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  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion14-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion13-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion12-04-09-2020.jpg
  • A passer-by stands next to a menu from a Chinese restaurant in Gerrard Street in London's Chinatown, England. The words Dim Sum Daily are displayed in neon lights above the person's head, its translated message is written on the top in Chinese characters. In the clear window we can see rows of Peking duck. It is early evening and the street is full of colour from the artificial lighting that creates an inviting mood for those browsing the menus on offer in this lively part of London's West End. The pedestrian is partly silhouetted and she stands in profile looking straight ahead as if ignoring what is on offer.
    electricity35_1.jpg
  • A mannequin of Santa Claus peers between Sale signs in garden retail centre in north Somerset, England. The inflated model is squeezed between the two red signs that tell shoppers to this rural shop to Enjoy the Good Life and that a Christmas sale is in force, the day after Boxing Day, the 27th December. Sale reductions and the lowering of prices are the lure for customers who need to beat the raising by the British Government of VAT (Value Added Tax) from 17.5 to 20% the following week - 4th January. Bargains will be offered at the old VAT rate making this the most popular of the holiday period to save during economic hardship.
    christmas_sale01-27-12-2010_1.jpg
  • A Deliveroo rider cycles past large concrete blocks, part of a construction site on the corner of Brook and New Bond Streets, on 6th April 2018, in London, England.
    brook_street-02-06-04-2018.jpg
  • Peering through the steamy window of a Chinese restaurant in London's Chinatown district, we see the shapes and forms of kitchen staff and customers in this lively scene. In the window are rows of Peking Duck with their skins cooked a crispy dark brown. Meanwhile, surrounded by cooking utensils and implements, the tools of their trade, two chefs busy themselves in the kitchen area, one's face shows him to be ethnic Chinese who is rubbing his hands in a cloth before continuing his chores. Two European girls are waiting expectantly for their dishes to arrive. Obscured by the steam and heat, a waiter in green bustles about this small eaterie.
    electricity122-17-01-2008 _1.jpg
  • Two employees of Cyprea Marine Foods fillet freshly-caught  yellow fin tuna fish at the company's refrigerated processing factory on Himmafushi island, Maldives. The 50kg carcasses have been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth and just line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been in ice since being landed to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The Sri Lankan workers are ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using extremely sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw away the rest.
    maldives89-12-11-2007.jpg
  • A team of employees of Cyprea Marine Foods fillet freshly-caught yellow fin tuna fish at the company's refrigerated processing factory on Himmafushi island, Maldives. The 50kg carcasses have been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth, just line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been in ice since being landed to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The Sri Lankan workers are ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using extremely sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw away the rest.
    maldives85-12-11-2007.jpg
  • An employee of Cyprea Marine Foods fillets freshly-caught  yellow fin tuna fish at the company's refrigerated processing factory on Himmafushi island, Maldives. The 50kg carcasses have been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth and just line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been in ice since being landed to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The Sri Lankan workers are ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using extremely sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw away the rest.
    maldives93-12-11-2007.jpg
  • A chunk of prime yellow fin tuna fish steak lies after filleting on a table in a processing factory on the island of Himmafushi, Maldives. The 50kg carcasses have been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth and having just been line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been encased in ice since being landed at sea to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The Sri Lankan butchers are ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using extremely sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw away the rest.
    maldives120-12-11-2007.jpg
  • October 9th 2011. Blockade of Westminster Bridge organised by UK Uncut before the NHS bill goes before Parliament on October 12th.A man holds a placard saying 'Health not profit'.11
    nhs_0448.jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-24-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-27-09-06-2...jpg
  • The statue of Sir Thomas Guy stands outside the historical entrance of Guys hospital, on 9th June 2020, in London, England. Thomas Guy 1644 – 1724 was British bookseller, speculator and founder of Guys Hospital, London whose links to the global slave trade is now a controversial aspect of this businessman by anti-slavery activists and more recently, Black Lives Matter protesters. His wealth came through shares in the South Sea Company whose main business was in the selling of slaves from Africa to the Spanish colonies. In 1720 he successfully sold his stock of the company for approx £400 million at todays prices and amassed a large fortune, opening the Guys Hospital  in 1725 which today serves as one of  the capitals major NHS healthcare centres. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Guys and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-28-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-14-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-06-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-05-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-09-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-19-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-20-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-18-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-15-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-11-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-08-09-06-2...jpg
  • Hours before it was removed by the Canal and River Trust, the statue of merchant slave owner, Robert Milligan stands partially covered by Black Lives Matter activists outside the Museum of Londons Docklands Museum on the former quay of West India Docks, on 9th June 2020, in London, United Kingdom. Scottish merchant Robert Milligan 1746 - 1809 grew up on his familys sugar plantation in Jamaica and by the time of his death, owned 526 slaves of his own. Because of the theft of his sugar and rum cargoes from the docks of the day, he and other busnessmen built the massive West India Docks trade hub, him becoming Deputy Chairman of the West India Dock Company. In the aftermath of the George Floyd protests in the US and UK Black Lives Matter groups, who are calling for the removal of statues and street names with links to the slave trade, Milligans and other statues of British slavery owners and profiteers, have become a focus of impassioned protest.
    black_lives_matter_statue-01-09-06-2...jpg
  • Three Parisians gain an advantage by climbing higher than pavement level to watch the patriotic Bastille Day Procession from a doorway on the Avenue Champs-Élysées, Paris. The young men have lodged themselves awkwardly a metre above the ground, resting their feet on various door catches and ledges, as if floating in mid-air. On a street traffic sign the French words 'Defense de Stationner' are written which in English translates as 'No Stopping', referring to vehicles not pedestrians. There is graffiti tagging sprayed on the walls and a brown stain at the bottom of a drainpipe
    RB-0092.jpg
  • A moment of street theatre is seen as a man seemingly gropes a young woman on the pavement (sidewalk) as three other Parisians gain an advantage by climbing higher than ground level to watch the patriotic Bastille Day Procession from a doorway on the Avenue Champs-Élysées, Paris. The young men have lodged themselves awkwardly a metre above the ground, resting their feet on various door catches and ledges, as if floating in mid-air. On a street traffic sign the French words 'Defense de Stationner' are written which in English translates as 'No Stopping', referring to vehicles not pedestrians. There is graffiti tagging sprayed on the walls and a brown stain at the bottom of a drainpipe.
    paris_spectators01-14-07-1992.jpg
  • An elderly Hungarian woman pauses to count her Forints and Fillér change, the national currency. She stands at the top of stairs near a well-lit window in the market which the largest indoor market in the Hungarian capital and is where this lady and many other market traders converge on every weekday morning to sell their own produce. The flower and herb woman has a lined face suggesting she has had a hard life under a Communist regime. She still wears a traditional Hungarian covered head favoured by older people in rural communities but is now dying out as headwear for a younger generation. The forint is the only currency once used by a socialist European state that is still in circulation. As a member of the European Union, the long term aim of the Hungarian government is to replace the forint with the euro.
    hungarian_woman01-13-06-1990_1.jpg
  • A local woman carries her purchases past a stallholder and his mule at the weekly market at Qurna, a village on the West Bank of Luxor, Egypt. Amidst the bustle of this busy regular event, people from many miles around have come to trade and buy their provisions.
    egypt25-01-03-2016_1.jpg
  • A local woman squeezes through the gap between a stallholder and a car at the weekly market at Qurna, a village on the West Bank of Luxor, Egypt. Amidst the bustle of this busy regular event, people from many miles around have come to trade and buy their provisions.
    egypt24-01-03-2016_1.jpg
  • Months after the fall of the Berlin wall and the collapse of the communist GDR state German Democratic Republic, a 1990s tin of Deutschmark and Pfennig coins are on a cauliflower market stall, on 15th June 1990, in Leipzig, Eastern Germany.
    deutschmarks_tin02-15-06-1990.jpg
  • Snow-covered bags of Concorde apples on sale at an outside farmer's market in south London. It is mid-winter and during a particularly bleak spell of weather in central London where a stall of fruit and vegetables is selling to locals in the street, suppliers' higher prices being reflected in the winter conditions. The label says Concorde, an almond sweet crisp juicy apple, home grown in 1kg polythene bags, produced from Perry Court Farm near Ashford, Kent.
    apples_snow01-20-01-2013_1.jpg
  • Months after the fall of the Berlin wall and the collapse of the communist GDR state German Democratic Republic, a 1990s tin of Deutschmark and Pfennig coins are on a cauliflower market stall, on 15th June 1990, in Leipzig, Eastern Germany.
    deutschmarks_tin01-15-06-1990.jpg
  • The Health and Care Bill has been passed by Parliament and is due to go to the House of Lords. In protest against the bill which aim to deconstruct and privatise large parts of the NHS UK Uncut activists together with health workers and trade unionists blocked the Westminster Bridge from 1pm til 5.30pm.
    IMG_1667_1.jpg
  • A detail of freshly-picked English oysters opened using a 'shucker' knife. English Falmouth Estuary oysters have become highly sought-after around European restaurants and we see a freshly-caught specimen still in its shell after being landed from a traditional Falmouth antique working sail boat (fishing without mechanical power is a rule on this local fishery) that still dredge harvested oysters from the river bed using traditional methods unchanged since Victorian times. The fisherman's muddy fingers can be seen lifting (or shuck) the crustacean slightly from the shell with an old oyster knife to display this wild, native Fal oyster which is known for its distinctive sweet, fresh and delicate flavour.
    oysters-04-10-1994_1.jpg
  • English Falmouth Estuary oysters have become highly sought-after around European restaurants and we see a freshly-caught specimen still in its shell after being landed from a traditional Falmouth antique working sail boat (fishing without mechanical power is a rule on this local fishery) that still dredge harvested oysters from the river bed using traditional methods unchanged since Victorian times. The fisherman's muddy fingers can be seen lifting (or shuck) the crustacean slightly from the shell with an old oyster knife to display this wild, native Fal oyster which is known for its distinctive sweet, fresh and delicate flavour.
    oyster10-04-1994.jpg
  • A plastic food tray of prime Maldives-sourced yellow fin tuna steaks makes its journey along a conveyor belt at New England seafood suppliers in Chessington, London England. Driven along by a blue chain it will next be sealed before shipment. Flown by air freight from the Maldives where it has been traditionally line caught in the Indian Ocean, this fish is bound for the UK's main supermarkets. New England Seafood is a major supplier of fresh and frozen premium sustainable fish and seafood in the UK and one of the largest importers of fresh tuna. Their customers are: the UK’s leading supermarkets including Marks & Spencer, Sainsbury’s and Waitrose; as well as smaller retail outlets; restaurant chains; food service markets and wholesale sectors nationwide.
    new_england91-27-11-2007.jpg
  • Seen from a low angle at the side of the track, near where grass and daisies grow, a speeding Eurostar TGV train hurtles towards the viewer, blurring as it comes towards us. This is the Kent countryside, otherwise known as the fertile Garden of England, and the route for high-speed trains that ply back and forth between western Europe and London St Pancras. This international passenger service was made possible by the completion of the Channel Tunnel in 1994 operating eighteen-carriage Class 373 trains which run at up to 300 kilometres per hour (186 mph) on a network of high-speed lines. Eurostar is operated by the national railway companies of France and Belguim, SNCF and SNCB, and by Eurostar (UK) Ltd (EUKL), a subsidiary of London and Continental Railways (LCR) which in turn also owns the high-speed infrastructure and stations on the British side.
    eurostar_speed-25-05-1995_1.jpg
  • A female office worker pauses to make a call on her mobile phone, on a wide walkway in Ernst & Young's Norman Foster-designed 385,000 square foot European headquarter at More London, London England. All other walkways above and below are empty and holding her head, the lady has sought privacy from her open-plan workstation and stands on her own. Architecturally, the term atrium comes from Latin: A large and light central hall or reception of a house where guests were greeted. The depth and height of all levels from near the top to almost the bottom give a sense of vertigo, a dizzying perspective. E & Y employs 114,000 people, in 700 locations across 140 countries around the world.
    ernst+young335-09-08-2007_1.jpg
  • Separated by colour-coded floors, employees of the auditing company Ernst & Young, participate in informal meetings in E & Y's Norman Foster-designed 385,000 square foot E & Y's European headquarter offices at More London, London England. Those on the top blue level 8 may be more senior to those below on the 7th purple storey of this tall, upright scene of modernity. It is busier on the upper floor then the two men beneath. Subsequent levels are vacant. Architecturally, the term atrium comes from Latin: a large and light central hall or reception of a house where guests were greeted. The depth and height of all levels from near the top to almost the bottom give a sense of vertigo, a dizzying perspective on seniority and success as opposed to lower-ranking middle-management.
    ernst+young151-09-08-2007_1.jpg
  • Separated by four floors, two employees of the auditing company Ernst & Young, make their way along walkways in the main atrium of E & Y's European headquarter offices at More London, London England. Striding confidently between offices, the two people are unaware of each other's presence but make their way from right to left of this tall, upright scene of modernity. The senior person on top may have an advantage from better opportunities, the low-ranking worker below may be needing to rise up the ranks. Morning sunlight floods through the green tinted glass that overlooks Tower Bridge on the River Thames. The term atrium comes from Latin: a large and light central hall or reception of a house where guests were greeted. The depth and height of all levels from near the top to almost the bottom give a sense of vertigo, a dizzying perspective.
    ernst+young138-09-08-2007_1.jpg
  • Tesco supermarket store. Tesco plc is a global grocery and general merchandise retailer headquartered in the United Kingdom. It is the third-largest retailer in the world measured by revenues and the second-largest measured by profits. It has stores in 14 countries across Asia, Europe and North America and is the grocery market leader in the UK (where it has a market share of around 30%). The company was founded by Jack Cohen in 1919 and opened its first store in 1929. It is a controversial success story in retail as it is often accused of strangling the market and pushing out smaller businesses and retailers.
    05242011tesco supermarketA.jpg
  • Tesco Express supermarket store logo in London, England, United Kingdom. Tesco plc is a global grocery and general merchandise retailer headquartered in the United Kingdom. It is the third-largest retailer in the world measured by revenues and the second-largest measured by profits. It has stores in 14 countries across Asia, Europe and North America and is the grocery market leader in the UK where it has a market share of around 30%. The company was founded by Jack Cohen in 1919 and opened its first store in 1929. It is a controversial success story in retail as it is often accused of strangling the market and pushing out smaller businesses and retailers.
    20180420_tesco_001.jpg
  • Tesco Express supermarket store logo in London, England, United Kingdom. Tesco plc is a global grocery and general merchandise retailer headquartered in the United Kingdom. It is the third-largest retailer in the world measured by revenues and the second-largest measured by profits. It has stores in 14 countries across Asia, Europe and North America and is the grocery market leader in the UK where it has a market share of around 30%. The company was founded by Jack Cohen in 1919 and opened its first store in 1929. It is a controversial success story in retail as it is often accused of strangling the market and pushing out smaller businesses and retailers.
    20180419_tesco_002.jpg
  • Tesco Express supermarket store logo in London, England, United Kingdom. Tesco plc is a global grocery and general merchandise retailer headquartered in the United Kingdom. It is the third-largest retailer in the world measured by revenues and the second-largest measured by profits. It has stores in 14 countries across Asia, Europe and North America and is the grocery market leader in the UK where it has a market share of around 30%. The company was founded by Jack Cohen in 1919 and opened its first store in 1929. It is a controversial success story in retail as it is often accused of strangling the market and pushing out smaller businesses and retailers.
    20180419_tesco_001.jpg
  • Melba Barawid, a member of the "Women's Rural Improvement' group takes care of the strawberry plants on communal land in Sitio Matinao, Alamada, Cotabato province, Mindanao Island, The Philippines. Women in the group make use of a small piece of land which they use to grow new vegetables and crops before trying them at home in their own gardens. 
The women are currently growing their first strawberry crop which so far has been a success. 
All profits from the sale of the vegetables and fruits grown on the land goes back into a communal pot and is used to initiate the next crop.
    A0022174cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • 72 year old Lilia Malinao runs the local Women's farmer group in Sitio Matinao, Alamada, Cotabato province, Mindanao Island, The Philippines. She is also President of ‘Women’s Rural Improvement Group’ and has been involved in Oxfam’s BINDS project for 1 year and 8 months. 
Women in the group make use of a small piece of land which they use to grow new vegetables and crops before trying them at home in their own gardens. 
The women are currently growing their first strawberry crop which so far has been a success. 
All profits from the sale of the vegetables and fruits grown on the land goes back into a communal pot and is used to initiate the next crop.
    A0022124cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • Mothers sit with their babies in pushchairs on park benches in the Silesian industrial town of Zabrze. A mining town known formerly as Hindenburg until 1945, under Stalinist thought, miners were considered a “working class elite” and were rewarded with higher wages and better social benefits but after communism, Zabrze has a high rate among mother of Ovarian Cancer because of the pollution, caused by the large concentration of industry, the triangle of land between Zabrze, Chorzów, and Bytom has locally been known as 'death triangle'. Since the collapse of communism in 1989, the environmental situation has steadily been improving due the restructuring of the Silesian industry although more than 250,000 jobs have been lost in coal mining since the reintroduction of capitalism. At the same time, enterprises are enjoying enormous profits.
    misc_poland10-06-09-2007.jpg
  • A tuna fish's sharp yellow fin protrudes from shredded ice at the Cyprea Marine Foods processing factory on Himmafushi Island, Maldives. The 50kg carcasses have been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth and having just been line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been encased in ice since being landed at sea to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The Sri Lankan butchers are ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using extremely sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw away the rest.
    maldives135-12-11-2007.jpg
  • The tail and sharp barbs of a freshly-caught yellow fin tuna fish lies inert on a filleting table at a refrigerated processing factory on Himmafushi island, Maldives. The 50kg carcass has been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth and just line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been in ice since being landed at sea to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The filleting is performed by Sri Lankan ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw the rest.
    maldives98-12-11-2007.jpg
  • The head of a freshly-caught yellow fin tuna fish lies inert on a filleting table at a refrigerated processing factory on Himmafushi island, Maldives. The 50kg carcass has been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth and just line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been in ice since being landed to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The filleting is performed by Sri Lankan ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw away the rest.
    maldives105-12-11-2007.jpg
  • A field of steel rebars meant to be made into structural posts of a now abandoned development sits in Macau, China on 28 January 2011. Macau experienced a building boom in the past few years as the gambling industry reaped profits from the influx of Chinese mainland gamblers, possibly creating a property bubble in the process.
    QS110128Macau010.jpg
  • Keith Valentine Graham (born 24 June 1958), better known as Levi Roots, is a British-Jamaican reggae musician, television personality, celebrity chef, businessman and multi-millionaire currently residing in Brixton, South London. He gained widespread fame after appearing on the UK television programme Dragons' Den, where he gained £50,000 funding for his Reggae Reggae Sauce.<br />
<br />
Levi, on Dragons' Den, originally said he developed and refined the sauce over many years, basing it on his grandmother Miriam Small's jerk chicken. This he now admits was false and used just as a marketing stratagy having invented the recipe himself. However, the origin of the recipe has been disputed by Tony Bailey, who runs a tiny West Indian takeaway in Brixton, South London; "The recipe is mine. People round here know, but we don’t say."<br />
<br />
Mr Bailey also filed a claim in the High Court for more than £300,000 claiming that, as the inventor of the sauce, he was entitled to a share of profits.
    _I1U6664_1.jpg
  • Keith Valentine Graham (born 24 June 1958), better known as Levi Roots, is a British-Jamaican reggae musician, television personality, celebrity chef, businessman and multi-millionaire currently residing in Brixton, South London. He gained widespread fame after appearing on the UK television programme Dragons' Den, where he gained £50,000 funding for his Reggae Reggae Sauce.<br />
<br />
Levi, on Dragons' Den, originally said he developed and refined the sauce over many years, basing it on his grandmother Miriam Small's jerk chicken. This he now admits was false and used just as a marketing stratagy having invented the recipe himself. However, the origin of the recipe has been disputed by Tony Bailey, who runs a tiny West Indian takeaway in Brixton, South London; "The recipe is mine. People round here know, but we don’t say."<br />
<br />
Mr Bailey also filed a claim in the High Court for more than £300,000 claiming that, as the inventor of the sauce, he was entitled to a share of profits.
    _I1U6625_1.jpg
  • Helen Jawil, a member of the "Women's Rural Improvement' group takes care of the strawberry plants on communal land in Sitio Matinao, Alamada, Cotabato province, Mindanao Island, The Philippines. Women in the group make use of a small piece of land which they use to grow new vegetables and crops before trying them at home in their own gardens. 
The women are currently growing their first strawberry crop which so far has been a success. 
All profits from the sale of the vegetables and fruits grown on the land goes back into a communal pot and is used to initiate the next crop.
    A0022166cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • Growing strawberry plants on communal land in Sitio Matinao, Alamada, Cotabato province, Mindanao Island, The Philippines. Women in the Rural Women's Improvement group make use of a small piece of land which they use to grow new vegetables and crops before trying them at home in their own gardens. 
The women are currently growing their first strawberry crop which so far has been a success. 
All profits from the sale of the vegetables and fruits grown on the land goes back into a communal pot and is used to initiate the next crop.
    A0022173cc_1_1_1.jpg
  • Keith Valentine Graham (born 24 June 1958), better known as Levi Roots, is a British-Jamaican reggae musician, television personality, celebrity chef, businessman and multi-millionaire currently residing in Brixton, South London. He gained widespread fame after appearing on the UK television programme Dragons' Den, where he gained £50,000 funding for his Reggae Reggae Sauce.<br />
<br />
Levi, on Dragons' Den, originally said he developed and refined the sauce over many years, basing it on his grandmother Miriam Small's jerk chicken. This he now admits was false and used just as a marketing stratagy having invented the recipe himself. However, the origin of the recipe has been disputed by Tony Bailey, who runs a tiny West Indian takeaway in Brixton, South London; "The recipe is mine. People round here know, but we don’t say."<br />
<br />
Mr Bailey also filed a claim in the High Court for more than £300,000 claiming that, as the inventor of the sauce, he was entitled to a share of profits.
    _I1U6659_1.jpg
  • Keith Valentine Graham (born 24 June 1958), better known as Levi Roots, is a British-Jamaican reggae musician, television personality, celebrity chef, businessman and multi-millionaire currently residing in Brixton, South London. He gained widespread fame after appearing on the UK television programme Dragons' Den, where he gained £50,000 funding for his Reggae Reggae Sauce.<br />
<br />
Levi, on Dragons' Den, originally said he developed and refined the sauce over many years, basing it on his grandmother Miriam Small's jerk chicken. This he now admits was false and used just as a marketing stratagy having invented the recipe himself. However, the origin of the recipe has been disputed by Tony Bailey, who runs a tiny West Indian takeaway in Brixton, South London; "The recipe is mine. People round here know, but we don’t say."<br />
<br />
Mr Bailey also filed a claim in the High Court for more than £300,000 claiming that, as the inventor of the sauce, he was entitled to a share of profits.
    _I1U6653_1.jpg
  • Sign supporting peoples health before profit in front of an Islington house during the coronavirus pandemic on the 24th April 2020 in London, United Kingdom.
    _E6A0157.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion37-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion33-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion36-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion31-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion28-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion27-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion29-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion23-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion22-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion16-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion07-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion41-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion40-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion39-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion34-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion25-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion19-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion18-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion17-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion09-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion05-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion06-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion01-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Extinction Rebellion Climate Change activists take their Environmental and Economy protest called The Walk of Shame to the City of London, the capitals financial district , on 4th September 2020, in London, England. According to XR, companies and institutions have profited from the slave trade and the profit from the exploitation of people and the planet. Companies on their tour of City insitutions such as Lloyds of London, Aviva Insurance and the Bank of England, are financing and insuring major fossil fuel projects, fuelling the climate and ecological emergency.
    extinction_rebellion02-04-09-2020.jpg
  • Falun Gong permanent protest opposite the Chinese Embassy on Portland Place, London.Peacefully protest in meditation 24/7 since 2002. A very spiritual demonstration against an oppressive regime. Flun gong claim the following: On July 20, 1999, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) launched the persecution against Falun Gong. Over the last nine years, 3,168 Falun Gong practitioners have lost their lives, many tortured to death; 75 of them were people in their eighties, and the youngest was only 8 months old. Thousands of practitioners are currently jailed and being tortured in forced labour camps, detention centres and prisons. The CCP even harvests organs from living Falun Gong practitioners for profit.
    20100522falun gong protestC.jpg
  • Falun Gong permanent protest opposite the Chinese Embassy on Portland Place, London.Peacefully protest in meditation 24/7 since 2002. A very spiritual demonstration against an oppressive regime. Flun gong claim the following: On July 20, 1999, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) launched the persecution against Falun Gong. Over the last nine years, 3,168 Falun Gong practitioners have lost their lives, many tortured to death; 75 of them were people in their eighties, and the youngest was only 8 months old. Thousands of practitioners are currently jailed and being tortured in forced labour camps, detention centres and prisons. The CCP even harvests organs from living Falun Gong practitioners for profit.
    20100522falun gong protestA.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 7th March 2015. Time to Act. Campaign against Climate Change demonstration. Demonstrators gathered in their tens of thousands to protest against all kinds of environmental issues such as fracking, clean air, alternative energies and generally all business which puts profit before the environment.
    20150307_climate change demo_T.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 7th March 2015. Time to Act. Campaign against Climate Change demonstration. Demonstrators gathered in their tens of thousands to protest against all kinds of environmental issues such as fracking, clean air, alternative energies and generally all business which puts profit before the environment.
    20150307_climate change demo_W.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 7th March 2015. Time to Act. Campaign against Climate Change demonstration. Demonstrators gathered in their tens of thousands to protest against all kinds of environmental issues such as fracking, clean air, alternative energies and generally all business which puts profit before the environment.
    20150307_climate change demo_X.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 7th March 2015. Time to Act. Campaign against Climate Change demonstration. Demonstrators gathered in their tens of thousands to protest against all kinds of environmental issues such as fracking, clean air, alternative energies and generally all business which puts profit before the environment.
    20150307_climate change demo_Z.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 7th March 2015. Time to Act. Campaign against Climate Change demonstration. Demonstrators gathered in their tens of thousands to protest against all kinds of environmental issues such as fracking, clean air, alternative energies and generally all business which puts profit before the environment.
    20150307_climate change demo_Y.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 7th March 2015. Time to Act. Campaign against Climate Change demonstration. Demonstrators gathered in their tens of thousands to protest against all kinds of environmental issues such as fracking, clean air, alternative energies and generally all business which puts profit before the environment.
    20150307_climate change demo_V.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 7th March 2015. Time to Act. Campaign against Climate Change demonstration. Demonstrators gathered in their tens of thousands to protest against all kinds of environmental issues such as fracking, clean air, alternative energies and generally all business which puts profit before the environment.
    20150307_climate change demo_U.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 7th March 2015. Time to Act. Campaign against Climate Change demonstration. Demonstrators gathered in their tens of thousands to protest against all kinds of environmental issues such as fracking, clean air, alternative energies and generally all business which puts profit before the environment.
    20150307_climate change demo_S.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 7th March 2015. Time to Act. Campaign against Climate Change demonstration. Demonstrators gathered in their tens of thousands to protest against all kinds of environmental issues such as fracking, clean air, alternative energies and generally all business which puts profit before the environment.
    20150307_climate change demo_Q.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 7th March 2015. Time to Act. Campaign against Climate Change demonstration. Demonstrators gathered in their tens of thousands to protest against all kinds of environmental issues such as fracking, clean air, alternative energies and generally all business which puts profit before the environment.
    20150307_climate change demo_G.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 7th March 2015. Time to Act. Campaign against Climate Change demonstration. Demonstrators gathered in their tens of thousands to protest against all kinds of environmental issues such as fracking, clean air, alternative energies and generally all business which puts profit before the environment.
    20150307_climate change demo_R.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 7th March 2015. Time to Act. Campaign against Climate Change demonstration. Demonstrators gathered in their tens of thousands to protest against all kinds of environmental issues such as fracking, clean air, alternative energies and generally all business which puts profit before the environment.
    20150307_climate change demo_L.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 7th March 2015. Time to Act. Campaign against Climate Change demonstration. Demonstrators gathered in their tens of thousands to protest against all kinds of environmental issues such as fracking, clean air, alternative energies and generally all business which puts profit before the environment.
    20150307_climate change demo_P.jpg
  • London, UK. Saturday 7th March 2015. Time to Act. Campaign against Climate Change demonstration. Demonstrators gathered in their tens of thousands to protest against all kinds of environmental issues such as fracking, clean air, alternative energies and generally all business which puts profit before the environment.
    20150307_climate change demo_K.jpg
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