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  • A customized caravan sits in the damp woods at the Faslane Peace Camp, Argyll and Bute, Scotland. Matt Bury, 52, is one of the camp's 10 full time residents and has been living in this trailer for a year. Painted harlequin-styled diamonds adorn the walls of the van in a personal artistic statement. Calor gas bottles lie on the ground and weeds grow around this semi-permanent site. Faslane Peace Camp is a makeshift political activists' site alongside HM Naval Base Clyde where Trident nuclear deterrent missiles and Vanhuard Class submarines dock. The camp has been occupied continuously, in a few different locations since 12 June 1982. Image taken for the 'UK at Home' book project published 2008.
    9999-RPB59-peace_camp02-30-09-2007_1.jpg
  • A cross made from English oak rises up into threatening grey English skies. With splits in its vertical and horizontal beams, the word Peace is written in lettering in the centre in an image of Christian values - a message for mankind, of humanity and goodwill to all Men. The wood is from the royal estate of Sandringham in Norfolk, presented in August 1987 by Queen Elizabeth II to mark the site of the high altar of the former St Benet's Abbey near Ludham on the Norfolk Broads.
    peace_cross04-02-08-2013_1.jpg
  • A cross made from English oak rises up into threatening grey English skies. With splits in its vertical and horizontal beams, the word Peace is written in lettering in the centre in an image of Christian values - a message for mankind, of humanity and goodwill to all Men. The wood is from the royal estate of Sandringham in Norfolk, presented in August 1987 by Queen Elizabeth II to mark the site of the high altar of the former St Benet's Abbey near Ludham on the Norfolk Broads.
    peace_cross01-02-08-2013_1.jpg
  • Buddhist Peace Pagoda in Battersea Park, South West London. This shrine / monument has gold Buddhas at each of it's facades.
    20090827Battersea Peace PagodaE.jpg
  • Buddhist Peace Pagoda in Battersea Park, South West London. This shrine / monument has gold Buddhas at each of it's facades.
    20090827Battersea Peace PagodaK.jpg
  • Buddhist Peace Pagoda in Battersea Park, South West London. This shrine / monument has gold Buddhas at each of it's facades.
    20090827Battersea Peace PagodaJ.jpg
  • Buddhist Peace Pagoda in Battersea Park, South West London. This shrine / monument has gold Buddhas at each of it's facades.
    20090827Battersea Peace PagodaI.jpg
  • Buddhist Peace Pagoda in Battersea Park, South West London. This shrine / monument has gold Buddhas at each of it's facades.
    20090827Battersea Peace PagodaH.jpg
  • Buddhist Peace Pagoda in Battersea Park, South West London. This shrine / monument has gold Buddhas at each of it's facades.
    20090827Battersea Peace PagodaG.jpg
  • Buddhist Peace Pagoda in Battersea Park, South West London. This shrine / monument has gold Buddhas at each of it's facades.
    20090827Battersea Peace PagodaF.jpg
  • Buddhist Peace Pagoda in Battersea Park, South West London. This shrine / monument has gold Buddhas at each of it's facades.
    20090827Battersea Peace PagodaD.jpg
  • Buddhist Peace Pagoda in Battersea Park, South West London. This shrine / monument has gold Buddhas at each of it's facades.
    20090827Battersea Peace PagodaC.jpg
  • Buddhist Peace Pagoda in Battersea Park, South West London. This shrine / monument has gold Buddhas at each of it's facades.
    20090827Battersea Peace PagodaA.jpg
  • Buddhist Peace Pagoda in Battersea Park, South West London. This shrine / monument has gold Buddhas at each of it's facades.
    20090827Battersea Peace PagodaB.jpg
  • David Reynolds (aka Eco) is a long-term activist, campaigner in the peace movement and resident of the Faslane Peace Camp, Scotland. His home of three years is called the Earth Shack and is largely re-cycled from scrap and garbage found locally on rubbish tips. Eco leans against his garden fence holding a mug of coffee this chilly Sunday morning. Signs of his political beliefs adorn the place: CND logos and Peace on Earth statements. His mother was a ‘Carnie’ (after the word Carnival, someone working on the fairgrounds) so perhaps it’s from her that he more enjoys an alternative outdoor camping lifestyle after a few years in the army. Faslane Peace Camp is a makeshift site alongside Faslane Naval base where Trident nuclear deterrent missiles and submarines dock. The camp has been occupied continuously, in a few different locations, since 1982.
    9999-RPB59-eco10-30-09-2007_1.jpg
  • Buddhist Peace Pagoda in Battersea Park on 1st February 2020 in London, England, United Kingdom. At a time when the fear of nuclear attack appeared to be escalating the offer of a Peace Pagoda to promote world peace and harmony the pagoda was offered to the people of London by the Nipponzan Myohoji Buddhist Order as part of the 1984 Greater London Council GLC Peace Year.
    20200201_battersea pagoda_002.jpg
  • Buddhist Peace Pagoda in Battersea Park on 1st February 2020 in London, England, United Kingdom. At a time when the fear of nuclear attack appeared to be escalating the offer of a Peace Pagoda to promote world peace and harmony the pagoda was offered to the people of London by the Nipponzan Myohoji Buddhist Order as part of the 1984 Greater London Council GLC Peace Year.
    20200201_battersea pagoda_001.jpg
  • The Irish peace campaigner, Susan McHugh at a local play park, on 16th May 1993, in Dublin, Ireland. Susan McHugh is an Irish peace campaigner who organised rallies in Dublin for peace in Northern Ireland and against the IRA following the bombing in Warrington on March 20, 1992.
    christine_mchugh-16-05-1993.jpg
  • The Irish peace campaigner, Susan McHugh at home, on 16th May 1993, in Dublin, Ireland. Susan McHugh is an Irish peace campaigner who organised rallies in Dublin for peace in Northern Ireland and against the IRA following the bombing in Warrington on March 20, 1992.
    christine_mchugh-16-05-1993_1.jpg
  • Palestinian communitiy and local supporters protest organised by Stop The War agaisnt Donald Trumps deal with Israel, the so called Deal of the century outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms on 1st February 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The official plan is entitled Peace to Prosperity: A Vision to Improve the Lives of the Palestinian and Israeli People. More commonly known as the Trump peace plan, is a proposal by the Trump administration bearing the stated intention of resolving the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.
    20200201_palestine demo_009.jpg
  • Palestinian communitiy and local supporters protest organised by Stop The War agaisnt Donald Trumps deal with Israel, the so called Deal of the century outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms on 1st February 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The official plan is entitled Peace to Prosperity: A Vision to Improve the Lives of the Palestinian and Israeli People. More commonly known as the Trump peace plan, is a proposal by the Trump administration bearing the stated intention of resolving the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.
    20200201_palestine demo_002.jpg
  • Palestinian communitiy and local supporters protest organised by Stop The War agaisnt Donald Trumps deal with Israel, the so called Deal of the century outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms on 1st February 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The official plan is entitled Peace to Prosperity: A Vision to Improve the Lives of the Palestinian and Israeli People. More commonly known as the Trump peace plan, is a proposal by the Trump administration bearing the stated intention of resolving the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.
    20200201_palestine demo_001.jpg
  • Palestinian communitiy and local supporters protest organised by Stop The War agaisnt Donald Trumps deal with Israel, the so called Deal of the century outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms on 1st February 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The official plan is entitled Peace to Prosperity: A Vision to Improve the Lives of the Palestinian and Israeli People. More commonly known as the Trump peace plan, is a proposal by the Trump administration bearing the stated intention of resolving the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.
    20200201_palestine demo_010.jpg
  • Palestinian communitiy and local supporters protest organised by Stop The War agaisnt Donald Trumps deal with Israel, the so called Deal of the century outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms on 1st February 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The official plan is entitled Peace to Prosperity: A Vision to Improve the Lives of the Palestinian and Israeli People. More commonly known as the Trump peace plan, is a proposal by the Trump administration bearing the stated intention of resolving the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.
    20200201_palestine demo_006.jpg
  • Palestinian communitiy and local supporters protest organised by Stop The War agaisnt Donald Trumps deal with Israel, the so called Deal of the century outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms on 1st February 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The official plan is entitled Peace to Prosperity: A Vision to Improve the Lives of the Palestinian and Israeli People. More commonly known as the Trump peace plan, is a proposal by the Trump administration bearing the stated intention of resolving the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.
    20200201_palestine demo_007.jpg
  • Palestinian communitiy and local supporters protest organised by Stop The War agaisnt Donald Trumps deal with Israel, the so called Deal of the century outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms on 1st February 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The official plan is entitled Peace to Prosperity: A Vision to Improve the Lives of the Palestinian and Israeli People. More commonly known as the Trump peace plan, is a proposal by the Trump administration bearing the stated intention of resolving the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.
    20200201_palestine demo_008.jpg
  • Palestinian communitiy and local supporters protest organised by Stop The War agaisnt Donald Trumps deal with Israel, the so called Deal of the century outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms on 1st February 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The official plan is entitled Peace to Prosperity: A Vision to Improve the Lives of the Palestinian and Israeli People. More commonly known as the Trump peace plan, is a proposal by the Trump administration bearing the stated intention of resolving the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.
    20200201_palestine demo_005.jpg
  • Palestinian communitiy and local supporters protest organised by Stop The War agaisnt Donald Trumps deal with Israel, the so called Deal of the century outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms on 1st February 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The official plan is entitled Peace to Prosperity: A Vision to Improve the Lives of the Palestinian and Israeli People. More commonly known as the Trump peace plan, is a proposal by the Trump administration bearing the stated intention of resolving the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.
    20200201_palestine demo_003.jpg
  • Palestinian communitiy and local supporters protest organised by Stop The War agaisnt Donald Trumps deal with Israel, the so called Deal of the century outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms on 1st February 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The official plan is entitled Peace to Prosperity: A Vision to Improve the Lives of the Palestinian and Israeli People. More commonly known as the Trump peace plan, is a proposal by the Trump administration bearing the stated intention of resolving the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.
    20200201_palestine demo_004.jpg
  • Serb politician Radovan Karadzic at the Yugoslav Peace Conference on 8th August 1992 in London UK. Peace peace-makers attempted to diffuse the Bosnian European conflict. As one of the worlds most wanted men, Karadzic was eventually arrested after 12 years on the run to face charges of genocide and crimes against humanity inflicted on Bosnian Muslim, Bosnian Croat and other non-Serb civilians in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the 1992-95 war, when he was president of the breakaway Republika Srpska. Implicated in the murder of nearly 8,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys in Srebrenica, after the supposedly UN-protected enclave fell to Bosnian Serb forces. The former psychiatrist and aspiring poet was also charged with running death camps for non-Serbs, and the shelling and sniping on civilians in the Bosnian capital, Sarajevo, in a siege that lasted more than three years. UPDATE MARCH 2016 Karadzic was convicted of genocide and war crimes over the 1992-95 war, and sentenced to 40 years in jail. UN judges in The Hague found him guilty of 10 of 11 charges, including genocide over the 1995 Srebrenica massacre.
    radovan_karadzic02-08-08-1992.jpg
  • Hackney August 13th 2011 Peace march after the riots, from Gillett Square to Tottenham Hale. Protesters with anti government placards.
    aug_6499.jpg
  • A Peace Garden pillar in a quiet corner of Dulwich Park, Southwark, south London during mid-winter snow. The column stands vertically surrounded by two Cabbage Palms (cordyline) and trees in this Victorian-designed public space. The words 'May Peace Prevail on Earth' are written along the post, the translation being in Japanese. Dulwich Park is a 29 hectare (72 acre) park in Dulwich in the London Borough of Southwark, south London, England. The initial design was by Charles Barry (junior), later refined by Lt Col J J Sexby (who also designed Battersea and parts of Southwark Parks). It was opened in 1890 by Lord Rosebery. In 2004–6, the park was restored to its original Victorian layout, following a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund.
    dulwich_snow07-21-01-2013_1.jpg
  • Serb politician Radovan Karadzic at the Yugoslav Peace Conference on 8th August 1992 in London UK. Peace peace-makers attempted to diffuse the Bosnian European conflict. As one of the worlds most wanted men, Karadzic was eventually arrested after 12 years on the run to face charges of genocide and crimes against humanity inflicted on Bosnian Muslim, Bosnian Croat and other non-Serb civilians in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the 1992-95 war, when he was president of the breakaway Republika Srpska. Implicated in the murder of nearly 8,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys in Srebrenica, after the supposedly UN-protected enclave fell to Bosnian Serb forces. The former psychiatrist and aspiring poet was also charged with running death camps for non-Serbs, and the shelling and sniping on civilians in the Bosnian capital, Sarajevo, in a siege that lasted more than three years. UPDATE MARCH 2016 Karadzic was convicted of genocide and war crimes over the 1992-95 war, and sentenced to 40 years in jail. UN judges in The Hague found him guilty of 10 of 11 charges, including genocide over the 1995 Srebrenica massacre.
    radovan_karadzic01-08-08-1992.jpg
  • The DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03899.jpg
  • A giant Buddha facing the DMZ Demilitarised Zone signifies the hope for peace between the North and South from the Goseong Unification Observatory on 06th February 2016 in South Korea. Open specially for the 2018 Winter Olympic and Paralympics, the site is also known as the Geumgangsan Observatory, and is a military area normally restricted to the public. Views stretch into North Korea overlooking the Geumgangsan Mountains and the Korean Demilitarised Zone, a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula deciding the two nations. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03793.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A7104.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A7230.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A6987.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A7050.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A6815.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A6785.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A6897.jpg
  • The DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the DMZ Museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03928.jpg
  • Korean propaganda on display at the DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03926.jpg
  • The DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03921.jpg
  • Korean propaganda on display at the DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03922.jpg
  • The DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03910.jpg
  • The DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03901.jpg
  • Display loud speakers at the DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03897.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A7265.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A7070.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A7157.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A7040.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A6935.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A6874.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
  • The DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the DMZ Museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03930.jpg
  • The Big Three photograph from the 1945 Yalta Conference featuring Winston Churchill, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Joseph Stalin. One of many Korean war photos displayed at the DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03909.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A7546.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A6963.jpg
  • A group of 25 peace activists blockaded the front gate of the Russian Embassy in London in protest at the bombing of civilians in east Aleppo on November 3rd 2016 in London, the United Kingdom. Activists from two campaign groups The Syria Campaign and Syria Solidarity UK placed a structure made from white mannequin ‘limbs’ next to the front gate, while two others locked themselves to the gate itself. Others scattered over 800 limbs around the gates, to symbolise the horrific impact of Russia’s use of cluster bombs and other banned weapons in the besieged city. Peace activists John Dunford and Iris Andrews locked themselves to the gates.  No arrests were made.
    AB9A6908.jpg
  • Red knitted poppies for WWI remembrance and for white for peace on 8th November 2020 in Clun, United Kingdom. According the the British Legion: The red poppy is a symbol of both Remembrance and hope for a peaceful future. The poppy is a well-known and well-established symbol, one that carries a wealth of history and meaning with it.
    20201108_knitted poppies_002.jpg
  • Red knitted poppies for WWI remembrance and for white for peace on 8th November 2020 in Clun, United Kingdom. According the the British Legion: The red poppy is a symbol of both Remembrance and hope for a peaceful future. The poppy is a well-known and well-established symbol, one that carries a wealth of history and meaning with it.
    20201108_knitted poppies_001.jpg
  • As a summer sun sets behind evening clouds, there is a moment of peace for a solitary man, silhouetted while seated on bench in the cemetery of the Holy Rude Church in Stirling, Scotland. Taking a while to collect his thoughts, to consider aspects of a troubled life or simply to think spiritual meanings, the man has found tranquillity and inner-strength from this beauty spot, a mound overlooking the headstones and graves of Scottish nobility.
    stirling_cemetery08-30-07-2010-1_1_1.jpg
  • The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, informally known as the National Lynching Memorial, a national memorial to commemorate the victims of lynching in the United States on 3rd March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. These are the caskets waiting to be accepted by each individual county and erected in their soil to not only recognise the victims of lynching but for each community to begin its own local process of acknowledgement and responsibility for the past. Current research shows that 4,084 African Americans were lynched between 1877 and 1950. More than 85% of the lynchings took place in the Southern states.
    _E6A7161.jpg
  • The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, informally known as the National Lynching Memorial, a national memorial to commemorate the victims of lynching in the United States on 3rd March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. The memorial, opened in 2018, features steel monuments dangling like bodies is the brainchild of Bryan Stevenson, who was inspired by the Holocaust memorials in Europe and by the post-Apartheid Truth and Reconciliation process in South Africa.  800 six-foot monuments hang in rows, with each coffin shape representing a county where a racial terror lynching took place. Incorporated into each monument are the names of the racial terror lynching victims and the date of their murder engraved on it. Current research shows that 4,084 African Americans were lynched between 1877 and 1950. More than 85% of the lynchings took place in the Southern states.
    _E6A7103.jpg
  • Private security used in the National Memorial for Peace and Justice, informally known as the National Lynching Memorial, a national memorial to commemorate the victims of lynching in the United States on 3rd March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. Current research shows that 4,084 African Americans were lynched between 1877 and 1950. More than 85% of the lynchings took place in the Southern states.
    _E6A7302.jpg
  • The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, informally known as the National Lynching Memorial, a national memorial to commemorate the victims of lynching in the United States on 3rd March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. These are the caskets waiting to be accepted by each individual county and erected in their soil to not only recognise the victims of lynching but for each community to begin its own local process of acknowledgement and responsibility for the past. Current research shows that 4,084 African Americans were lynched between 1877 and 1950. More than 85% of the lynchings took place in the Southern states.
    _E6A7245.jpg
  • The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, informally known as the National Lynching Memorial, a national memorial to commemorate the victims of lynching in the United States on 3rd March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. The memorial, opened in 2018, features steel monuments dangling like bodies is the brainchild of Bryan Stevenson, who was inspired by the Holocaust memorials in Europe and by the post-Apartheid Truth and Reconciliation process in South Africa.  800 six-foot monuments hang in rows, with each coffin shape representing a county where a racial terror lynching took place. Incorporated into each monument are the names of the racial terror lynching victims and the date of their murder engraved on it. Current research shows that 4,084 African Americans were lynched between 1877 and 1950. More than 85% of the lynchings took place in the Southern states.
    _E6A7231.jpg
  • The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, informally known as the National Lynching Memorial, a national memorial to commemorate the victims of lynching in the United States on 3rd March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. The memorial, opened in 2018, features steel monuments dangling like bodies is the brainchild of Bryan Stevenson, who was inspired by the Holocaust memorials in Europe and by the post-Apartheid Truth and Reconciliation process in South Africa.  800 six-foot monuments hang in rows, with each coffin shape representing a county where a racial terror lynching took place. Incorporated into each monument are the names of the racial terror lynching victims and the date of their murder engraved on it. Current research shows that 4,084 African Americans were lynched between 1877 and 1950. More than 85% of the lynchings took place in the Southern states.
    _E6A7210.jpg
  • The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, informally known as the National Lynching Memorial, a national memorial to commemorate the victims of lynching in the United States on 3rd March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. These are the caskets waiting to be accepted by each individual county and erected in their soil to not only recognise the victims of lynching but for each community to begin its own local process of acknowledgement and responsibility for the past. Current research shows that 4,084 African Americans were lynched between 1877 and 1950. More than 85% of the lynchings took place in the Southern states.
    _E6A7241.jpg
  • The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, informally known as the National Lynching Memorial, a national memorial to commemorate the victims of lynching in the United States on 3rd March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. The memorial, opened in 2018, features steel monuments dangling like bodies is the brainchild of Bryan Stevenson, who was inspired by the Holocaust memorials in Europe and by the post-Apartheid Truth and Reconciliation process in South Africa.  800 six-foot monuments hang in rows, with each coffin shape representing a county where a racial terror lynching took place. Incorporated into each monument are the names of the racial terror lynching victims and the date of their murder engraved on it. Current research shows that 4,084 African Americans were lynched between 1877 and 1950. More than 85% of the lynchings took place in the Southern states.
    _E6A7220.jpg
  • The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, informally known as the National Lynching Memorial, a national memorial to commemorate the victims of lynching in the United States on 3rd March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. These are the caskets waiting to be accepted by each individual county and erected in their soil to not only recognise the victims of lynching but for each community to begin its own local process of acknowledgement and responsibility for the past. Current research shows that 4,084 African Americans were lynched between 1877 and 1950. More than 85% of the lynchings took place in the Southern states.
    _E6A7233.jpg
  • The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, informally known as the National Lynching Memorial, a national memorial to commemorate the victims of lynching in the United States on 3rd March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. The memorial, opened in 2018, features steel monuments dangling like bodies is the brainchild of Bryan Stevenson, who was inspired by the Holocaust memorials in Europe and by the post-Apartheid Truth and Reconciliation process in South Africa.  800 six-foot monuments hang in rows, with each coffin shape representing a county where a racial terror lynching took place. Incorporated into each monument are the names of the racial terror lynching victims and the date of their murder engraved on it. Current research shows that 4,084 African Americans were lynched between 1877 and 1950. More than 85% of the lynchings took place in the Southern states.
    _E6A7219.jpg
  • The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, informally known as the National Lynching Memorial, a national memorial to commemorate the victims of lynching in the United States on 3rd March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. The memorial, opened in 2018, features steel monuments dangling like bodies is the brainchild of Bryan Stevenson, who was inspired by the Holocaust memorials in Europe and by the post-Apartheid Truth and Reconciliation process in South Africa.  800 six-foot monuments hang in rows, with each coffin shape representing a county where a racial terror lynching took place. Incorporated into each monument are the names of the racial terror lynching victims and the date of their murder engraved on it. Current research shows that 4,084 African Americans were lynched between 1877 and 1950. More than 85% of the lynchings took place in the Southern states.
    _E6A7181.jpg
  • The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, informally known as the National Lynching Memorial, a national memorial to commemorate the victims of lynching in the United States on 3rd March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. The memorial, opened in 2018, features steel monuments dangling like bodies is the brainchild of Bryan Stevenson, who was inspired by the Holocaust memorials in Europe and by the post-Apartheid Truth and Reconciliation process in South Africa.  800 six-foot monuments hang in rows, with each coffin shape representing a county where a racial terror lynching took place. Incorporated into each monument are the names of the racial terror lynching victims and the date of their murder engraved on it. Current research shows that 4,084 African Americans were lynched between 1877 and 1950. More than 85% of the lynchings took place in the Southern states.
    _E6A7201.jpg
  • The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, informally known as the National Lynching Memorial, a national memorial to commemorate the victims of lynching in the United States on 3rd March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. The memorial, opened in 2018, features steel monuments dangling like bodies is the brainchild of Bryan Stevenson, who was inspired by the Holocaust memorials in Europe and by the post-Apartheid Truth and Reconciliation process in South Africa.  800 six-foot monuments hang in rows, with each coffin shape representing a county where a racial terror lynching took place. Incorporated into each monument are the names of the racial terror lynching victims and the date of their murder engraved on it. Current research shows that 4,084 African Americans were lynched between 1877 and 1950. More than 85% of the lynchings took place in the Southern states.
    _E6A7098.jpg
  • The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, informally known as the National Lynching Memorial, a national memorial to commemorate the victims of lynching in the United States on 3rd March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. The memorial, opened in 2018, features steel monuments dangling like bodies is the brainchild of Bryan Stevenson, who was inspired by the Holocaust memorials in Europe and by the post-Apartheid Truth and Reconciliation process in South Africa.  800 six-foot monuments hang in rows, with each coffin shape representing a county where a racial terror lynching took place. Incorporated into each monument are the names of the racial terror lynching victims and the date of their murder engraved on it. Current research shows that 4,084 African Americans were lynched between 1877 and 1950. More than 85% of the lynchings took place in the Southern states.
    _E6A7087.jpg
  • The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, informally known as the National Lynching Memorial, a national memorial to commemorate the victims of lynching in the United States on 3rd March 2020 in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. The memorial, opened in 2018, features steel monuments dangling like bodies is the brainchild of Bryan Stevenson, who was inspired by the Holocaust memorials in Europe and by the post-Apartheid Truth and Reconciliation process in South Africa.  800 six-foot monuments hang in rows, with each coffin shape representing a county where a racial terror lynching took place. Incorporated into each monument are the names of the racial terror lynching victims and the date of their murder engraved on it. Current research shows that 4,084 African Americans were lynched between 1877 and 1950. More than 85% of the lynchings took place in the Southern states.
    _E6A7072.jpg
  • Views into North Korea and the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from the Goseong Unification Observatory on 06th February 2016 in South Korea. Open specially for the 2018 Winter Olympic and Paralympics, the site is also known as the Geumgangsan Observatory, and is a military area normally restricted to the public. Views stretch into North Korea overlooking the Geumgangsan Mountains and the Korean Demilitarised Zone, a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula deciding the two nations. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03796.jpg
  • Sign reads Peace Be at St Bartholomew church in Wanborough, Surrey, UK. Originally a Saxon church, it was rebuilt in the 12th century and is a beautiful and simple chapel originally built for the monks of Waverley Abbey. It now serves the rural parish of Wanborough, as part of the United Parish of Seale, Puttenham and Wanborough.
    20140421_st bartholomews churchC.jpg
  • The Old Jazz Band playing at the Peace Hotel in Shanghai, China on 15 November, 2013. Built originally as the Cathay Hotel by Sir Victor Sassoon in the early 20th century, the hotel is now operated by Canada's Fairmont Hotels and Resorts but still has a commanding view of the Huangpu River and the stunning modern skyline of Pudong.
    QS131115Shanghai054_1_1.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion ‘Shell Out’ protest 'We rise in peace' banner on 8th September 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The environmental group gathered outside the Shell building to protest at the ongoing extraction of fossil fuels and the resulting environmental record. Extinction Rebellion is a climate change group started in 2018 and has gained a huge following of people committed to peaceful protests. These protests are highlighting that the government is not doing enough to avoid catastrophic climate change and to demand the government take radical action to save the planet.
    20200908_extinction rebellion shell ...jpg
  • A South Korean cultural dance and music display at the Goseong Unification Observatory on 06th February 2016 in South Korea. Open specially for the 2018 Winter Olympic and Paralympics, the site is also known as the Geumgangsan Observatory, and is a military area normally restricted to the public. Views stretch into North Korea overlooking the Geumgangsan Mountains and the Korean Demilitarized Zone, a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula deciding the two nations. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03881.jpg
  • A South Korean cultural dance and music display at the Goseong Unification Observatory on 06th February 2016 in South Korea. Open specially for the 2018 Winter Olympic and Paralympics, the site is also known as the Geumgangsan Observatory, and is a military area normally restricted to the public. Views stretch into North Korea overlooking the Geumgangsan Mountains and the Korean Demilitarized Zone, a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula deciding the two nations. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03829.jpg
  • A South Korean cultural dance and music display at the Goseong Unification Observatory on 06th February 2016 in South Korea. Open specially for the 2018 Winter Olympic and Paralympics, the site is also known as the Geumgangsan Observatory, and is a military area normally restricted to the public. Views stretch into North Korea overlooking the Geumgangsan Mountains and the Korean Demilitarized Zone, a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula deciding the two nations. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03858.jpg
  • Views into North Korea and the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from the Goseong Unification Observatory on 06th February 2016 in South Korea. Open specially for the 2018 Winter Olympic and Paralympics, the site is also known as the Geumgangsan Observatory, and is a military area normally restricted to the public. Views stretch into North Korea overlooking the Geumgangsan Mountains and the Korean Demilitarised Zone, a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula deciding the two nations. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03815.jpg
  • Views into North Korea and the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from the Goseong Unification Observatory on 06th February 2016 in South Korea. Open specially for the 2018 Winter Olympic and Paralympics, the site is also known as the Geumgangsan Observatory, and is a military area normally restricted to the public. Views stretch into North Korea overlooking the Geumgangsan Mountains and the Korean Demilitarised Zone, a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula deciding the two nations. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03807.jpg
  • Views into North Korea and the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from the Goseong Unification Observatory on 06th February 2016 in South Korea. Open specially for the 2018 Winter Olympic and Paralympics, the site is also known as the Geumgangsan Observatory, and is a military area normally restricted to the public. Views stretch into North Korea overlooking the Geumgangsan Mountains and the Korean Demilitarised Zone, a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula deciding the two nations. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03800.jpg
  • The Goseong Unification Observatory overlooks the DMZ Demilitarised Zone on 06th February 2016 in South Korea. Open specially for the 2018 Winter Olympic and Paralympics, the site is also known as the Geumgangsan Observatory, and is a military area normally restricted to the public. Views stretch into North Korea overlooking the Geumgangsan Mountains and the Korean Demilitarised Zone, a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula deciding the two nations. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03797.jpg
  • Views into North Korea and the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from the Goseong Unification Observatory on 06th February 2016 in South Korea. Open specially for the 2018 Winter Olympic and Paralympics, the site is also known as the Geumgangsan Observatory, and is a military area normally restricted to the public. Views stretch into North Korea overlooking the Geumgangsan Mountains and the Korean Demilitarised Zone, a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula deciding the two nations. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03799.jpg
  • Views into North Korea and the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from the Goseong Unification Observatory on 06th February 2016 in South Korea. The closest building is a South Korean watch tower, in the distance a North Korean watch tower can also be seen. Open specially for the 2018 Winter Olympic and Paralympics, the site is also known as the Geumgangsan Observatory, and is a military area normally restricted to the public. Views stretch into North Korea overlooking the Geumgangsan Mountains and the Korean Demilitarised Zone, a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula deciding the two nations. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03789.jpg
  • Views into North Korea and the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from the Goseong Unification Observatory on 06th February 2016 in South Korea. Open specially for the 2018 Winter Olympic and Paralympics, the site is also known as the Geumgangsan Observatory, and is a military area normally restricted to the public. Views stretch into North Korea overlooking the Geumgangsan Mountains and the Korean Demilitarised Zone, a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula deciding the two nations. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03786.jpg
  • Views into North Korea and the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from the Goseong Unification Observatory on 06th February 2016 in South Korea. Open specially for the 2018 Winter Olympic and Paralympics, the site is also known as the Geumgangsan Observatory, and is a military area normally restricted to the public. Views stretch into North Korea overlooking the Geumgangsan Mountains and the Korean Demilitarised Zone, a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula deciding the two nations. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03781.jpg
  • Views into North Korea and the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from the Goseong Unification Observatory on 06th February 2016 in South Korea. Open specially for the 2018 Winter Olympic and Paralympics, the site is also known as the Geumgangsan Observatory, and is a military area normally restricted to the public. Views stretch into North Korea overlooking the Geumgangsan Mountains and the Korean Demilitarised Zone, a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula deciding the two nations. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03773.jpg
  • Views into North Korea and the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from the Goseong Unification Observatory on 06th February 2016 in South Korea. Open specially for the 2018 Winter Olympic and Paralympics, the site is also known as the Geumgangsan Observatory, and is a military area normally restricted to the public. Views stretch into North Korea overlooking the Geumgangsan Mountains and the Korean Demilitarised Zone, a strip of land running across the Korean Peninsula deciding the two nations. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03780.jpg
  • Egyptian politician and diplomat, Boutros Boutros-Ghali speaks at the Yugoslav Peace Conference on 8th August 1992 in London UK. Boutros Boutros-Ghali was the sixth Secretary-General of the United Nations from January 1992 to December 1996.
    Boutros_Boutros_Ghali01-08-08-1992.jpg
  • Egyptian politician and diplomat, Boutros Boutros-Ghali speaks at the Yugoslav Peace Conference on 8th August 1992 in London UK. Boutros Boutros-Ghali was the sixth Secretary-General of the United Nations from January 1992 to December 1996.
    Boutros_Boutros_Ghali02-08-08-1992.jpg
  • Mohamad Aris,  pictured holding a biscuit icing glazer fashioned out of newspaper, is <br />
a cookie maker working  13-14 hours a day,  he is married with one child: <br />
<br />
“Kabul is getting worse , I want peace and security from the Elections but I am not confident this can happen. For now I think only of making money for my family. I live for today, I cannot think further ahead than two hours"
    afghan26_10_079_1.jpg
  • Sign reads Peace Be at St Bartholomew church in Wanborough, Surrey, UK. Originally a Saxon church, it was rebuilt in the 12th century and is a beautiful and simple chapel originally built for the monks of Waverley Abbey. It now serves the rural parish of Wanborough, as part of the United Parish of Seale, Puttenham and Wanborough.
    20140421_st bartholomews churchA.jpg
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