ground started rumbling. I cried out, `wow an earthquake!` At that point I looked up to see a two- storey building falling down on me. Large blocks of masonry trapped my arm and fell on my son . My son got free and  went for help. Five men returned and tried to lift the masonry with a large stick but they couldn't do it, they left me. I was petrified, the house next door caught alight and I knew for sure I was going to die" Then I felt someone pulling my arm although no one was there. From that moment I struggled to free myself, I pulled so fiercely that I left my finger behind  It wasn't until two hours later that I realized."
    haiti_87_1.jpg
  • Anne Marie, street seller,  Main street, Port Au Prince. "My home is destroyed? I lost my brother and sister in the earth quake. It was terrifying, houses were falling down around us, there were dead bodies everywhere and people were screaming. I went three days without water. I  was working on the street when the earth quake happened which is why I am ok but now I have to look after my sister? kids as she is dead,. They are weak and not used to coping on the streets so in order to feed them, I must work. I have no time to grieve."
    haiti_74-1_1.jpg
  • Chanette Inocent Jeremie in an aid queue at  Petion-Ville. On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    Haiti_36_1.jpg
  • Alex is a co-director of 'Haitians helping Haitians' a charity that gives Haitians the means to help themselves, to improve their quality of life. (http://www.hhelpingh.org) Alex Juste was lying on his bed when the earthquake struck: "There was a big shuddering noise, I felt the bed shaking" he says. The walls started opening. I could see right into my neighbours' apartment. I had to see what had happened so I started running. I lost it totally. I was screaming, 'This is the end of the world!'  There were people under concrete,  saying, 'sir, help me,!' But I couldn't do anything." Alex's experience is typical. No Haitian has been left untouched.
    Haiti_33_1.jpg
  • On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    Haiti_31_1.jpg
  • Mario Vieu is the owner, director and a broadcaster at Signal FM, a small station in Petion- Ville, Port au Prince. As soon as the earthquake struck he made his way to the Radio station; by accident or design, some one had left Hotel California radio station playing on a loop. His staff were afraid to go in but he managed to persuade some journalists to come and chat about what had happened and has been broadcasting ever since. "We had a minimum of 5000 people outside  all the time for four days (not the same people). We just gave them a microphone  and then broadcasted  messages all day. "We were like a phone with two people but broadcasting to the whole city. People would call in , 'My wife and kids are under the debris  - would you send help?'; afterwards they would come back and say, thank you."
    Haiti_28_1.jpg
  • Pierre Yves Jovin, 56, Morgue Manager, Central hospital, Port Au Prince. Pierre has worked at the morgue for 27 years. He is the manager in charge. He is standing in front of the cold stores each of which hold about 60 bodies. Relatives are still coming to see if they can identify their loved ones such is the need to know if their families are just missing or dead.  People are searching high and low for loved ones even knowing that the chances of finding them dead or alive must be miniscule when so many have been cleared into mass graves or burnt where they lay. "After the earthquake, all the bodies were piled outside this morgue. There was a huge pile of two to three thousand and inside there were bodies piled up to the ceiling.  Every time the earth trembled, the after-shocks caused the bodies to move and I could smell the dead"
    Haiti_15_1.jpg
  • On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    Haiti_12 (1)_1.jpg
  • Alex is a co-director of 'Haitians helping Haitians' a charity that gives Haitians the means to help themselves, to improve their quality of life. (http://www.hhelpingh.org) Alex Juste was lying on his bed when the earthquake struck: "There was a big shuddering noise, I felt the bed shaking" he says. The walls started opening. I could see right into my neighbours' apartment. I had to see what had happened so I started running. I lost it totally. I was screaming, 'This is the end of the world!'  There were people under concrete,  saying, 'sir, help me,!' But I couldn't do anything." Alex's experience is typical. No Haitian has been left untouched.
    Haiti_10_1.jpg
  • Nadine Pleato, opposite a collapsed building in down-town Port Au Prince . She is living in a garage at Latimer 54, near Paloma. She says: "I have just purchased this bag so I can pack a few things and leave Port Au Prince for the provinces. My house was completely destroyed and I lost all my clothes in the quake. All I have left is four pieces of clothing: a skirt and what I am wearing. I have to live and bathe in the street..I didn't know if my mother was alive for six days until she arrived from the provinces with supplies. I was so relieved but I still haven't seen my boyfriend since the morning of the quake. We were with each other a year. He must be dead but I will never know for sure. It's hard to carry on.  How can we be normal now?"
    Haiti_08_1.jpg
  • Cantrine-Flon Camp has approximately 3500 refugees who have very little at all. At the moment they are surviving on yams and potatoes, buying their own drinking water and using a field for sanitation. They need tents and medicine, since what they had donated by a Haitian doctor, is sparse. Malnutrition is a problem along with vomiting, diarrhoea and infections. ."Every time there is a bang, I jump. We all do, it's a kind of collective trauma. Since my house fell down I have been living in this camp but conditions are not good. All we've had to eat so far is yams and potatoes. There are no tents, toilets, little medicine and we buy our own drinking water with what money we have."
    Haiti_02_1.jpg
  • Nadine Pleato, opposite a collapsed building in down-town Port Au Prince . She is living in a garage at Latimer 54, near Paloma. She says: "I have just purchased this bag so I can pack a few things and leave Port Au Prince for the provinces. My house was completely destroyed and I lost all my clothes in the quake. All I have left is four pieces of clothing: a skirt and what I am wearing. I have to live and bathe in the street..I didn't know if my mother was alive for six days until she arrived from the provinces with supplies. I was so relieved but I still haven't seen my boyfriend since the morning of the quake. We were with each other a year. He must be dead but I will never know for sure. It's hard to carry on.  How can we be normal now?"
    Haiti_05_1.jpg
  • Bihar India March 2011. Akhand Jyoti Eye hospital, Mastichak. Patients the morning after their  cataract operation.
    b1_8142.jpg
  • Police on patrol in down-town Port Au Prince, their  tough style of policing is controversial. On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    Untitled50_1.jpg
  • Hundreds of Haitians pray at The Church of God, Rue de Centre 3, during the Sunday service ( 07/02/10) The church was damaged during the earthquake with  many  of the choir singers entombed. Sylvie Selde remembers "The entire group of singers practising were killed. We are still recovering the bodies now, only nine so far. When we recover them we take them to the mass grave or dig a hole and put them in. This is a message from  God, a  judgement,  do the right thing. Stop being wicked".  Many believe that in Port Au Prince one Haitian Alex K Juste is more positive "That day, there was no rich, no poor, no colour, no prejudice, no racism. We were equal, they knew that God existed and their hands were up in the air praising the Lord. We held hands, we cared for each other, we supported the sick.  What a beautiful thing to see us Haitians reunited, together as one".
    Untitled49_1.jpg
  • Francy,  morgue attendant, Central Hospital Port Au Prince, with colleague. Francy has worked at the morgue all his life, "The bodies don't bother me, not even when there were thousands here. Why should they? They are all my brothers and sisters."
    Haiti_24_1.jpg
  • On Tuesday 12th of January at 16.53pm local time the biggest Earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years struck with devastating force. 230,000 people were killed, 300,000 injured and 1.2 million left needing emergency shelter. Survivors have lost family, homes, livelihoods and essential services. Hospitals, schools and government buildings were also destroyed'. These pictures are of the survivors three weeks later.
    Haiti_22_1.jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_B__0...jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_B__0...jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_B__0...jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_A_02...jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_B__0...jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_B__0...jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_B__0...jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_B__0...jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_B__0...jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_B__0...jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_B__0...jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_A_07...jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_A_06...jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_A_06...jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_A_06...jpg
  • Women’s March on London to coincide with the first day of Donald Trump’s Presidency on January 21st 2017 in London, United Kingdom. Women-led marches, welcoming all participants, took place across the world, as people of all genders marched in London as part of an international day of action in solidarity. The march, was for the protection of fundamental rights and for the safeguarding of freedoms threatened by recent political events. Thousands of demonstrators united together for the dignity and equality of all peoples, for the safety and health of our planet and for the strength of our vibrant and diverse communities and against politics of fear.
    20170121_womens march on london_A_06...jpg
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