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  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9903.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9875.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9788 1.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9673.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9653.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9875 1.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9842.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9834 1.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9825 1.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9816 1.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9737 1.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9653 1.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9863.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9863 1.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9825.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9816.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9788.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9737.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9673 1.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9842 1.jpg
  • Womens Rights / Feminism March on 1st June 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. Thousands of women, joined by some men, marched in central Rio de Janeiro alongside other cities in Brazil, to demand more respect for women and regonition throughout, what is in some ways a macho society. The march was also in reaction to a brutal gang rape last week in Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, where the suspects posted a video of the assault on social media, the events have shocked the country.
    _MG_9834.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    _DSC7651.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    Int_womens_day_pano2.2.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    _DSC7798.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    _DSC7701.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    Int_womens_day_pano1.2.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    _DSC7745.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    _DSC7738.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    _DSC7698.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    _DSC7840.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    _DSC7803.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    _DSC7784.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    _DSC7748.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    _DSC7742.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    _DSC7722.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    _DSC7706.jpg
  • On March 8th 2019 - International Women's Day, tens of thousands of people gathered and marched through the streets of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Their demands are for better women's rights. In a macho society like Brazil, there is still a way to go. Brazil has the fifth highest rate of femicide globally, and abortion is still illegal. These are some of the issues that the feminism movement in Brazil is demanding.
    _DSC7665.jpg
  • Ladies attending the first-ever international Conference on Womens' Challenge in Darfur, gather in a compound belonging to the Governor of North Darfur in Al Fasher (also spelled, Al-Fashir) where the women from remote parts of Sudan gathered to discuss peace and political issues. The Sudanese Women General Union has 27,000 branches all over Sudan, including Darfur. They have representatives in all rural villages, across communities of around 80 tribes and clans. The women of Sudan are wives, mothers, farmers a real force and historically, there have been female leaders.
    sudan068-23-05-2009_1.jpg
  • Darfurian women express the hope of peace when they line-up at Al Fashir airport, Sudan to greet British peer Lord Ahmed of Rotheram who has brought over from the UK, a delegation to attend the first-ever international Conference on Womens' Challenge in Darfur, hosted by the governor in his own compound. The Sudanese Women General Union. The Sudanese Women General Union has 27,000 branches all over Sudan, including Darfur. They have representatives in all rural villages, across communities of around 80 tribes and clans. The women of Sudan are wives, mothers, farmers a real force and historically, there have been female leaders.
    sudan055-23-05-2009_1.jpg
  • Dr Safaa Elagib Adam reads documents on the journey by air to the firstever international Conference on Womens' Challenge in Darfur. Seated in a chartered Russian Antonov aircraft during flight to Al Fasher (also spelled, Al-Fashir) where women from remote parts of Sudan gathered to discuss peace and political issues. The short flight saves her a hazardous five-day drive by road, known for extreme acts of violence by rebels and Janjaweed soldiers. The Sudanese Women General Union has 27,000 branches all over Sudan, including Darfur. They have representatives in all rural villages, across communities of around 80 tribes and clans. The women of Sudan are wives, mothers, farmers a real force and historically, there have been female leaders.
    sudan041-23-05-2009_1.jpg
  • Ladies attending the first-ever international Conference on Womens' Challenge in Darfur, raise their hands in the hope of peace while gathering to hear speeches by the British peer Lord Ahmed and traditional songs by local singers just outside the compound walls belonging to the Governor of North Darfur in Al Fasher (also spelled, Al-Fashir) where the women from remote parts of Sudan gathered to discuss peace and political issues and celebrate Darfurian culture. The Sudanese Women General Union has 27,000 branches all over Sudan, including Darfur. They have representatives in all rural villages, across communities of around 80 tribes and clans. The women of Sudan are wives, mothers, farmers a real force and historically, there have been female leaders.
    sudan142-23-05-2009_1.jpg
  • Ladies attending the first-ever international Conference on Womens' Challenge in Darfur, gather to admire local Darfuri handcrafts on display in a compound belonging to the Governor of North Darfur in Al Fasher (also spelled, Al-Fashir) where the women from remote parts of Sudan gathered to discuss peace and political issues. The Sudanese Women General Union has 27,000 branches all over Sudan, including Darfur. They have representatives in all rural villages, across communities of around 80 tribes and clans. The women of Sudan are wives, mothers, farmers a real force and historically, there have been female leaders.
    sudan091-23-05-2009_1.jpg
  • After a flight from the Sudanese capital Khartoum, British Muslim activist, TV broadcaster and journalist, Yvonne Ridley is greeted by women of Darfur on the tarmac of Al-Fashir airport. She and a delegation hosted by British peer Lord Ahmed, she is here to attend the first-ever international Conference on Womens' Challenge in Darfur, hosted by the governor in his own compound. The Sudanese Women General Union has 27,000 branches all over Sudan, including Darfur. They have representatives in all rural villages, across communities of around 80 tribes and clans. The women of Sudan are wives, mothers, farmers a real force and historically, there have been female leaders.
    sudan047-23-05-2009_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso, a Mo Suo minority girl returns home with a large basket strapped to her back containing the algae from the lake which she will then feed to her animals.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_033_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso  prepares lunch at home amidst hanging corns and posters and photos of the Dalai Lama, in village along the shores of Lugu Lake, northwest Yunnan province.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_022_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso, 22, shares a joke and an intimate moment with her mother Mu Ze Namu, they belong to the Mo Suo minority / tribe from Lugu Lake, northwest Yunnan province.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room
    chilugu_048_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso visits a neighbour and mother of the mayor of the village on Lugu Lake, northwest Yunnan province.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_037_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso feeds algae from Lugu lake to her chickens, donkey, and cows.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_034_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso working in  the family's courtyard with mother and father and a neighbour's child, close to  Lugu lake, northwest Yunnan province.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_028_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso with family have lunch together amid posters of Mao  Zedong and  the Dalai Lama in home close to the shores of Lugu Lake, northwest Yunnan province.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_024-2_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso with a friend, also from the Mo Suo minority visit a Buddhist temple in Yongning town, north west Yunnan Province, close to Tibetan and Sichuan border.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_049_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso, 22,  at home with her parents, Lugu Lake, northwest Yunnan province.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_039_1.jpg
  • Mu Ze Latso a Mo Suo minority,  with friend go shopping for groceries in Yongning town’s market, in northwest Yunnan Province close to Sichuan and Tibetatn border.<br />
<br />
Mo Su people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Su traditions. minority,  with friend go shopping for groceries in Yongning town’s market, in northwest Yunnan Province close to Sichuan and Tibetatn border.<br />
<br />
Mo Su people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walkin
    chilugu_012-2_1.jpg
  • Together with a Mo Suo friend Mu Ze Latso goes down to Lugu Lake to collect  a type of algae / plant which she then feeds to her livestock: hens, ducks,  pigs, cow, etc. northwest Yunnan province.<br />
<br />
Mo Suo people live along LuGu lake, northwest  Yunnan province. Since the population is not big enough, the Chinese government did not assign them as an independent minority. Mo Suo people belongs to the NaXi minority of LiJiang region. Mo Suo people have their own distinctive culture, religion and customs. Most significantly: Mo Suo people do not have a marriage System. Locally, they call their relationships a "walking marriage". <br />
A girl has her ADULT ceremony when she is 14, then she can start to wear the Mo Su costume and the family will give her a room that is called “Flower room”.<br />
Logically, she is allowed to take her boyfriend, since Mo Su family carries on by the mother's name, the son and the daughter stay with mother their whole lifes.<br />
When they are adults, the girl chooses her boyfriend. The boyfriend come to sleep in her room in the evening and leave for his mother's home in the morning. He belongs to his mother's family. She belongs to her mother's family, her children will be taken care of by her family: her mother, uncle, aunts, or sisters and brothers. Her children do not belongs to the boyfriend's family.<br />
Normally, the mother will pass her "power" to her eldest daughter when she is old and thus perpetuate the Mo Suo traditions.
    chilugu_030-2_1.jpg
  • Women with banners at the Bread and Roses Womens March on January 19, 2019 in London, England.  The event was dubbed the Bread and Roses March based on the strikes of the same name by textile workers in Massachusetts in 1912 and Bread and Roses is the title of a poem by American poet James Oppenheim about the strikes.
    20190119_Womens_March_London_VF_11.jpg
  • Bouquets of flowers are left at the bandstand on Clapham Common for murdered woman Sarah Everard on 15th March 2021, in London, United Kingdom. The Clapham Common bandstand was the scene on Saturday for a night-time vigil by London women but was broken up because of government Covid restrictions.
    sarah_everard26-15-03-2021.jpg
  • Bouquets of flowers are left at the bandstand on Clapham Common for murdered woman Sarah Everard on 15th March 2021, in London, United Kingdom. The Clapham Common bandstand was the scene on Saturday for a night-time vigil by London women but was broken up because of government Covid restrictions.
    sarah_everard30-15-03-2021.jpg
  • Bouquets of flowers are left at the bandstand on Clapham Common for murdered woman Sarah Everard on 15th March 2021, in London, United Kingdom. The Clapham Common bandstand was the scene on Saturday for a night-time vigil by London women but was broken up because of government Covid restrictions.
    sarah_everard28-15-03-2021.jpg
  • Bouquets of flowers are left at the bandstand on Clapham Common for murdered woman Sarah Everard on 15th March 2021, in London, United Kingdom. The Clapham Common bandstand was the scene on Saturday for a night-time vigil by London women but was broken up because of government Covid restrictions.
    sarah_everard24-15-03-2021.jpg
  • Bouquets of flowers are left at the bandstand on Clapham Common for murdered woman Sarah Everard on 15th March 2021, in London, United Kingdom. The Clapham Common bandstand was the scene on Saturday for a night-time vigil by London women but was broken up because of government Covid restrictions.
    sarah_everard01-15-03-2021.jpg
  • A woman with a Boris Johnson banner at the Bread and Roses Womens March on January 19, 2019 in London, England.  The event was dubbed the Bread and Roses March based on the strikes of the same name by textile workers in Massachusetts in 1912 and Bread and Roses is the title of a poem by American poet James Oppenheim about the strikes.
    20190119_Womens_March_London_VF_23.jpg
  • Women with banners at the Bread and Roses Womens March on January 19, 2019 in London, England.  The event was dubbed the Bread and Roses March based on the strikes of the same name by textile workers in Massachusetts in 1912 and Bread and Roses is the title of a poem by American poet James Oppenheim about the strikes.
    20190119_Womens_March_London_VF_20.jpg
  • A young child with a homemade banner at the Bread and Roses Womens March on January 19, 2019 in London, England.  The event was dubbed the Bread and Roses March based on the strikes of the same name by textile workers in Massachusetts in 1912 and Bread and Roses is the title of a poem by American poet James Oppenheim about the strikes.
    20190119_Womens_March_London_VF_15.jpg
  • A woman with a WASPI Women Against State Pension Inequality at the Bread and Roses Womens March on January 19, 2019 in London, England.  The event was dubbed the Bread and Roses March based on the strikes of the same name by textile workers in Massachusetts in 1912 and Bread and Roses is the title of a poem by American poet James Oppenheim about the strikes.
    20190119_Womens_March_London_VF_07.jpg
  • Two black women hold a banner at the start of the Bread and Roses Womens March on January 19, 2019 in London, England.  The event was dubbed the Bread and Roses March based on the strikes of the same name by textile workers in Massachusetts in 1912 and Bread and Roses is the title of a poem by American poet James Oppenheim about the strikes.
    20190119_Womens_March_London_VF_03.jpg
  • Women protesters march through central London as part of an international campaign on the first full day of Donald Trumps presidency, on 21st January 2017, in London, England. They marched from the US embassy in Mayfair, to Trafalgar Square for a rally, held in solidarity with a march in Washington and other cities around the world. Organisers say it highlighted womens rights, which they perceive to be under threat from the new US administration. London organisers announced on stage that between 80,000 and 100,000 people - which included both men and women - had taken part in the rally.
    womens_trump_march-30-21-01-2017.jpg
  • Women protesters march through central London as part of an international campaign on the first full day of Donald Trumps presidency, on 21st January 2017, in London, England. They marched from the US embassy in Mayfair, to Trafalgar Square for a rally, held in solidarity with a march in Washington and other cities around the world. Organisers say it highlighted womens rights, which they perceive to be under threat from the new US administration. London organisers announced on stage that between 80,000 and 100,000 people - which included both men and women - had taken part in the rally.
    womens_trump_march-27-21-01-2017.jpg
  • Women protesters march through central London as part of an international campaign on the first full day of Donald Trumps presidency, on 21st January 2017, in London, England. They marched from the US embassy in Mayfair, to Trafalgar Square for a rally, held in solidarity with a march in Washington and other cities around the world. Organisers say it highlighted womens rights, which they perceive to be under threat from the new US administration. London organisers announced on stage that between 80,000 and 100,000 people - which included both men and women - had taken part in the rally.
    womens_trump_march-10-21-01-2017.jpg
  • Women protesters march through central London as part of an international campaign on the first full day of Donald Trumps presidency, on 21st January 2017, in London, England. They marched from the US embassy in Mayfair, to Trafalgar Square for a rally, held in solidarity with a march in Washington and other cities around the world. Organisers say it highlighted womens rights, which they perceive to be under threat from the new US administration. London organisers announced on stage that between 80,000 and 100,000 people - which included both men and women - had taken part in the rally.
    womens_trump_march-06-21-01-2017.jpg
  • On US President Donald Trumps second day of a controversial three-day state visit to the UK, protesters in Handmaids Tale costumes march down Whitehall and voice their opposition to the 45th American President, down Whitehall, on 4th June 2019, in London England.
    trump_protest-47-04-06-2019.jpg
  • Ladies attending the first-ever international Conference on Womens' Challenge in Darfur, gather to dance and sing traditional songs in a compound belonging to the Governor of North Darfur in Al Fasher (also spelled, Al-Fashir) where the women from remote parts of Sudan gathered to discuss peace and political issues. The Sudanese Women General Union has 27,000 branches all over Sudan, including Darfur. They have representatives in all rural villages, across communities of around 80 tribes and clans. The women of Sudan are wives, mothers, farmers a real force and historically, there have been female leaders.
    sudan118-23-05-2009_1_1.jpg
  • Inspired by Swedish teenager Greta Thunberg and organised by Youth Strike 4 Climate, British eco-aware school and college-age pupils protest about Climate Change inaction in Whitehall during their walkout from classes, on 15th March 2019, in Westminster, London England.
    student_climate_protest-29-15-03-201...jpg
  • In the window of a local wool shop is a display of a Pussy Hat, on 22nd April 2017, in Cleeve, North Somerset, England.
    pussyhat_window-02-22-04-2017.jpg
  • A suffragette-style sash has been draped by a womens group across the statue of Francis, Duke of Bedford on International Womens Day, on 8th March 2018, in Russell Square, London, England. According to the group concerned about the poor representation of women commemorations, there are fewer than 3% of non-royal statues in the UK. Francis Russell, 5th Duke of Bedford 1765-1802 was an English aristocrat and Whig politician, responsible for much of the development of central Bloomsbury, London.
    international_womens_day-08-08-03-20...jpg
  • A womens group member drapes a suffragette-style sash across the statue of Francis, Duke of Bedford on International Womens Day, on 8th March 2018, in Russell Square, London, England. According to the group concerned about the poor representation of women commemorations, there are fewer than 3% of non-royal statues in the UK. Francis Russell, 5th Duke of Bedford 1765-1802 was an English aristocrat and Whig politician, responsible for much of the development of central Bloomsbury, London.
    international_womens_day-01-08-03-20...jpg
  • For the second week in a row, thousands of women and men took to the streets of Sao Paulo to protest against far right election candidate Jair Bolsonaro. The protests have been organised by feminist groups, under the name Mulheres contra fascismo / women against facism and mulheres contra Bolsonaro / Women against Bolsonaro. The hastag / banner - elenao is the unified slogan for the campaign, and has gained huge popularity in Brazil during the election run.
    _DSC1487.jpg
  • For the second week in a row, thousands of women and men took to the streets of Sao Paulo to protest against far right election candidate Jair Bolsonaro. The protests have been organised by feminist groups, under the name Mulheres contra fascismo / women against facism and mulheres contra Bolsonaro / Women against Bolsonaro. The hastag / banner - elenao is the unified slogan for the campaign, and has gained huge popularity in Brazil during the election run.
    _DSC1418.jpg
  • For the second week in a row, thousands of women and men took to the streets of Sao Paulo to protest against far right election candidate Jair Bolsonaro. The protests have been organised by feminist groups, under the name Mulheres contra fascismo / women against facism and mulheres contra Bolsonaro / Women against Bolsonaro. The hastag / banner - elenao is the unified slogan for the campaign, and has gained huge popularity in Brazil during the election run.
    _DSC1253.jpg
  • Statue dedicated to the feminist Mary Wollstonecraft on display at Newington Green on 11th of November 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The statue by artist Maggie Hambling has been 10 years in the making and was installed on the 10th of November 2020. The statue has created some controversy and attracted many onlookers and much discussion the day after it first went on display due to the naked nature of the figure. The artist responded saying: 'You can’t be naked enough can you? 'The point is that she has to be naked because clothes define people. We all know that clothes are limiting and she is everywoman.'
    3E9A7948.jpg
  • Statue dedicated to the feminist Mary Wollstonecraft on display at Newington Green on 11th of November 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The statue by artist Maggie Hambling has been 10 years in the making and was installed on the 10th of November 2020. The statue has created some controversy and attracted many onlookers and much discussion the day after it first went on display due to the naked nature of the figure. The artist responded saying: 'You can’t be naked enough can you? 'The point is that she has to be naked because clothes define people. We all know that clothes are limiting and she is everywoman.'
    3E9A7791.jpg
  • March 4th 2017. Thousands of people, mostly women and girls, marched across Tower Bridge in an event organised by Care International to mark International Womens Day March 8th and the need for gender equality. London mayor Sadiq Khan speaks before the event and declares himself a feminist.
    iwd_5996_1.jpg
  • Hundreds of women demonstrate to demand the end of violence by men towards women at the Million Women Rise march on 7th March, 2020 in London, United Kingdom. Many of the protesters wear red clothing to symbolise the blood of women murdered and raped at the hands of male violence.
    CD 07-03-20 Million Women March-5.jpg
  • Bouquets of flowers are left at the bandstand on Clapham Common for murdered woman Sarah Everard on 15th March 2021, in London, United Kingdom. The Clapham Common bandstand was the scene on Saturday for a night-time vigil by London women but was broken up because of government Covid restrictions.
    sarah_everard33-15-03-2021.jpg
  • Bouquets of flowers are left at the bandstand on Clapham Common for murdered woman Sarah Everard on 15th March 2021, in London, United Kingdom. The Clapham Common bandstand was the scene on Saturday for a night-time vigil by London women but was broken up because of government Covid restrictions.
    sarah_everard34-15-03-2021.jpg
  • Bouquets of flowers are left at the bandstand on Clapham Common for murdered woman Sarah Everard on 15th March 2021, in London, United Kingdom. The Clapham Common bandstand was the scene on Saturday for a night-time vigil by London women but was broken up because of government Covid restrictions.
    sarah_everard31-15-03-2021.jpg
  • Bouquets of flowers are left at the bandstand on Clapham Common for murdered woman Sarah Everard on 15th March 2021, in London, United Kingdom. The Clapham Common bandstand was the scene on Saturday for a night-time vigil by London women but was broken up because of government Covid restrictions.
    sarah_everard22-15-03-2021.jpg
  • Bouquets of flowers are left at the bandstand on Clapham Common for murdered woman Sarah Everard on 15th March 2021, in London, United Kingdom. The Clapham Common bandstand was the scene on Saturday for a night-time vigil by London women but was broken up because of government Covid restrictions.
    sarah_everard20-15-03-2021.jpg
  • Bouquets of flowers are left at the bandstand on Clapham Common for murdered woman Sarah Everard on 15th March 2021, in London, United Kingdom. The Clapham Common bandstand was the scene on Saturday for a night-time vigil by London women but was broken up because of government Covid restrictions.
    sarah_everard14-15-03-2021.jpg
  • Bouquets of flowers are left at the bandstand on Clapham Common for murdered woman Sarah Everard on 15th March 2021, in London, United Kingdom. The Clapham Common bandstand was the scene on Saturday for a night-time vigil by London women but was broken up because of government Covid restrictions.
    sarah_everard11-15-03-2021.jpg
  • Bouquets of flowers are left at the bandstand on Clapham Common for murdered woman Sarah Everard on 15th March 2021, in London, United Kingdom. The Clapham Common bandstand was the scene on Saturday for a night-time vigil by London women but was broken up because of government Covid restrictions.
    sarah_everard10-15-03-2021.jpg
  • Bouquets of flowers are left at the bandstand on Clapham Common for murdered woman Sarah Everard on 15th March 2021, in London, United Kingdom. The Clapham Common bandstand was the scene on Saturday for a night-time vigil by London women but was broken up because of government Covid restrictions.
    sarah_everard05-15-03-2021.jpg
  • Women with banners at the Bread and Roses Womens March on January 19, 2019 in London, England.  The event was dubbed the Bread and Roses March based on the strikes of the same name by textile workers in Massachusetts in 1912 and Bread and Roses is the title of a poem by American poet James Oppenheim about the strikes.
    20190119_Womens_March_London_VF_33.jpg
  • Women with banners at the Bread and Roses Womens March on January 19, 2019 in London, England.  The event was dubbed the Bread and Roses March based on the strikes of the same name by textile workers in Massachusetts in 1912 and Bread and Roses is the title of a poem by American poet James Oppenheim about the strikes.
    20190119_Womens_March_London_VF_32.jpg
  • Women with banners at the Bread and Roses Womens March on January 19, 2019 in London, England.  The event was dubbed the Bread and Roses March based on the strikes of the same name by textile workers in Massachusetts in 1912 and Bread and Roses is the title of a poem by American poet James Oppenheim about the strikes.
    20190119_Womens_March_London_VF_30.jpg
  • Women with banners at the Bread and Roses Womens March on January 19, 2019 in London, England.  The event was dubbed the Bread and Roses March based on the strikes of the same name by textile workers in Massachusetts in 1912 and Bread and Roses is the title of a poem by American poet James Oppenheim about the strikes.
    20190119_Womens_March_London_VF_28.jpg
  • Women with banners at the Bread and Roses Womens March on January 19, 2019 in London, England.  The event was dubbed the Bread and Roses March based on the strikes of the same name by textile workers in Massachusetts in 1912 and Bread and Roses is the title of a poem by American poet James Oppenheim about the strikes.
    20190119_Womens_March_London_VF_27.jpg
  • Women with banners at the Bread and Roses Womens March on January 19, 2019 in London, England.  The event was dubbed the Bread and Roses March based on the strikes of the same name by textile workers in Massachusetts in 1912 and Bread and Roses is the title of a poem by American poet James Oppenheim about the strikes.
    20190119_Womens_March_London_VF_26.jpg
  • Women with banners at the Bread and Roses Womens March on January 19, 2019 in London, England.  The event was dubbed the Bread and Roses March based on the strikes of the same name by textile workers in Massachusetts in 1912 and Bread and Roses is the title of a poem by American poet James Oppenheim about the strikes.
    20190119_Womens_March_London_VF_22.jpg
  • Women with banners at the Bread and Roses Womens March on January 19, 2019 in London, England.  The event was dubbed the Bread and Roses March based on the strikes of the same name by textile workers in Massachusetts in 1912 and Bread and Roses is the title of a poem by American poet James Oppenheim about the strikes.
    20190119_Womens_March_London_VF_19.jpg
  • Women with banners at the Bread and Roses Womens March on January 19, 2019 in London, England.  The event was dubbed the Bread and Roses March based on the strikes of the same name by textile workers in Massachusetts in 1912 and Bread and Roses is the title of a poem by American poet James Oppenheim about the strikes.
    20190119_Womens_March_London_VF_16.jpg
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