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  • Agricultural landscape of field of corn with a few moon daisy heads standing out from the crowd near to Long Itchington, England, United Kingdom.
    20190623_agricultural landscape_004.jpg
  • Agricultural landscape of fields of corn with a few barley heads standing out from the crowd near to Long Itchington, England, United Kingdom.
    20190623_agricultural landscape_003.jpg
  • Agricultural landscape of fields of corn with a few barley heads standing out from the crowd near to Long Itchington, England, United Kingdom.
    20190623_agricultural landscape_002.jpg
  • Shengwu Lou round earth dwelling in the village of Jiaolu, Fujian Province.  View of interior of the home of Li Zheng Ying and children. Visible Kitchen, living room / eating room.                  These are some of the most extraordinary multistory structures in China built exclusively out of earth and timber (they are known as tulou). From the outside they look and protect like fortresses, built principally by the ethnic minority group known as the Hakka. They where built principally in the 17th till the early 20th centuries. In all about 1000 remain standing today mostly centered around the mountainous regions of the provinces of Fujian, Jiangxi and Guandong. They where constructed in various shapes from circular, square, oblong,even rhomboid. Shengwu Lou, was built sometime in the Qing Dynasty ( 1644-1912) and still remains well preserved and lived in by a hand full of residents. The single - story inner ring and three -story outer ring are divided into 15 apartments that surround a courtyard  with a water well. Cokking and eating facilities are at ground level and all bedrooms and storage are spread over the upper floors.             Shengwu Lou round earth dwelling in the village of Jiaolu, Fujian Province.  Interior circular courtyard and living spaces with central water well, shared by residents and chickens and hens alike. These are some of the most extraordinary multistory structures in China built exclusively out of earth and timber (they are known as tulou). From the outside they look and protect like fortresses, built principally by the ethnic minoritiy group known as the Hakka. They where built principally in the 17th till the early 20th centuries. In all about 1000 remain standing today mostly centered around the mountainous regions of the provinces of Fujian, Jiangxi and Guandong. They where constructed in various shapes from circular, square, oblong,even rhomboid. Shengwu Lou, was built sometime in the Qing Dynasty ( 1644-1912) and still remains wel
    chihakarou_041_1.jpg
  • Man out shopping on Bond Street standing unaware that everything orange starts to blend in together. Orange umbrella and Hermes shopping bags against an orange hoarding of a shop being refitted. London, UK.
    20141213_orange on bond street_B.jpg
  • A young boy stands up in his father's Anglia car on a summer day out in the early nineteen sixties. Standing up on the driver's front seat the child smiles out of the open window while the car is parked on a day out to the countryside. This is the new age of car ownership when newfound wealth meant families could afford to buy a vehicle and travel elsewhere after the war years of 1950s austerity. The Ford Anglia is a British car designed and manufactured by Ford in the United Kingdom. The Ford Anglia name was applied to four models of car between 1939 and 1967. 1,594,486 Anglias were produced, The picture was recorded on Kodachrome (Kodak) film in about  1961.
    sixties_archive04-15-06-1960_1.jpg
  • Standing late at night in the doorway of a Soho nightclub in Old Compton Street, London England, a bouncer provides security for his employer. Otherwise known as doormen or door supervisers, these usually hardened men offer a deterrent for anyone causing trouble inside ot out of licensed bars and clubs such as this. Lit from overhead spotlights, he looks menacing and capable of street violence - enough to urge troublemakers to move on quick. reflected in the glass is Ed's Diner a well-known eaterie in this street. Soho is known as a rather seedy but vibrant area of London's West End and late-night social disorder fuelled by excessive alcohol is pretty much normal.
    RB_136-08-10-1992.jpg
  • A motivational guru is standing on a podium to address an audience of Ernst & Young staff during their annual Academy Day held for 3,000 of company London employees at Excel in London's Docklands, England. Standing confidently on his rostrum with a laptop computer, bottled water and a pyramid as teaching aids, he holds his hand to encourage the personnel to participate by offering their ideas and input dring the seminar. Each employee attending this fair where motivational pep-talks from executives, outside speakers and gurus will talk to large groups of E & Y personnel so their presence on this day away from the office is vital for the year's business ahead.
    Ernst+Young_Academy107-21-09-2007_1.jpg
  • It is late on a summer Somerset evening and light is fading towards bedtime for children. Clutching a small bunch of daisies, a five year-old girl gazes at one of her flowers as if held in a trance. Standing in a meadow belonging to her grandfather, she holds up a single stem and twirls it around in her fingers to see its shape and sense its smell. About to climb over a gate in the background, her younger brother is having an adventure of his own, standing on the metal horizontal part of the frame, holding on with one hand. It is a tranquil scene of childhood innocence, of long summer days and summer holidays. From a personal documentary project entitled "Next of Kin" about the photographer's two children's early years spent in parallel universes. Model released.
    ella+sam20-14-10_2001_1.jpg
  • Two ladies pick plants in a field on the outskirts of Brussels in the 1970s. It is overcast but their smiles are bright as the women stand for their portrait picture, taken on a film camera in 1973. Standing in ankle-deep grass in this meadow on the outskirts of the Belbian capital, they look happy with their collection of wildlife. The picture shows us a memory of nostalgia in an era from the last century.
    70s_family06-13-09-1973_1.jpg
  • Portrait of parents and their young son standing at Zaventem Brussels airport in the 1970s. Dressed for winter and holding a holiday flight bag with the emblem of their tour to Mexico, the trio stand outside the terminal building of Brussels Zaventem airport in 1970. The picture shows us a memory of nostalgia in an era from the last century.
    70s_family08-20-06-1970_1.jpg
  • A portrait of a middle-aged man with Welsh mountains and hills in the background, taken on a film camera by an amateur photographer in the 1970s. Standing with hands on hips, the gentleman wearing a short red top is alone on the hillside during a daytrip to the north Welsh mountains in 1973. With the rolling valley and peaks in cloud in the distance, the scene is a tranquil landscape. The picture shows us a memory of nostalgia in an era from the last century.
    70s_family02-13-09-1973_1.jpg
  • Chengqi  round earth dwelling is considered the "king of Hakka earth buildings", Gaobei village, Fujian province,                  The bulding consists of four storeys plus four  inner circles containing a total of 400 rooms.          These are some of the most extraordinary multistory structures in China built exclusively out of earth and timber (they are known as tulou). From the outside they look and protect like fortresses, built principally by the ethnic minority group known as the Hakka. They where built principally in the 17th till the early 20th centuries. In all about 1000 remain standing today mostly centered around the mountainous regions of the provinces of Fujian, Jiangxi and Guandong. They where constructed in various shapes from circular, square, oblong, even rhomboid. Chengqi  was built sometime in the Qing Dynasty ( 1644-1912)  estimated at about 300 years old and still remains well preserved and lived in by a hand full of residents. Cooking and eating facilities are at ground level and all bedrooms and storage are spread over the upper floors.
    chihakarou_038_1.jpg
  • Shengwu Lou round earth dwelling in the village of Jiaolu, Fujian Province.  Interior circular courtyard and living spaces with central water well, shared by residents and chickens and hens alike. ar These are some of the most extraordinary multistory structures in China built exclusively out of earth and timber (they are known as tulou). From the outside they look and protect like fortresses, built principally by the ethnic minority group known as the Hakka. They where built principally in the 17th till the early 20th centuries. In all about 1000 remain standing today mostly centered around the mountainous regions of the provinces of Fujian, Jiangxi and Guandong. They where constructed in various shapes from circular, square, oblong,even rhomboid. Shengwu Lou, was built sometime in the Qing Dynasty ( 1644-1912) and still remains well preserved and lived in by a hand full of residents. The single - story inner ring and three -story outer ring are divided into 15 apartments that surround a courtyard  with a water well. Cooking and eating facilities are at ground level and all bedrooms and storage are spread over the upper floors.
    chihakarou_008_1.jpg
  • A portrait of family standing in the doorway of a detached home in the 1970s. Two brothers dressed in identical red shirts point upwards and their sister points in another direction while their grandmother stands next to the childrens' uncle in the doorway of this detached home in Kent. The man wears the height of 70s fashion - a 3-piece suit (with waistcoat) with flared trousers and a  brown shirt. The picture shows us a memory of nostalgia in an era from the last century.
    70s_family07-19-04-1973_1.jpg
  • A young boy of about 5 years-old stands on a seaside bridge as an older man walks past in the early 1960s. Seen from a low angle, we look up at the small boy standing on some steps of a bridge on the seafront at Southend-on-Sea in Essex, recorded on a film camera by the boy's father, an amateur photographer in 1962. The picture shows us a memory of nostalgia in an era from the last century.
    60s_family07-13-08-1962_1.jpg
  • The Chuxi - Hakka- earth dwellings, Chuxi village, Fujian Province.  Interior circular courtyard and living spaces with central water well, shared by residents and chickens and dogs alike. These are some of the most extraordinary multistory structures in China built exclusively out of earth and timber (they are known as tulou). From the outside they look and protect like fortresses, built principally by the ethnic minority group known as the Hakka. They where built principally in the 17th till the early 20th centuries. In all about 1000 remain standing today mostly centered around the mountainous regions of the provinces of Fujian, Jiangxi and Guandong. They where constructed in various shapes from circular, square, oblong,even rhomboid. The Chuxi earth dwellings where built sometime in the Qing Dynasty ( 1644-1912) and still remains well preserved and lived in by a hand full of residents. The single - story inner ring and three -story outer ring are divided into 15 apartments that surround a courtyard  with a water well. Cooking and eating facilities are at ground level and all bedrooms and storage are spread over the upper floors.
    chihakarou_042_1.jpg
  • Shengwu Lou round earth dwelling in the village of Jiaolu, Fujian Province.  Interior circular courtyard and living spaces with central water well, shared by residents and chickens and hens alike. These are some of the most extraordinary multistory structures in China built exclusively out of earth and timber (they are known as tulou). From the outside they look and protect like fortresses, built principally by the ethnic minority group known as the Hakka. They where built principally in the 17th till the early 20th centuries. In all about 1000 remain standing today mostly centered around the mountainous regions of the provinces of Fujian, Jiangxi and Guandong. They where constructed in various shapes from circular, square, oblong,even rhomboid. Shengwu Lou, was built sometime in the Qing Dynasty ( 1644-1912) and still remains well preserved and lived in by a hand full of residents. The single - story inner ring and three -story outer ring are divided into 15 apartments that surround a courtyard  with a water well. Cokking and eating facilities are at ground level and all bedrooms and storage are spread over the upper floors.
    chihakarou_034_1.jpg
  • The artist Rachel Whiteread CBE (born 1963) sits on the steps of her best-known sculpture called 'House'. 'House' stands alone on a now-empty and house-less East London street. Oddly, the contours of the structure have been inverted to reveal an inside-out version of the original building. It is a concrete cast of the inside of an entire Victorian terraced house completed in autumn 1993 and exhibited at the location of the original property — 193 Grove Road — in East London (all the houses in the street had earlier been knocked down by the council). It won Whiteread the Turner Prize (the first woman to do so) for best young British artist in 1993. Here we see 'House' at a close distance with graffiti painted on the walls stating the words "Wot for ..why not!" before it was controversially demolished by the council in January 1994.
    rachel_whiteread02-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • As traffic zooms past, the art installation called 'House' stands alone on a now-empty and house-less East London street. Oddly, the contours of the structure have been inverted to reveal an inside-out version of the original building. It is a concrete cast of the inside of an entire Victorian terraced house completed in autumn 1993 and exhibited at the location of the original property — 193 Grove Road — in East London (all the houses in the street had earlier been knocked down by the council). Created by the artist Rachel Whiteread CBE (born 1963) this is her best-known sculpture. It won her the Turner Prize (the first woman to do so) for best young British artist in 1993. Here we see 'House' next to a lamp post which throws down it's light on a winter evening, before it was controversially demolished by the council in January 1994.
    rachel_whiteread01-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • A schoolboy of Afro-Caribbean descent stands looking confused on a platform at Victoria mainline station in central London. The young lad looks smart in a new school uniform of cap, blazer, long trousers and polished black shoes. We might guess that it is the start of a new academic year and that he is about to attend a new school for which he needs to take a train on his own. His mother and younger and older sister are also to the far right of the picture so he may go with his elder sibling carrying a multi-coloured umbrella and a bright blue briefcase containing his lunch and a few items needed for lessons. Surrounded by adult commuters, some of who look on with mild amusement, also make await their train from the city out of town. Mostly, people mind their own business and what is a special day for the boy will become a much-travelled route.
    platform_schoolboy09-23-1994.jpg
  • British Prime Minister, Margaret Thatchers political career of 11 years ends emotionally on the steps of 10 Downing Street after being deposed in a leadership challenge, on 28th November 1990 in London, England. Standing close behind her is Thatchers husband and lifelong confidente, Dennis.
    margaret_thatcher03-28-11-1990.jpg
  • Portrait of a young couple while on holiday in Gouda, the Netherlands in the 1970s. Standing on the street's cobbles, the married couple smile in the Dutch city in front of the 15th century Gothic City Hall. Gouda population 70,828 in 2009) is a city and municipality in the western Netherlands, in the province of South Holland. Gouda, which was granted city rights in 1272, is famous for its Gouda cheese, smoking pipes, and 15th-century city hall.
    70s_family13-19-09-1973.jpg
  • A group of young men are standing in a train corridor admiring some attractive young ladies through the open door of a railway compartment. They are all on their way from London's Waterloo mainline station to Ascot in Berkshire for Ladies Day during the Royal Ascot racing week. In the foreground, a lad wearing a dark suit and yellow tie tugs on his shirt sleeve in a confident and assertive manner before approaching the girls to say hello. He and another man are looking amorously down towards the seated females who are dressed in summer skirts and tops, in readiness for a warm day at the races. Royal Ascot is held every June and is one of the main dates on the sporting calendar and social season.
    RB-0124.jpg
  • During the evening rush hour, hundreds of rail commuters are queueing to board a Thameslink train which has just arrived on the platform at Farringdon Station in Clerkenwell, London England. Standing 10-deep, they patiently wait the next ride home southbound during a tube strike forced the closure of underground stations and making workers take alternative routes. Looking down from a high bridge we see the train's roof and the heads of those delayed and inconvenienced. It is another miserable journey home.
    RB_116-08-05-1989.jpg
  • Standing behind barriers opposite Prime Minister Brown's Downing Street in Whitehall, the heart of Britain's governmental district in Westminster, some of the thousands of pro-Tibet protesters angrily shout their messages to 80 torchbearing personalities who ran 31 miles through the UK capital's streets. We see them holding images of dead Tibetans, killed by Chinese forces during the most recent crackdown in Lhasa and holding placards with anti-Chinese messages. Amid chaotic scenes across London and Paris where mass-arrests and civil disobedience marked what was planned as a  pre-Olympic carnival, the IOC's event proved a disaster for Chinese organisers. 37 were arrested but these facts were blanked from official TV screens which showed only the calm personlities who carried in turn the Olympic flame.
    olympic_tibet_protests09-06-04-2008.jpg
  • Large arrows coloured red, green and yellow point north, west and east - or up, right and left - in three directions, to offer directions to seminars for Ernst & Young staff during their annual Academy Day held for 3,000 of company London employees at Excel in London's Docklands, England. The people are either confidently pacing forward, standing still to seek guidance or simply spontaneously emerging from the shadows to a brighter future, a moment when freedom of choice is offered and the road ahead dictates their fate. It is a scene of corporate theate and each employee will attend this fair where pep-talks from executives, outside speakers and motivational gurus talk to large groups of E & Y personnel so their presence on this day away from the office is vital for the year's business ahead.
    Ernst+Young_Academy123-21-09-2007_1.jpg
  • Girlfriends look at a pet dog's paws during a day out in wales. While inspecting the large dog's front foot, the women are distracted by another event elsewhere. Sitting on concrete blocks called breeze blocks at the side of a private road during a country walk, the female friends are both wearing jeans and trainers.
    long_boarding05-30-08-2015.jpg
  • "First shoes in Wales." An eleven month-old infant tries to walk in her first pair of proper rigid shoes whilst on holiday in Snowdonia, North Wales UK. Tentatively taking a few unconfident steps the young girl  cries out in surprise, almost falling over. Her mother instinctively grabs her coat hood before she topples into into the pebbles and soft mud of a river bed which would soil her clean clothes. We see a mother preventing her daughter from getting dirty and from hurting herself, a fast reaction to stop injury on a small child. This is from a documentary series of pictures about the first year of the photographer's first child Ella. Accompanied by personal reflections and references from various nursery rhymes, this work describes his wife Lynda's journey from expectant to actual motherhood and for Ella - from new-born to one year-old.
    corbis_ella22-20-04-1995_1.jpg
  • Lone woman with a lamp post shadow against a grey construction hoarding in central London's Trafalgar Square. Painting work is being carried out to the street lighting lamp post, a green plastic fence surrounding the wet paint while the post's upright has created a strong linear theme to the pavement and background hoarding that screens other work.
    trafalgar_hoarding01-23-09-2015.jpg
  • Sayed Mohammed, 18, a mason’s assistant is responsible for plastering the walls, during the renovation of the old city district of Murad Khane. He is using a traditional mud-based render made out of gravel, straw and mud. <br />
“The builders tread the mud, straw and gravel mixture for a couple of days to make it strong” he says. “It’s tougher than concrete when it’s finished.” . <br />
<br />
Sayed dreams of being a good mason, having a car and a family. He has been working since he was ten when he used to sell fruit during the Taliban years, he has no education.  Murad Khane, the ancient centre of Kabul is undergoing a massive regeneration thanks to the Turquoise Mountain Foundation. The foundation was set up by Steward Rory Stewart, the man who’s life has inspired a Hollywood biopic starring Orlando Bloom. He walked across Afghanistan with his dog, governed a province in  Iraq , tutored Prince William and Harry and was asked personally by Prince Charles to undertake the project of regenerating the heart of the old city centre. Two years later, the project has galvanized the local community who have all been offered work. The organization has cleared some 20,000 tons of rotting garbage from the streets, built a primary school, a clinic and restored several of the finest courtyard homes to near-mint condition. With an eye for capacity building Stewart has also developed a school for traditional crafts,
    afghan21_10_044_1.jpg
  • A solitary person walks over wasteland in Liverpool, England, left after housing was demolished decades ago - its impoverished population having moved out for a better life elsewhere. the sign tells us the name of this road but paint has been daubed over it in an attempt perhaps, to erase its identity now that the community has gone too. Billboards for consumer goods are on show for  non-existent shoppers.
    liverpool_dereliction04-08-08-1991.jpg
  • A wide landscape of dereliction and poverty during the early 1990s in the city of Liverpool, England. The Liver building is seen in the far distance as a symbol of the city centre beyond an empty street up which a solitary man walks his dog. Empty buildings await destruction after the terraced housing has long been razed to the ground in the 1960s - the impoverished population having moved out for a better life elsewhere.
    liverpool_dereliction03-08-08-1991.jpg
  • "Garden ballet." With hands outstretched, a ten month-old infant supports her weight on some garden chairs as she learns to stand on her own two feet. Without the strength in her legs, she loses her balance and her mother stands behind holding her daughter by the waist preventing her from falling over. It is a warm summer afternoon with both mother and child barefoot on the back garden patio and we see the experience of an adult encouraging a developing human being with the confidence to stand erect with back straight. This is from a documentary series of pictures about the first year of the photographer's first child Ella. Accompanied by personal reflections and references from various nursery rhymes, this work describes his wife Lynda's journey from expectant to actual motherhood and for Ella - from new-born to one year-old.
    corbis_ella18-20-04-1995_1.jpg
  • City worker with her own unique style walks down Bishopsgate in the City of London, England, UK. Wearing a black and white striped dress this woman also has carefully tended hair which makes her stand out from the crowd.
    20160129_city worker striped dress_A.jpg
  • City worker with her own unique style walks down Bishopsgate in the City of London, England, UK. Wearing a black and white striped dress this woman also has carefully tended hair which makes her stand out from the crowd.
    20160129_city worker striped dress_B.jpg
  • portrait of workers in small rural community, Minas Gerais, Brazil
    cp_bra_0274_1.jpg
  • "Homo erectus." At the exact moment that a young human being walks for the first time, an eleven month-old girl infant conquers her fear and takes her first tentative upright unaided steps. After months of building lower leg strength by pushing and leaning against household objects, she now leaves the protective hands of a delighted but nervous mother who relishes the joyous moment of her offspring's great achievement. The girl's legs and hips help propel her forward motion, naturally making her an upright bi-pedal species. This is from a documentary series of pictures about the first year of the photographer's first child Ella. Accompanied by personal reflections and references from various nursery rhymes, this work describes his wife Lynda's journey from expectant to actual motherhood and for Ella - from new-born to one year-old.
    corbis_ella21-20-04-1995_1.jpg
  • Seen from the inside looking outwards, we see one of the giant 38 ton 'torso nodes' of Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5 roof structure. Developed by Arup to design the geometry of abutment steel, this engineering challenge needed to help support 50 ton rafters to made T5 the largest free-standing building in the UK. In the centre is the torso that sits on top of two feet with the wings splaying out to the window. The main architecture was created by the Richard Rogers Partnership (now Rogers Stirk Harbour and Partners) and opened in 2008 after a cost of £4.3 billion. Terminal 5 has the capacity to serve around 30 million passengers a year. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport872-22-07-2009_1.jpg
  • A young boy wearing his school uniform looks traumatised standing next to a burned-out shell of a saloon car that was set alight by vandals beneath the infamous Divis flats of the Catholic Lower Falls Road, West Belfast. He wears a red jumper which contrasts the blue graffiti paint on the wall behind him and the charred ground at his feet. He is alone, a young boy experiencing childhood through the traumas of a violent world Divis Tower was a flashpoint area during the height of the Troubles. 9 year-old Patrick Rooney a child of a similar age to this lad, was the first child killed in the Troubles, was killed in the tower during the Northern Ireland riots of August 1969,
    RB-0034.jpg
  • A soldier from the British Royal Artillery guards a 12ft Fire Shadow missile on manufacturer MBDA's trade stand at the Farnborough airshow, shows visiiting guests to this exhibit the merits of its use and design. The so-called lurker bomb is designed to loiter above a battlefield for up to 6 hours before attacking stationary or mobile targets and also able to shadow British troops for up to ten hours or 100 miles, ready to take out enemy targets with surgical precision at a minute’s notice. . The Farnborough International Airshow is a seven-day international trade fair for the aerospace industry and held every two years in mid-July at Farnborough Airport in Hampshire, England known as the home of British aviation, held since there since 1948. The show is usually attended by more than 1,300 exhibitors and 150,000 trade visitors.
    mbda_missile06-11-07-2012.jpg
  • Businessmen inspect the 12ft Fire Shadow missile on manufacturer MBDA's trade stand at the Farnborough airshow. An employee shows visiting guests to this exhibit the merits of its use and design. The so-called lurker bomb is designed to loiter above a battlefield for up to 6 hours before attacking stationary or mobile targets and also able to shadow British troops for up to ten hours or 100 miles, ready to take out enemy targets with surgical precision at a minute’s notice. . The Farnborough International Airshow is a seven-day international trade fair for the aerospace industry and held every two years in mid-July at Farnborough Airport in Hampshire, England known as the home of British aviation, held since there since 1948. The show is usually attended by more than 1,300 exhibitors and 150,000 trade visitors.
    mbda_missile02-11-07-2012.jpg
  • A soldier from the British Royal Artillery guards a 12ft Fire Shadow missile on manufacturer MBDA's trade stand at the Farnborough airshow, ready to show visiting guests to this exhibit the merits of its use and design. The so-called lurker bomb is designed to loiter above a battlefield for up to 6 hours before attacking stationary or mobile targets and also able to shadow British troops for up to ten hours or 100 miles, ready to take out enemy targets with surgical precision at a minute’s notice. . The Farnborough International Airshow is a seven-day international trade fair for the aerospace industry and held every two years in mid-July at Farnborough Airport in Hampshire, England known as the home of British aviation, held since there since 1948. The show is usually attended by more than 1,300 exhibitors and 150,000 trade visitors.
    mbda_fireshadow04-09-07-2012.jpg
  • During the Farnborough Airshow, out of focus in the background, visitors to the General Electric (GE) jet engine manufacturer study a real GEnx turbofan engine that GE claim emits 15% less Co2 than conventional engines. The GEnx (General Electric Next-generation) is an advanced dual rotor, axial flow, high bypass turbofan in production by GE Aviation for the Boeing 787 and 747-8. The GEnx is intended to replace the CF6 in GE's product line.
    farnborough_airshow38-21-07-2010_1.jpg
  • An elderly homeless man walks slowly past a Barclays Bank cash dispenser at which business people are either queueing or typing in their PIN numbers from cash accounts, or simply passing-by. One middle-aged gent stands eyeing the poor man suspiciously while other men of wealth, prospects and prosperity are tall and stand erect in smart suits and polished shoes, the homeless man is hunched and dishevelled, carrying a supermarket bag - perhaps containing all of his worldly goods. It is a tragic scene of extremes between the haves and the have-nots; the rich and poor; between people with hope and those in despair. This is the City of London, near Fenchurch Street Station where the UK's insurance companies are based and it is impossible to know if any of these men in smart clothes are the same age as the poor man.
    city_london14-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • McCarthy sisters and family stand defiantly beside a burned out building at Dale Farm site prior to eviction. Riot police and bailiffs were present on 20th October 2011, as the site was cleared of the last protesters chained to barricades. Dale Farm is part of a Romany Gypsy and Irish Traveller site in Crays Hill, Essex, UK. <br />
<br />
Senior resident Kathleen McCarthy said she now wished to leave, once obstacles are removed, and the majority of residents are expected to join her. Most plan to relocate to Oak Road, on the neighbouring legal site.<br />
<br />
Dale Farm housed over 1,000 people, the largest Traveller concentration in the UK. The whole of the site is owned by residents and is located within the Green Belt. It is in two parts: in one, residents constructed buildings with planning permission to do so; in the other, residents were refused planning permission due to the green belt policy, and built on the site anyway.
    20111020dale farm evictionAV.jpg
  • Spiritual revellers celebrate the summer Solstice mid-summer and longest day at the ancient stones of Stonehenge, on 21st June 2017, in Wiltshire, England. According to pagans, the Stonehenge is a sacred place that links the Earth, Moon, Sun and the seasons. Built in three phases between 3,000 B.C. and 1,600 B.C. its purpose remains under study. However, it’s known that if you stand in just the right place inside the monument on summer solstice, through the entrance towards a rough hewn stone outside the circle you will see the sun rise above the Heel Stone.
    stonehenge_solstice-23-21-06-2017.jpg
  • Stop Trump’s Muslim ban demonstration on 4th February 2017 in London, United Kingdom. The protest was called on by Stop the War Coalition, Stand Up to Racism, Muslim Association of Britain, Muslim Engagement and Development, the Muslim Council of Britain, CND and Friends of Al-Aqsa. Thousands of demonstrators gathered to demonstrate against Trumps ban on Muslims, saying it must be opposed by all who are against racism and support basic human rights, and for Theresa May not to collude with him.
    anti_trump_protest-25-04-02-2017_1.jpg
  • A portrait of two lady friends in Brussels in the 1970s. The two women are on a shopping and sightseeing trip into the Belgian capital in 1978, Clutching bags and some shopping, they stand in the Brussels square called Place de Brouckere in the centre of the city. The signs of cafes and shops are in the background..
    70s_family10-19-04-1978_1.jpg
  • A young couple stand with the backdrop of Welsh mountains and hills in the background in the 1970s. Helping her husband to light his cigarette in a breeze, the woman's coat is blowing in the wind, so high up in the mountains have they stopped during a daytrip to the north Welsh hills. Rolling misty mountains are in the distance as bad weather appears to be approaching. It was taken on a film camera by the man's father, an amateur photographer in 1973. The picture shows us a memory of nostalgia in an era from the last century.
    70s_family05-13-09-1973_1.jpg
  • A hunched, homeless elderly man walks along Fenchurch Street in the City of London while younger and affluent office workers saunter past, smiling and with a care in the world. It is a scene of social class division, the contrasts between wealth and poverty, have and have nots, prospects and no hope for the future and of old age and youth. The old man carries a plastic bag with all his belongings and the workers carry their lunch in a paper bag. They are not only smart and he dishevelled but they stand tall and he is stooped, further proof of the hard, demanding life he leads on the capital's streets.
    misc-london02-30-08-2007.jpg
  • Peering through a hole in the huge metal door of an old Victorian tunnel, two children stand on the place where a railway once emerged from this brick entrance - a link between nearby Dulwich and the Crystal Palace. Now the London Wildlife Trust maintains this once-wild wood at Sydenham, South London, England, which has reverted to forest again, 40 years after (one of the first the electrified railways) line fell silent. The brother and sister look through to see if there is light at the end of this tunnel but it has long been bricked up, sealed to deter vandals and danger to all. It is Autumn and the leaves on the beech and oak trees are about to fall, adding to the already organic deep forest floor. From a personal documentary project entitled "Next of Kin" about the photographer's two children's early years spent in parallel universes. Model released
    ella+sam21-20-10_2001_1.jpg
  • Seen from an aerial viewpoint, office workers come and go from a generic banking company. The symmetrical reflections are reproduced from a dividing line of plate glass in the capital's financial district, known as the City of London - or Square Mile. People come and go from this unidentified building entrance and exit while others stand still to smoke cigarettes under the shelter of the reflective ceiling. Shadows and light diverge towards the bottom. The City of London is the capital's historic centre first occupied by the Romans then expanded during following centuries until today, it has a resident population of under 10,000 but a daily working population of 311,000.
    city_reflections18-13-03-2013_1.jpg
  • Seen from an aerial viewpoint, office workers come and go from a generic banking company. The symmetrical reflections are reproduced from a dividing line of plate glass in the capital's financial district, known as the City of London - or Square Mile. People come and go from this unidentified building entrance and exit while others stand still to smoke cigarettes under the shelter of the reflective ceiling. Shadows and light diverge towards the bottom. The City of London is the capital's historic centre first occupied by the Romans then expanded during following centuries until today, it has a resident population of under 10,000 but a daily working population of 311,000.
    city_reflections16-13-03-2013_1.jpg
  • Seen from an aerial viewpoint, office workers come and go from a generic banking company. The symmetrical reflections are reproduced from a dividing line of plate glass in the capital's financial district, known as the City of London - or Square Mile. People come and go from this unidentified building entrance and exit while others stand still to smoke cigarettes under the shelter of the reflective ceiling. Shadows and light diverge towards the bottom. The City of London is the capital's historic centre first occupied by the Romans then expanded during following centuries until today, it has a resident population of under 10,000 but a daily working population of 311,000.
    city_reflections04-13-03-2013_1.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
  • Artesan artesania items in a small shop in Itacre, Bahia, Brazil. Woven out of fine willow sticks.
    _MG_9982_1.jpg
  • Artesan artesania items in a small shop in Itacre, Bahia, Brazil. Woven out of fine willow sticks.
    _MG_9979_1.jpg
  • Artesan artesania items in a small shop in Itacre, Bahia, Brazil. Woven out of fine willow sticks.
    _MG_9972_1.jpg
  • Two Celtic fans get out of their seat to watch the action on the pitch at Celtic's ground, Parkhead. Celtic have a strong following of mostly Irish Catholics and are bitter rivals to the city's other team, Glasgow Rangers.
    SFE_970304_0002.jpg
  • All representatives from Civil Society was expelled and banned in the last crucial days of the UNFCCC talks. The summit was billed as the most important one since Kyoto and that a progressive and fair deal necessary to save the global climate. This all failed to materialise and no real deal came out of the summit.
    IMG_5001_1_1.jpg
  • Taria, a Nepalese teacher, looks at her book while her students carry out a writing exercise a class room in the Voice of Children rehabilitation center in Kathmandu, Nepal.  The not-for-profit organisation supports street children and those who are at risk of sexual abuse through educational and vocational training opportunities, health services and psychosocial counseling.
    Nepal-children-writing-class-6932_1.jpg
  • An Asian couple dressed in matching red, outside St. Pancras station, London. In conversation on the phone, he makes arrangements while his girlfriend stands awkwardly, over-dressed for this part of north London. At her feet is some newspaper blowing along the street.
    st_pancras03-04-08-2015_1.jpg
  • A young woman on rollerblades stands taking in the sea air and looking out across the Atlantic Ocean from South Pointe South Beach Miami
    20100110_miami_southbeach-0085_1.jpg
  • As evening light fades, campers who are relaxing in the awning of their caravan are having a sociable time with friends. Their table has drinks and an outdoor campers' light and we see through the open flap of their awning at a caravan site at Looe in Devon, England. Other vehicles can be seen in the distance, all lined up against the hedged-border of this field, run by the prestigious Caravan Club of Great Britain whose membership stands around 1 million members. Formed in 1907 the club boasts over 900 staff and an annual turnover of around £100 million. Rules about pitching vans and how to behave with waste, children and noise are strictly controlled and often, sites specialise more for families with kids or for older people wanting more peace.
    uk_caravans02-13-08-2000_1.jpg
  • Crowds of visitors and locals gather on the terrace of an Ocean Drive cafe in Miami Beach. It is early evening and we see the blurred people moving about over the picture during a time-exposure of a few seconds. The colours of ambient neon lights that these streets are well-known for have become very vivid with bright pinks and reds a main feature of this scene. A menu board listing cocktail drinks prices stands on the sidewalk. Candles have been lit in glass jars on table tops. Ghostly, blurred Palm trees sway about in the coastal breeze against the fading sky of early evening. This is a vibrant district of tropical Miami, Florida. The place to hang-out and be noticed. Glowing pinks and blues are vivid in this scene where beautiful people and expensive cars cruise along slowly, each parading bodywork and personality.
    miami_beach01-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • Last Day notice for a now closed business in central London, a victim of the UK recession. The words have been written on the pane of glass in white emulsion paint that has dripped and run before drying properly on the window of this anonymous office building in Holborn, London. Around a recession-bled Britain, high-street businesses have been going bust in their thousands. Britain has now endured eight recessions since the Second World War. The current one was caused by a shock to the availability of credit, a massive build up of debt. The number of people out of work currently stands at almost two million. Given the rate at which the economy is deteriorating this could easily be above three million. From a continuing piece of work about windows and urban messages. Picture is from the project of closed business windows: 'Bust - the Art of Recession'.
    last_day01-27-02-2012.jpg
  • An elderly gentleman looks out from his urban cottage opposite the new Millennium Dome, soon to force him from home. 76 year-old Ronald White stands in the doorway of his home in the short row of Georgian cottages called Ceylon Place that he has lived in for many years. But the construction of the nearby Millennium Dome means that Ronald will have to leave his house and be displaced for the sake of this highly controversial building project, in time for its opening on Millennium night 1999. He looks worried and anxious about his impending move though it is not known if he was ever allowed to move back.
    elderly_resident01-25-03-1998_1.jpg
  • In afternoon sunshine, a local mother and her child on scooter pause to talk during a walk in Brockwell Park, Herne Hill, South London. Bending down to the child's face, the mum makes her point known to the youngster who stands astride her toy before continuing their journeys around the upper paths of this Victorian public space. Brockwell Park is a 50.8 hectare (125.53 acres) park located between Brixton, Herne Hill and Tulse Hill. Brockwell Hall house and its grounds were acquired by the London County Council (LCC) in March 1891 and opened to the public the following summer. In 1901 the LCC acquired a further 43 acres (17 ha) of land north of the original park.
    brockwell_park09-15-11-2010_1.jpg
  • Mary McCarthy (l) stands with her sister Margaret at Dale Farm site prior to eviction. Riot police and bailiffs were present on 20th October 2011, as the site was cleared of the last protesters chained to barricades. Dale Farm is part of a Romany Gypsy and Irish Traveller site in Crays Hill, Essex, UK. <br />
<br />
Senior resident Kathleen McCarthy said she now wished to leave, once obstacles are removed, and the majority of residents are expected to join her. Most plan to relocate to Oak Road, on the neighbouring legal site.<br />
<br />
Dale Farm housed over 1,000 people, the largest Traveller concentration in the UK. The whole of the site is owned by residents and is located within the Green Belt. It is in two parts: in one, residents constructed buildings with planning permission to do so; in the other, residents were refused planning permission due to the green belt policy, and built on the site anyway.
    20111020dale farm evictionAW.jpg
  • Kathleen McCarthy stands defiantly with her sister Mary beside a burned out building at Dale Farm site prior to eviction. Riot police and bailiffs were present on 20th October 2011, as the site was cleared of the last protesters chained to barricades. Dale Farm is part of a Romany Gypsy and Irish Traveller site in Crays Hill, Essex, UK. <br />
<br />
Senior resident Kathleen McCarthy said she now wished to leave, once obstacles are removed, and the majority of residents are expected to join her. Most plan to relocate to Oak Road, on the neighbouring legal site.<br />
<br />
Dale Farm housed over 1,000 people, the largest Traveller concentration in the UK. The whole of the site is owned by residents and is located within the Green Belt. It is in two parts: in one, residents constructed buildings with planning permission to do so; in the other, residents were refused planning permission due to the green belt policy, and built on the site anyway.
    20111020dale farm evictionAU.jpg
  • Kathleen McCarthy stands defiantly beside a burned out building at Dale Farm site prior to eviction. Riot police and bailiffs were present on 20th October 2011, as the site was cleared of the last protesters chained to barricades. Dale Farm is part of a Romany Gypsy and Irish Traveller site in Crays Hill, Essex, UK. <br />
<br />
Senior resident Kathleen McCarthy said she now wished to leave, once obstacles are removed, and the majority of residents are expected to join her. Most plan to relocate to Oak Road, on the neighbouring legal site.<br />
<br />
Dale Farm housed over 1,000 people, the largest Traveller concentration in the UK. The whole of the site is owned by residents and is located within the Green Belt. It is in two parts: in one, residents constructed buildings with planning permission to do so; in the other, residents were refused planning permission due to the green belt policy, and built on the site anyway.
    20111020dale farm evictionAT.jpg
  • At a craft store in Minot, North Dakota, a cut out figure of western legend John Wayne stands above a stuffed Buffalo in a scene of The Badlands.
    2007_10_18_North Dakota_Y.jpg
  • An Asian couple dressed in matching red, outside St. Pancras station, London. In conversation on the phone, he makes arrangements while his girlfriend stands awkwardly, over-dressed for this part of north London. At her feet is some newspaper blowing along the street.
    st_pancras03-04-08-2015_1.jpg
  • A portrait of a mother and teenage son in a public park during summer time in the early 1960s. The portrait has been recorded on a film camera by an amateur photographer in 1961. The young man stands with his arm on his mum's shoulder in this public park in Essex. The picture shows us a memory of nostalgia in an era from the last century.
    60s_family15-15-03-1961_1.jpg
  • Anne stands outside a small church she has borrowed to run an outreach clinic for Action for children in conflict (AFCIC) based from Thika, Kenya. The main aim of the organisation is to keep the children off the streets and to remain with their families.
    11-afcic-9612.jpg
  • Anne stands outside a small church she has borrowed to run an outreach clinic for Action for children in conflict (AFCIC) based from Thika, Kenya. The main aim of the organisation is to keep the children off the streets and to remain with their families.
    11-afcic-9603.jpg
  • Mary McCarthy (l) stands with her sister Margaret at Dale Farm site prior to eviction. Riot police and bailiffs were present on 20th October 2011, as the site was cleared of the last protesters chained to barricades. Dale Farm is part of a Romany Gypsy and Irish Traveller site in Crays Hill, Essex, UK. <br />
<br />
Senior resident Kathleen McCarthy said she now wished to leave, once obstacles are removed, and the majority of residents are expected to join her. Most plan to relocate to Oak Road, on the neighbouring legal site.<br />
<br />
Dale Farm housed over 1,000 people, the largest Traveller concentration in the UK. The whole of the site is owned by residents and is located within the Green Belt. It is in two parts: in one, residents constructed buildings with planning permission to do so; in the other, residents were refused planning permission due to the green belt policy, and built on the site anyway.
    20111020dale farm evictionAX.jpg
  • Arrow on the side of a courier van and road arrow, in Regent Street in Central London. Part of the branding of this city courier delivery company, we see its fluorescent colours standing out of the van's side, as opposed to the grey arrow on the road, indicating the direction for pedestrians crossing this busy road used by many tourists, often forgetting that traffic comes from the right.
    arrow_van01-04-03-2015_1.jpg
  • A family stand at railings watching shipping on the River Thames at Gravesend during summer time in the early 1960s. Standing at some railings, the two women and the young boy are looking out towards the River Thames at the Kent town just a few miles outside London. Here is shipping that is taking cargo to the capital in an era when the river still a main artery for goods brought from across the world into London. The picture was recorded on a film camera by the boy's father, an amateur photographer in 1962. The picture shows us a memory of nostalgia in an era from the last century.
    60s_family06-13-08-1962_1.jpg
  • A young school girl happily reads out loud to her class in a classroom in St Agnes Primary School, Woodstock, Cape Town, South Africa.  Two boys stand behind her also looking at the book and waiting for their turn to read.  They are standing in a queue by the green board at the front of the class and wear school uniform.
    South-Africa-Reading-Education-8493.jpg
  • Looking up at the Shard skyscraper and local architecture in Southwark, central London. From the top deck of a London bus, we look out through the window and up to see the tall buildings, new to the landscape of London Bridge. The skyscraper landmark known as The Shard in the capital was completed in May 2012. It is the tallest building in the European Union. The 46th-tallest building in the world, standing 310 m (1,017 ft) tall, it is also be the second-tallest free-standing structure in the UK. Several Qatari investors funded the construction of the tower via Islamic finance.
    shard_sky01-09-12-2015_1.jpg
  • A giant billboard ad for the use of iPhones seen on the side of a central London building, juxtaposed with bus advertising and a WW1 memorial soldier of the Royal Fusiliers. The two buses are stopped in traffic on the road, one with the advertising of yet another Hollywood action film opening soon. The huge image on the side of the building is in the City of London and features a young woman standing on a mountain top looking out across the clouds at altitude. The Infrantryman stands at rest on the top of the memorial, a reminder of lost youth and possibilities from an era of sacrifice before consumerism a hundred years later.
    iphone_ad03-09-04-2015_1.jpg
  • Standing near Hougemont Farm, Waterloo, Belgium, scene of some of the fiercest fighting on the battlefield on the day in 1815 when French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated by the (Iron) Duke of Wellington, we see the current Duke, Brigadier Arthur Valerian Wellesley, 8th Duke of Wellington, KG, LVO, OBE, MC, DL, FKC (born in Rome on 2nd July 1915). He is a British hereditory peer and a retired officer in the British Army. When he succeeded his father as Duke, he was known as Marquess Douro but is now styled His Grace The Duke of Wellington. Making an occasional visit to the battlefields, he stands on a raw winter's day on the very landscape where his ancestor's brave British men fought off a fierce French attack, the Duke gazes out over the rolling hills that proved the undoing of Napoleon and which changed the course of European history.
    duke_of_wellington02-30-01_2004_1.jpg
  • Standing near Hougemont Farm, Waterloo, Belgium, scene of some of the fiercest fighting on the battlefield on the day in 1815 when French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated by the (Iron) Duke of Wellington, we see the current Duke, Brigadier Arthur Valerian Wellesley, 8th Duke of Wellington, KG, LVO, OBE, MC, DL, FKC (born in Rome on 2nd July 1915). He is a British hereditory peer and a retired officer in the British Army. When he succeeded his father as Duke, he was known as Marquess Douro but is now styled His Grace The Duke of Wellington. Making an occasional visit to the battlefields, he stands on a raw winter's day on the very landscape where his ancestor's brave British men fought off a fierce French attack, the Duke gazes out over the rolling hills that proved the undoing of Napoleon and which changed the course of European history.
    duke_of_wellington01-30-01_2004_1.jpg
  • Tourists point out landmarks and admire Paris below from the second level of the Eiffel Tower. With the girders of the tower rising above their heads towards its summit, the people look out to distant landmarks. The Eiffel Tower (nickname La dame de fer, the iron lady) is a puddled iron lattice tower standing 320 metres (1,050 ft) tall, about the same height as an 81-story building. It is located on the Champ de Mars in Paris, named after the engineer Gustave Eiffel, whose company designed and built the tower. Erected in 1889 as the entrance arch to the 1889 World's Fair, it has become both a global cultural icon of France and one of the most recognizable structures in the world.
    eiffel_tower06-16-08-2012_1.jpg
  • Living statue street performers hanging out during a break from standing still. This Mr Bean performer makes some adjustments to his look with his make up and mirror. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140606_south bank mr beanB.jpg
  • Living statue street performers hanging out during a break from standing still. This Mr Bean performer makes some adjustments to his look with his make up and mirror. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140606_south bank mr beanA.jpg
  • Living statue street performers hanging out during a break from standing still. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140606_south bank living statuesK.jpg
  • Living statue street performers hanging out during a break from standing still. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140606_south bank living statuesJ.jpg
  • Living statue street performers hanging out during a break from standing still. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140606_south bank living statuesI.jpg
  • Living statue street performers hanging out during a break from standing still. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140606_south bank living statuesH.jpg
  • Living statue street performers hanging out during a break from standing still. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140606_south bank living statuesG.jpg
  • Dhaka, Bangladesh. The three girls, Rabia,18, Munni,15 and Sabia,13, work at home making saris. A factory out-let has commissioned the work. It  take s2 weeks to make a sari and they get £3 /sari each. Rabia and Munni are sister and both suffer from Rheumatic Arthritis and sitting down working 9 hours/ day seven days a week only makes their condition worse. Sabia wants to go to school but both Rabia and Muni prefer not to go out. Their disability has made them very shy, they cant walk properly and standing up Rabia is now only the size of a 10 year old. Her father says that if they were to go to school, who would then pay for their medication, not to mention the loss of income they generate...best to stay at home he says. The Stars Foundation visiting CSID.<br />
Centre for Services and Information on Disability (CSID) is a charity working for integrating disabled children into mainstream society.integrating disabled children into mainstream society.
    IMG_3369_1.jpg
  • Living statue street performers hanging out during a break from standing still. This Mr Bean performer makes some adjustments to his look with his make up and mirror. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140606_south bank mr beanC.jpg
  • Living statue street performers hanging out during a break from standing still. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140606_south bank living statuesF.jpg
  • Living statue street performers hanging out during a break from standing still. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140606_south bank living statuesE.jpg
  • Living statue street performers hanging out during a break from standing still. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20140606_south bank living statuesA.jpg
  • Dhaka, Bangladesh. Munni,15  work at home making saris. A factory out-let has commissioned the work. It  takes 2 weeks to make a sari and they get £3 /sari each. Munni and her sister Rabia  and both suffer from Rheumatic Arthritis and sitting down working 9 hours/ day seven days a week only makes their condition worse. Both Rabia and Muni prefer not to go out. Their disability has made them very shy, they cant walk properly and standing up Rabia is now only the size of a 10 year old. Her father says that if they were to go to school, who would then pay for their medication, not to mention the loss of income they generate...best to stay at home he says.The Stars Foundation visiting CSID.<br />
Centre for Services and Information on Disability (CSID) is a charity working for integrating disabled children into mainstream society.
    IMG_3379_1.jpg
  • Dhaka, Bangladesh. The three girls, Rabia,18, Munni,15 and Sabia,13, work at home making saris. A factory out-let has commissioned the work. It  take s2 weeks to make a sari and they get £3 /sari each. Rabia and Munni are sister and both suffer from Rheumatic Arthritis and sitting down working 9 hours/ day seven days a week only makes their condition worse. Sabia wants to go to school but both Rabia and Muni prefer not to go out. Their disability has made them very shy, they cant walk properly and standing up Rabia is now only the size of a 10 year old. Her father says that if they were to go to school, who would then pay for their medication, not to mention the loss of income they generate...best to stay at home he says. The Stars Foundation visiting CSID.<br />
Centre for Services and Information on Disability (CSID) is a charity working for integrating disabled children into mainstream society.
    IMG_3365_1.jpg
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