Ihre Suche nach:
489 Ergebnis(se) in 4 ms
-
DUK10112929_018
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160j)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_017
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160h)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_016
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160e)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_015
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160g)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_014
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160i)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_013
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160m)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_012
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160f)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_011
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160s)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_010
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160n)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_009
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160t)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_008
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160r)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_007
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160o)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_006
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160w)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_005
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160u)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_004
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160x)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_003
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160p)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_002
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160y)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_001
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160q)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10106185_008
NEWS - Frankfurter Buchmesse
October 10, 2018 - Frankfurt, Hesse, Germany - Journalist Martin Klingst from Die Zeit, speaks at the Frankfurt Book Fair about freedom of the press. The 70th Frankfurt Book Fair 2018 is the world largest book fair with over 7,000 exhibitors and over 250,000 expected visitors. It is open from the 10th to the 14th October with the last two days being open to the general public (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10096424_013
PEOPLE - Wimbledon: Carla Suarez Navarro gegen Belinda Bencic
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Juergen Hasenkopf/REX/Shutterstock (9735460r)
Belinda Bencic (SUI) macht die Faust und jubelt,Jubel,Freude,Emotion,
Wimbledon Tennis Championships, Day 3, The All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, London, UK - 04 Jul 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10093974_060
FEATURE - Pix of the Day: Die Bilder des Tages
June 12, 2018 - Lyon, France - Die-In of the members of Alliance VITA against medically assisted procreation (PMA) in Lyon, France, on June 12, 2018. The action is part of the national campaign against medically assisted procreation and the ''rights of the child'' organized in sixty cities (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10093287_057
FEATURE - Best of: Bilder des Wochenendes
May 25, 2018 - Coral Springs, Florida, United States Of America - CORAL SPRINGS, FL - MAY 25: Student activist and shooting survivor David Hogg and other students in the parking lot of a Publix supermarket in Coral Springs in honor of victims of the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. They staged a public ''die In'' where they came in and disrupted and bullied a law abiding business for there own political agenda on May 25, 2018 in Coral Springs, Florida....People: Atmosphere (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10089053_016
NEWS - Venezuela: Brand in Gefängnis fordert über 70 Todesopfer
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roman Camacho/SOPA Images/REX/Shutterstock (9483035g)
Relatives of detainees in the police headquarters of Carabobo, in the city of Valencia in Carabobo state, remain outside the police station waiting to find out if their detained relatives is still alive.
66 die in prison fire, Valencia, Venezuela - 28 Mar 2018
A fire inside the cells of the police station taken the lives of 66 detainees and 2 women who were visiting. Family members alleged that the police burned them alive inside the cells after a fight with them. Relatives also reported that police sells weapons inside the prison and charge money for visiting. For more than 20 hours the national government has not release statements and the list of victims.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10086262_029
PEOPLE - Paris Fashion Week: Promis bei Vivienne Westwood
March 3, 2018 - Paris, Ile-de-France, France - Yolandi Visser arrives at the Vivienne Westwood show as part of the Paris Fashion Week Womenswear Fall/Winter 2018/2019 on March 3, 2018 in Paris, France (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10086262_058
PEOPLE - Paris Fashion Week: Promis bei Vivienne Westwood
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Swan Gallet/WWD/REX/Shutterstock (9444429t)
Yolandi Visser and Watkin Tudor Jones
Vivienne Westwood show, Front Row, Fall Winter 2018, Paris Fashion Week, France - 03 Mar 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078540_015
FEATURE - London: 800 Eimer bunte bei der Tower Bridge
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (9257885n)
Bodie Chester-Canavan, 6 from Bushey, Hertfordshire pictured with 800 abandoned buckets appear at Potters Field Park, London, in a moving tribute to the 800 children who die every day, on average, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation. Just one bucket in the installation, part of WaterAid?s #Untapped appeal, could hold almost enough safe drinking water for one child for a week. Every £1 donated to the #Untapped appeal until 31st January 2018 will be matched by the UK Government. Photo Credit should read WaterAid / Ollie Dixon.
WaterAid's 'Untapped' appeal, Potters Field Park, London, UK - 05 Dec 2017
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078540_014
FEATURE - London: 800 Eimer bunte bei der Tower Bridge
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (9257885l)
Bodie Chester-Canavan, 6 from Bushey, Hertfordshire pictured with 800 abandoned buckets appear at Potters Field Park, London, in a moving tribute to the 800 children who die every day, on average, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation. Just one bucket in the installation, part of WaterAid?s #Untapped appeal, could hold almost enough safe drinking water for one child for a week. Every £1 donated to the #Untapped appeal until 31st January 2018 will be matched by the UK Government. Photo Credit should read WaterAid / Ollie Dixon.
WaterAid's 'Untapped' appeal, Potters Field Park, London, UK - 05 Dec 2017
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078540_013
FEATURE - London: 800 Eimer bunte bei der Tower Bridge
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (9257885o)
Bodie Chester-Canavan with 800 abandoned buckets on display by Tower Bridge, in a tribute to the 800 children on average who die every day, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation.
WaterAid's 'Untapped' appeal, Potters Field Park, London, UK - 05 Dec 2017
Every £1 donated to the #Untapped appeal until 31st January 2018 will be matched by the UK Government
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078540_012
FEATURE - London: 800 Eimer bunte bei der Tower Bridge
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (9257885m)
Bodie Chester-Canavan, 6 from Bushey, Hertfordshire pictured with 800 abandoned buckets appear at Potters Field Park, London, in a moving tribute to the 800 children who die every day, on average, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation. Just one bucket in the installation, part of WaterAid?s #Untapped appeal, could hold almost enough safe drinking water for one child for a week. Every £1 donated to the #Untapped appeal until 31st January 2018 will be matched by the UK Government. Photo Credit should read WaterAid / Ollie Dixon.
WaterAid's 'Untapped' appeal, Potters Field Park, London, UK - 05 Dec 2017
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078540_011
FEATURE - London: 800 Eimer bunte bei der Tower Bridge
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (9257885j)
Bodie Chester-Canavan, 6 from Bushey, Hertfordshire pictured with 800 abandoned buckets appear at Potters Field Park, London, in a moving tribute to the 800 children who die every day, on average, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation. Just one bucket in the installation, part of WaterAid?s #Untapped appeal, could hold almost enough safe drinking water for one child for a week. Every £1 donated to the #Untapped appeal until 31st January 2018 will be matched by the UK Government. Photo Credit should read WaterAid / Ollie Dixon.
WaterAid's 'Untapped' appeal, Potters Field Park, London, UK - 05 Dec 2017
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078540_010
FEATURE - London: 800 Eimer bunte bei der Tower Bridge
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (9257885k)
Bodie Chester-Canavan, 6 from Bushey, Hertfordshire pictured with 800 abandoned buckets appear at Potters Field Park, London, in a moving tribute to the 800 children who die every day, on average, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation. Just one bucket in the installation, part of WaterAid?s #Untapped appeal, could hold almost enough safe drinking water for one child for a week. Every £1 donated to the #Untapped appeal until 31st January 2018 will be matched by the UK Government. Photo Credit should read WaterAid / Ollie Dixon.
WaterAid's 'Untapped' appeal, Potters Field Park, London, UK - 05 Dec 2017
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078540_009
FEATURE - London: 800 Eimer bunte bei der Tower Bridge
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (9257885i)
Zoe Stevens adjusts one of the 800 abandoned buckets on display by Tower Bridge, in a tribute to the 800 children on average who die every day, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation.
WaterAid's 'Untapped' appeal, Potters Field Park, London, UK - 05 Dec 2017
Every £1 donated to the #Untapped appeal until 31st January 2018 will be matched by the UK Government
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078540_008
FEATURE - London: 800 Eimer bunte bei der Tower Bridge
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (9257885c)
Zoe Stevens adjusts one of the 800 abandoned buckets on display by Tower Bridge, in a tribute to the 800 children on average who die every day, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation.
WaterAid's 'Untapped' appeal, Potters Field Park, London, UK - 05 Dec 2017
Every £1 donated to the #Untapped appeal until 31st January 2018 will be matched by the UK Government
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078540_007
FEATURE - London: 800 Eimer bunte bei der Tower Bridge
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (9257885d)
Zoe Stevens adjusts one of the 800 abandoned buckets on display by Tower Bridge, in a tribute to the 800 children on average who die every day, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation.
WaterAid's 'Untapped' appeal, Potters Field Park, London, UK - 05 Dec 2017
Every £1 donated to the #Untapped appeal until 31st January 2018 will be matched by the UK Government
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078540_006
FEATURE - London: 800 Eimer bunte bei der Tower Bridge
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (9257885e)
800 abandoned buckets on display by Tower Bridge, in a tribute to the 800 children on average who die every day, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation.
WaterAid's 'Untapped' appeal, Potters Field Park, London, UK - 05 Dec 2017
Every £1 donated to the #Untapped appeal until 31st January 2018 will be matched by the UK Government
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078540_005
FEATURE - London: 800 Eimer bunte bei der Tower Bridge
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (9257885h)
800 abandoned buckets on display by Tower Bridge, in a tribute to the 800 children on average who die every day, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation.
WaterAid's 'Untapped' appeal, Potters Field Park, London, UK - 05 Dec 2017
Every £1 donated to the #Untapped appeal until 31st January 2018 will be matched by the UK Government
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078540_004
FEATURE - London: 800 Eimer bunte bei der Tower Bridge
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (9257885f)
Zoe Stevens holds one of the 800 abandoned buckets on display by Tower Bridge, in a tribute to the 800 children on average who die every day, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation.
WaterAid's 'Untapped' appeal, Potters Field Park, London, UK - 05 Dec 2017
Every £1 donated to the #Untapped appeal until 31st January 2018 will be matched by the UK Government
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078540_003
FEATURE - London: 800 Eimer bunte bei der Tower Bridge
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (9257885g)
Zoe Stevens adjusts one of the 800 abandoned buckets on display by Tower Bridge, in a tribute to the 800 children on average who die every day, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation.
WaterAid's 'Untapped' appeal, Potters Field Park, London, UK - 05 Dec 2017
Every £1 donated to the #Untapped appeal until 31st January 2018 will be matched by the UK Government
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078540_002
FEATURE - London: 800 Eimer bunte bei der Tower Bridge
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (9257885a)
Zoe Stevens adjusts one of the 800 abandoned buckets on display by Tower Bridge, in a tribute to the 800 children on average who die every day, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation.
WaterAid's 'Untapped' appeal, Potters Field Park, London, UK - 05 Dec 2017
Just one bucket in the installation, part of WaterAid's #Untapped appeal, could hold almost enough safe drinking water for one child for a week. Every £1 donated to the #Untapped appeal until 31st January 2018 will be matched by the UK Government
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078540_001
FEATURE - London: 800 Eimer bunte bei der Tower Bridge
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (9257885b)
Zoe Stevens adjusts one of the 800 abandoned buckets on display by Tower Bridge, in a tribute to the 800 children on average who die every day, due to a lack of clean water and sanitation.
WaterAid's 'Untapped' appeal, Potters Field Park, London, UK - 05 Dec 2017
Every £1 donated to the #Untapped appeal until 31st January 2018 will be matched by the UK Government
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078994_009
FEATURE - Zu Welt AIDS Tag
November 29, 2017 - New York, New York, United States - ACT UP New York took to the streets in outrage to draw attention to World AIDS Day, an international recognition of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. ACT UP NY in alliance with fellow direct action groups, Rise and Resist, and Voices4, staged a die—in and speak out on November 29, 2017 in Times Square to emphasize: people with HIV and AIDS are still here. We are here, and we are fighting for the end of the AIDS epidemic in New York, the US, and around the world (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078994_006
FEATURE - Zu Welt AIDS Tag
November 29, 2017 - New York, New York, United States - ACT UP New York took to the streets in outrage to draw attention to World AIDS Day, an international recognition of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. ACT UP NY in alliance with fellow direct action groups, Rise and Resist, and Voices4, staged a die—in and speak out on November 29, 2017 in Times Square to emphasize: people with HIV and AIDS are still here. We are here, and we are fighting for the end of the AIDS epidemic in New York, the US, and around the world (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078994_005
FEATURE - Zu Welt AIDS Tag
November 29, 2017 - New York, New York, United States - ACT UP New York took to the streets in outrage to draw attention to World AIDS Day, an international recognition of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. ACT UP NY in alliance with fellow direct action groups, Rise and Resist, and Voices4, staged a die—in and speak out on November 29, 2017 in Times Square to emphasize: people with HIV and AIDS are still here. We are here, and we are fighting for the end of the AIDS epidemic in New York, the US, and around the world (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078994_004
FEATURE - Zu Welt AIDS Tag
November 29, 2017 - New York, New York, United States - ACT UP New York took to the streets in outrage to draw attention to World AIDS Day, an international recognition of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. ACT UP NY in alliance with fellow direct action groups, Rise and Resist, and Voices4, staged a die—in and speak out on November 29, 2017 in Times Square to emphasize: people with HIV and AIDS are still here. We are here, and we are fighting for the end of the AIDS epidemic in New York, the US, and around the world (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078818_053
NEWS - Fussball Championsleague: FC Basel siegt gegen Manchester United
Editorial use only. No merchandising. For Football images FA and Premier League restrictions apply inc. no internet/mobile usage without FAPL license - for details contact Football Dataco
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Robbie Stephenson/JMP/REX/Shutterstock (9236881k)
Matteo Darmian of Manchester United is tripped by Geoffroy Serey Die of Basel
FC Basel v Manchester United, Switzerland - 22 Nov 2017
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078818_042
NEWS - Fussball Championsleague: FC Basel siegt gegen Manchester United
Editorial use only. No merchandising. For Football images FA and Premier League restrictions apply inc. no internet/mobile usage without FAPL license - for details contact Football Dataco
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Phil Duncan/ProSports/REX/Shutterstock (9236862aj)
FC Basel Serey Die during the Champions League match between FC Basel and Manchester United at St Jacob-Park, Basel
FC Basel v Manchester United, Champions League - 22 Nov 2017
(c) Dukas -
DUK10078818_030
NEWS - Fussball Championsleague: FC Basel siegt gegen Manchester United
Editorial use only. No merchandising. For Football images FA and Premier League restrictions apply inc. no internet/mobile usage without FAPL license - for details contact Football Dataco
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Robbie Stephenson/JMP/REX/Shutterstock (9236881cb)
Paul Pogba of Manchester United looks up at Geoffroy Serey Die of Basel after being fouled
FC Basel v Manchester United, Switzerland - 22 Nov 2017
(c) Dukas -
DUK10076775_038
FEATURE - Pix of the Day: Die Bilder des Tages
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Paul Marotta/REX/Shutterstock (9211321ab)
The Die Welt balloon, one of the worlds largest helium balloons, is seen along with Tarabant autos made in the former east Germany on Friday, 3 November , 2017
Berlin travel, Germany - 03 Nov 2017
(c) Dukas -
DUK10076066_036
NEWS - Geheimakten zum Kennedy-Attentat werden veröffentlicht
October 26, 2017 - FILE - The government is due to release Thursday more than 3,000 files about the assassination of former President John F. Kennedy. The files would be the last to be released by the National Archives under a 1992 law that ordered the government to make all remaining documents pertaining to the assassination public. There has long been a trove of conspiracy theories surrounding Kennedy's death in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, including doubts about whether assassin Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone, as the Warren Commission determined in its report the following year. Pictured: Nov. 26, 1963 - London, England, U.K. - A solemn mass for President JOHN F. KENNEDY was held in Westminster Cathedral, and was attended by over 2,000 people (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10073619_028
FEATURE - Bilder der Woche
September 25, 2017 - Berlin, Germany - Top candidate of Die Linke (The Left) party Sahra Wagenknecht (C) leaves a press conference in Berlin, Germany on September 25, 2017 (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas