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  • People gather in Trafalgar Square where free food is being given out for people in need under coronavirus lockdown on 1st July 2020 in London, England, United Kingdom. As the July deadline approaces and government will relax its lockdown rules further, the central London remains very quiet, while some non-essential shops are allowed to open with individual shops setting up social distancing systems.
    20200701_coronavirus free food_002.jpg
  • People gather in Trafalgar Square where free food is being given out for people in need under coronavirus lockdown on 1st July 2020 in London, England, United Kingdom. As the July deadline approaces and government will relax its lockdown rules further, the central London remains very quiet, while some non-essential shops are allowed to open with individual shops setting up social distancing systems.
    20200701_coronavirus free food_001.jpg
  • People gather in Trafalgar Square where free food is being given out for people in need under coronavirus lockdown on 1st July 2020 in London, England, United Kingdom. As the July deadline approaces and government will relax its lockdown rules further, the central London remains very quiet, while some non-essential shops are allowed to open with individual shops setting up social distancing systems.
    20200701_coronavirus free food_002.jpg
  • People gather in Trafalgar Square where free food is being given out for people in need under coronavirus lockdown on 1st July 2020 in London, England, United Kingdom. As the July deadline approaces and government will relax its lockdown rules further, the central London remains very quiet, while some non-essential shops are allowed to open with individual shops setting up social distancing systems.
    20200701_coronavirus free food_001.jpg
  • Two Georgian men play cards while waiting for passing trade during an outdoor yard sale in an Atlanta suburb. The male friends sit on old chairs at a table surrounded by furniture from a nearby home. Chairs, units, cabinets, sofa seats, and music centres sit on the ground on which autumn leaves still lie on roadside grass. Perhaps out of economic necessity or merely to clear space in someone's home, the possessions need to be sold to passers-by, drivers on a road in this suburb of Atlanta, Georgia.
    atlanta_yard_sale-05-11-1995_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
  • Two businessmen pass-by a slogan about the future of the aviation industry written on a red hoarding at Britain's Farnborough Air Show, Hampshire, England. "What aviation needs is a giant leap forward" it says on a deep red background, next to a door that has also been covered in the primary colour. A pole vaulter is about to leap across the picture to prove the giant momentum needed to spring aviation into the future. The Air Show is one of Europe's premier aviation show events, attracting global companies selling aerospace equipment and enthusiasts who watch daily flying displays. It is seen as a thermometer for current innovation and future trends.
    farnborough_air_show16-14-07-2008_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_82_1.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
  • 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 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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 banner on the balcony of a flat in Bowater House on the Golden Lane Estate protests about the 10-storey luxury apartment development called The Denizen, a controversial building by Taylor Wimpey that locals say will dominate their view and block their daylight, on 30th October 2017, in London, England. Residents on the Estate have erected banners by artists Jeremy Deller and Elizabeth Price to picket the developers. Despite this, Wimpey say, We are one of the UKs largest residential developers. As a responsible developer we are committed to working with local people and communities.
    denizen_protest-09-30-10-2017.jpg
  • Below an effigy of Christ on the cross is a banner asking passers-by if theyre thinking about joining the Catholic faith in south London, on 21st September 2016, in Waterloo, SE1, London borough of Southwark, England UK.
    catholic_church-05-21-09-2016.jpg
  • With a blindfolded trainer, a young Labrador dog learns how to negotiate obstructions and hazards as part of its training as a guide dog. There are around 5,000 working guide dogs in the UK today, though the Guide Dogs charity cares for around 8,000 dogs, including breeding stock, puppies, dogs in training and retired dogs. Before the young dog is allowed out into the real streets outside it must prove its natural ability to take its unsighted owner safely along a series of obstructive objects.
    guide_dog01-09-06-1997_1.jpg
  • Wearing darkened glasses, unsighted Tim Gutteridge walks along a suburban pavement near to The Guide Dogs for the Blind Association's offices in Reading, England with Lewis, a one year-old Labrador Retriever who has been groomed to become a guide dog. Tim is hoping to forge a strong relationship with his new-found companion who confidently leads the way along the path anticipating and avoiding obstacles and dangers. Animals like Lewis don't start learning with a guide dog trainer until they are 12-15 months old. There are around 5,000 working guide dogs in the UK today, though the Guide Dogs charity care for around 8,000 dogs, including breeding stock, puppies, dogs in training and retired dogs.
    guide_dog02-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • Wearing darkened glasses, unsighted Tim Gutteridge stands outside The Guide Dogs for the Blind Association's offices in Reading, England with Lewis, a one year-old Labrador Retriever who has been groomed to become a guide dog. Tim is hoping to forge a strong relationship with his new-found companion whose job is to confidently leads the way anticipating and avoiding obstacles and dangers. Animals like Lewis don't start learning with a guide dog trainer until they are 12-15 months old. There are around 5,000 working guide dogs in the UK today, though the Guide Dogs charity care for around 8,000 dogs, including breeding stock, puppies, dogs in training and retired dogs. A sign in bright yellow says 'Please don't distract me I'm working.'
    guide_dog01-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • An exhausted father lays on the family sofa, snuggled up with his infant child who also slumbers on his chest. He has been reading a yellow-covered copy of the Don de Lillo novel, Libra. In the background, the wife and mother can be seen having some sort of personal crisis while the man looks very chilled out and probably  pleased to have the chance to read, snooze and have his sleeping child to comfort. It is a scene of role-reversal as the male of the family is the one left holding the baby, a scene of a modern family as opposed to the traditional Victorian or Edwardian gender.
    fatherhood-20-03-2001_1.jpg
  • An unidentified father in the act of pouring coffee from a cafetiere into two metallic silver mugs in while holding his sleeping baby son in his London kitchen. The unconscious child is a few months old and the parent stands expertly holding both hot liquid and infant as if juggling pleasure and parenthood simultaneously. The sleeping child is limp in the father's arm and is dressed in the same scarlet red as the vibrant colour on the wall behind. We only see the man's upper-legs and torso but the baby is tiny against his body making the scale of both young and old. otherwise, the generic room is bare of decoration or possessions - only a drying cloth and chopping board is seen on the draining board, near plain white tiles.
    children20-30-08-2007_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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • An English caucasian lady smiles at something of interest to the viewer's right. She is a wrinkled female in her sixties, a healthy person with her own original teeth and whose untidy hair is greying and whose skin is slightly tanned under a summer sun. She wears a blue shirt with a wide collar, fashionable in the 1980s (eighties) and has a bemused, attentive expression as if entertained by something of humour out of frame. This is someone's mother and grandmother, at an age when her hard-working life is nearly over and her pension is hopefully covering her everyday needs.
    granny01_1.jpg
  • Monir,9 years old, father Sorif. Monir has multiple disability. They live in a shack behind a rickshaw holding place with mother Morshda and little sister Mim and brother Muktar. CSID provides Monir with therapy twice/week, his chair and in the past several eye operations for Muktar.
    IMG_3836_1.jpg
  • Detail of a City of Westminster sign describing this illustrious address in a wealthy part of London - Eaton Square. A single Doric column is seen lower-right and slightly discoloured paintwork from wet English weather is on the edge of the balcony of an otherwise exclusive and classically-designed street in Belgravia. Eaton Square is one of London's three garden squares built by Thomas Cubitt and the Grosvenor family when they developed the main part of Belgravia from 1826 until 1855. Belgravia attracts actors, politicians, ambassadors, big-budget bankers, traders and Prime Ministers like Neville Chamberlain and Stanley Baldwin at number 93.
    belgravia018-26-04-2008_1.jpg
  • Monir,9 years old, father Sorif and Muktar, 15. Muktar is visually impaired and Monir has multiple disability. Muktar is fantastic at English and when he grows up he is going to be a doctor. they live in a shack behind a rickshaw holding place with mother Morshda and little sister Mim.  CSID provides Monir with therapy twice/week, his chair and in the past several eye operations for Muktar.
    IMG_3871_1.jpg
  • Monir,9 years old, father Sorif and Muktar. Monir has multiple disabilities and Muktar a poor eye. They live in a shack behind a rickshaw holding place with mother Morshda and little sister Mim. CSID provides Monir with therapy twice/week, his chair and in the past several eye operations for Muktar.
    IMG_3848_1.jpg
  • A member of staff cleaning a donated secondhand fridge freezer ready to pass onto someone in need. Longton Community Church work to improve the lives of those in need in their local community, Leyland, Lancashire.
    UK-Charity-volunteer-8193.jpg
  • We see the head and shoulders of a man in military uniform who stands motionless beside the American flag.  he is at a graduation ceremony for United States Air Force pilots who have just passed a week-long survival courseheld at the Fairchild Air Force Base, Spokane, Washington. Its highy-trained personel conducts a survival, escape and evasion course which combat pilots and air crew need to pass before rejoining their units for real-time warfare. Conducted, in hangars and the surrounding forests, it forms part of an extensive physical and psychological assessment of young aviators on active service. In the future any one of them may be shot down behind enemy lines and need to use the lessons passed-on here to help facilitate their rescue by US forces. One pilot who passed this course in 1991, himself a Spokane-born boy, was F-16 pilot Scott O'Grady. He put his skills learned here to the test while evading Serb forces before being airlifted to safety and a hero's Presidential welcome.
    RB-0164.jpg
  • A close-up portrait of a young man in his mid-twenties street portrait with moustache. With deep blue eyes and very blonde hair, the man has the look of a Nordic or north European of Viking descent - an almost Aryan specimen. His moustacge is otherwise untrimmed and is in need of a clipping. He also has gathering stubble on his chin as he stands in a matching blue doorway. A close-up portrait of a young man in his mid-twenties street portrait with moustache. With deep blue eyes and very blonde hair, the man has the look of a Nordic or north European of Viking descent - an almost Aryan specimen. His moustache is otherwise untrimmed and is in need of a clipping. He also has gathering stubble on his chin as he stands in a matching blue doorway.
    moustache_men122-28-May-2011.jpg
  • A close-up portrait of a young man in his mid-twenties street portrait with moustache. With deep blue eyes and very blonde hair, the man has the look of a Nordic or north European of Viking descent - an almost Aryan specimen. His moustacge is otherwise untrimmed and is in need of a clipping. He also has gathering stubble on his chin as he stands in a matching blue doorway. A close-up portrait of a young man in his mid-twenties street portrait with moustache. With deep blue eyes and very blonde hair, the man has the look of a Nordic or north European of Viking descent - an almost Aryan specimen. His moustache is otherwise untrimmed and is in need of a clipping. He also has gathering stubble on his chin as he stands in a matching blue doorway.
    moustache_men117-28-May-2011-2.jpg
  • The flight-deck crew of a Sri Lankan Airlines A340-300 series Airbus - registration number 4R-ADE - perform a series of pre-flight checks before a scheduled departure, while on the apron at Malé international airport in the Republic of the Maldives. Featuring electronic instruments it is known as a 'glass cockpit' and using a printed checklist manual, they methodically work through dozens of complex systems that require accurate input before the aircraft is ready for take off. Flight navigation computers, fuel and engine settings and radio frequencies all need programming by the two pilots, the captain on the left and the First Officer on the right. These modern airliners have only two pilots in a modern flight-deck as technology superceeded the need for a third member, the flight-engineers of a previous era of aviation.
    maldives452-15-11-2007.jpg
  • Two film crews record a USAF United States Air Force aviator, in training during week-long survival course held at the Fairchild Air Force Base, Spokane, Washington, on 6th August 1995, in Spokane, Washington, USA. The course is aimed at highy-trained personnel conducting a survival, escape and evasion course which combat pilots and air crew need to pass before rejoining their units for real-time warfare. Held in hangars and the surrounding forests, it forms part of an extensive physical and psychological assessment of young aviators on active service. In the future any one of them may be shot down behind enemy lines and need to use the lessons passed-on here to help facilitate their rescue by US forces. One pilot who passed this course in 1991, himself a Spokane-born boy, was F-16 pilot Scott OGrady. He put his skills learned here to the test while evading Serb forces before being airlifted to safety and a heros Presidential welcome.
    USAF_media-04-01-2020.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. Three people wearing pink pussy hats hold a placard saying Womens Rights shouldnt be something we need to march for.
    iwd_5874_1.jpg
  • In pouring rain, United States Air Force pilots stand like canmouflaged statues in the undergrowth near Fairchild Air Force Base, Spokane, Washington. They are listening to a USAF survival instructor giving them advice about another challenge they are about to face, a few hundred yards ahead in the woods, so they listen intently in the saturatedconditions. They stand motionless, green figures in a green maze of foliage, wearing waterproof cagoules covering their backpacks which are shiny as the rain trickles down. They look like hunchbacks of the forest. The week-long survival course is held at the military facilities around Fairchild where the Air Force conducts a survival, escape and evasion course which combat pilots need to pass before rejoining their units for real-time warfare. This part of the lecture is held in the forest and forms part of an extensive physical and psychological assessment for young aviators on active service. In the future any one of them may be shot down behind enemy lines and need to use the lessons passed-on here to help facilitate their rescue by US forces. One pilot who passed this course in 1991, himself a Spokane-born boy, was F-16 pilot Scott O'Grady. He put his skills learned here to the test while evading Serb forces before being airlifted to safety and a hero's Presidential welcome.
    RB-0163.jpg
  • A close-up portrait of an elderly man in his seventies street portrait with moustache. The man has stubble on his chin and his mostache is also untidy, in need of a trim and his white hair spills across his balding forehead and on to his glasses frames. A close-up portrait of an elderly man in his seventies street portrait with moustache. The man has stubble on his chin and his moustache is also untidy, in need of a trim and his white hair spills across his balding forehead and on to his glasses frames.
    moustache_men94-28-May-2011-2.jpg
  • Asian Dub Foundation on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue in London to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_6729_1.jpg
  • An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_6623_1.jpg
  • An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_6529_1.jpg
  • Asian Dub Foundation on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue in London to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_6398_1.jpg
  • Asian Dub Foundation on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue in London to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_6100_1.jpg
  • An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_6051_1.jpg
  • An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5747_1.jpg
  • Alabama 3 pays tribute to Bob Crow, leader of the RMT Union who passed away a few days prior. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco in London venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5691_1.jpg
  • Alabama 3 on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5638_1.jpg
  • Alabama 3 on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5611_1.jpg
  • Alabama 3 on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue in London to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5584_1.jpg
  • Alabama 3 on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue in London to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5511_1.jpg
  • Children play football on the roof of the CINI halfway house in Calcutta, India.<br />
Child In Need Institute (CINI) run halfway houses for vulnerable street children from as young as 5 years old with the aim of reconnecting the children with their families.
    09-cini-6929.jpg
  • A sick child has his chest examined by the doctor in the CINI health clinic. Child In Need Institute (CINI) is based in Kolkata, India. It is a non-governmental organisation (NGO), which provides sustainable development in health, nutrition, education and security for the poorest communities in West Bengal, Jharkhand, Chattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh states.
    09-cini-6700.jpg
  • Sister Krishna Mondal writes in the patient’s medical notes. She is the senior nurse who manages the CINI emergency ward. Child In Need Institute (CINI) is based in Kolkata, India. It is a non-governmental organisation (NGO), which provides sustainable development in health, nutrition, education and security for the poorest communities in West Bengal, Jharkhand, Chattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh states.
    09-cini-6592.jpg
  • An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_6661_1.jpg
  • An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_6451_1.jpg
  • An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_6348_1.jpg
  • An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_6243_1.jpg
  • An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5862_1.jpg
  • An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5805_1.jpg
  • An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco in London venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5757_1.jpg
  • An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5753_1.jpg
  • Jamie Kelsey-Fry, one of the organisers of the event.  The event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue in London to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5712_1.jpg
  • Alabama 3 on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5632_1.jpg
  • Alabama 3 on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5616_1.jpg
  • Alabama 3 on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5612_1.jpg
  • Alabama 3 on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5556_1.jpg
  • Alabama 3 on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5545_1.jpg
  • Alabama 3 on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue in London  to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5536_1.jpg
  • Alabama 3 on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue in London to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5501_1.jpg
  • Alabama 3 on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5473_1.jpg
  • Alabama 3 on stage. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5462_1.jpg
  • Louise Somerville Williams from Frack Free Somerset, a grass root orgaisation opposing fracking. An event billed as 'We need to talk about Fracking was held at the Rollerdisco venue in London to raise awareness about fracking. Fracking is a highly controversial method of extracting gas underground. The line-up included Alabama 3 and the Asian Dub Foundation and DJs Gavin Turk and Mark Stewart and Pandit G.
    IMG_5394_1.jpg
  • An adult sexual health group in discussion at the FALDA Unit near Kolkata, India. FALDA is supported by the Child In Need Institute (CINI) and its primary focus is educating youth on HIV, sexual and reproductive health issues.  They work throughout 6 local government regions and cover 65,000 youth through 120 drop in centres.
    09-cini-7191.jpg
  • A female health worker makes a home visit to check on the progress of a mother and her daughter at the CINI Diamond Harbour Centre, near Kolkata, India. <br />
Child In Need Institute (CINI) is a non-government organisation based in Kolkata, India.
    09-cini-7032.jpg
  • Five boys wait for their food at the CINI halfway house in Calcutta, India.<br />
Child In Need Institute (CINI) run halfway houses for vulnerable street children from as young as 5 years old with the aim of reconnecting the children with their families.
    09-cini-6804.jpg
  • A karate class at a CINI halfway house in Calcutta, India.<br />
Child In Need Institute (CINI) run halfway houses for vulnerable street children from as young as 5 years old with the aim of reconnecting the children with their families. There are many fun activities, such as karate, dance and art to support and entertain the children.
    09-cini-6745.jpg
  • A sick child is examined by a doctor in the CINI health clinic while other families wait their turn. Child In Need Institute (CINI) is based in Kolkata, India. It is a non-governmental organisation (NGO), which provides sustainable development in health, nutrition, education and security for the poorest communities in West Bengal, Jharkhand, Chattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh states.
    09-cini-6679.jpg
  • Communal food being prepared on the CINI ward by the mothers of the sick children. The mothers get involved with the daily cooking duties so that they can have some activity other than caring for their child. Child In Need Institute (CINI) is based in Kolkata, India. It is a non-governmental organisation (NGO), which provides sustainable development in health, nutrition, education and security for the poorest communities in West Bengal, Jharkhand, Chattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh states.
    09-cini-6608.jpg
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