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  • Landmine victims pllay music for money outside the entrance to Preah Khan. Preah Khan was built and used by Jayavarman VII. Living there while Angkor Thom was being reconstructed. Once having the role of monastery and university to many thousands, it then became an inter-denominational temple for Buddha, Shiva and Vishnu and the main deity Lokesvara (plus another 282 gods). Today it is in a state of semi-collapse, lichen and moss covered, and with the jungle trees encroaching it's walls.
    2006-11-05_Amputees Preah Khan_B_1.jpg
  • Landmine victims pllay music for money outside the entrance to Preah Khan. Preah Khan was built and used by Jayavarman VII. Living there while Angkor Thom was being reconstructed. Once having the role of monastery and university to many thousands, it then became an inter-denominational temple for Buddha, Shiva and Vishnu and the main deity Lokesvara (plus another 282 gods). Today it is in a state of semi-collapse, lichen and moss covered, and with the jungle trees encroaching it's walls.
    2006-11-05_Amputees Preah Khan_C_1.jpg
  • Bagram, Afghanistan. Woman walking along a road with red and white stones marking the fact there are landmines.
    af1.jpg
  • Kabul 2001. Woman in a burqa walking past a wall drawing showing different sorts of landmines and other weapons.
    afg6.jpg
  • The shadows of tree branches across the boarded-up entrance of All Hallows, an inner-city church on Copperfield Street, on 30th January 2018, in the south London borough of Southwark, England. All Hallows Church Southwark was designed by George Gilbert Scott Junior and built in 1879-80 in Copperfield Street south of the river. The church suffered bomb damage on two occasions in WW2, in addition to being gutted by a landmine where it remained a relative ruin. It was not until 1957 that any attempt was made to salvage the bombed church, but due to the poor state of the surviving remains, the main structure and northern parts of the building had to be demolished.
    southwark-14-30-01-2018.jpg
  • Xieng Khouang is the most heavily bombed province in Laos the most heavily bombed country, per capita in the world. Unexploded ordnance or UXO are explosive weapons, bombs, bullets, shells, landmines etc that did not explode when they were employed and still pose a risk of detonation. 'Bombies' are the most common form of UXO remaining - approximately 80 million unexploded bombies remained in Laos after the Vietnam War. They cause more accidents than any other type of UXO in Laos. Two year old Hmong boy Kayeng was blinded by a UXO accident whilst playing with his uncles nearby his home in Ban Tong. The photograph shows Kayeng with his grandmother Yee.
    A0012697cc_1_1.jpg
  • Xieng Khouang is the most heavily bombed province in Laos, the most heavily bombed country, per capita in the world. Unexploded ordnance or UXO are explosive weapons, bombs, bullets, shells, landmines etc that did not explode when they were employed and still pose a risk of detonation. 'Bombies' are the most common form of UXO remaining - approximately 80 million unexploded bombies remained in Laos after the Vietnam War. They cause more accidents than any other type of UXO in Laos.
    UXO Montage 50mb_1_1.jpg
  • Xieng Khouang is the most heavily bombed province in Lao PDR, the most heavily bombed country, per capita in the world. Unexploded ordnance or UXO are explosive weapons, bombs, bullets, shells, landmines etc that did not explode when they were employed and still pose a risk of detonation. Children play in home in front of several large bombs which may or may not be safe.
    A0012561cc_1_1.jpg
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