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Awami League Banned In Bangladesh
Bangladeshis celebrate after the interim government officially bans all activities of the Awami League (AL) under the Anti-Terrorism Act, pending the conclusion of the International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) trials against the party and its leaders, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Ahmed Salahuddin/NurPhoto) -
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Awami League Banned In Bangladesh
Bangladeshis celebrate after the interim government officially bans all activities of the Awami League (AL) under the Anti-Terrorism Act, pending the conclusion of the International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) trials against the party and its leaders, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Ahmed Salahuddin/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184546159_NUR
Awami League Banned In Bangladesh
Bangladeshis celebrate after the interim government officially bans all activities of the Awami League (AL) under the Anti-Terrorism Act, pending the conclusion of the International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) trials against the party and its leaders, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Ahmed Salahuddin/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184546155_NUR
Awami League Banned In Bangladesh
Bangladeshis celebrate after the interim government officially bans all activities of the Awami League (AL) under the Anti-Terrorism Act, pending the conclusion of the International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) trials against the party and its leaders, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Ahmed Salahuddin/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184546151_NUR
Awami League Banned In Bangladesh
Bangladeshis celebrate after the interim government officially bans all activities of the Awami League (AL) under the Anti-Terrorism Act, pending the conclusion of the International Crimes Tribunal (ICT) trials against the party and its leaders, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Ahmed Salahuddin/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_101345488_REX
Mosque shootings, Christchurch, New Zealand - 15 Mar 2019
Rex Features Ltd. do not claim any Copyright or License of the attached image
Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (10157635o)
Paralysed husband Farid Uddin, whose wife Husne Ara Parvin, 42, has been identified as one of the victims killed yesterday by white supremacist Australian killer Brenton Tarrant, 28, who is the main suspect for gunning down people inside two mosques in New Zealand. Husne, one of the Bangladeshis killed in the shootings at two mosques in New Zealand, was killed when she tried to save her wheelchair-bound paralysed husband Farid Uddin, according to a relative. Farid survived the attack as others in the mosque took him out to safety when the shooting began, he said. The couple have a daughter.
Mosque shootings, Christchurch, New Zealand - 15 Mar 2019
DUKAS/REX/SHUTTERSTOCK DUKAS -
DUKAS_101345485_REX
Mosque shootings, Christchurch, New Zealand - 15 Mar 2019
Rex Features Ltd. do not claim any Copyright or License of the attached image
Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (10157635l)
Husne Ara Parvin, 42, who has been identified as one of the victims killed yesterday by white supremacist Australian killer Brenton Tarrant, 28, who is the main suspect for gunning down people inside two mosques in New Zealand. Husne, one of the Bangladeshis killed in the shootings at two mosques in New Zealand, was killed when she tried to save her wheelchair-bound paralysed husband Farid Uddin, according to a relative.
Mosque shootings, Christchurch, New Zealand - 15 Mar 2019
DUKAS/REX/SHUTTERSTOCK DUKAS -
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NEWS - Spanien: Bootflüchtlinge vor Motril gerettet
Migrants from Bangladesh seen waiting on the Hamal rescue boat.
79 migrants were rescued in the Alboran Sea by maritime rescue teams from the port of Motril near Granada.//SOPAIMAGES_sopa01646/Credit:Carlos Gil / SOPA Images/SIPA/1809141125 (FOTO: DUKAS/SIPA) *** Local Caption *** 00875234
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Children and mustered flower in Bangladesh
Jan. 2, 2015 - Munshigonj, Bangladesh - CHildren playing in mustered field in Bangladesh..As winter deepens in this country that lies athwart the Tropic of Cancer, the landscape is coloured, across the country, with vast swathes of fields of Mustard, lending an impressive, almost magical quality to the almost endless views across the deltaic plains (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
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Bangladesh The India-Bangladesh Border Fence
Locals walk in the fields near the border with India, in Bangladesh on Sunday, March 4, 2007. India is building a border fence between itself and Bangladesh in an effort to curb illegal immigration. Bangladesh is not opposed to the fence. A thirty year old accord, written not long after Bangladesh gained independence, states that no barrier can be built within 150 yards of the border, which is currently delineated by concrete markers. India is keeping the fence at that distance in most areas but not all. Also the fence must eventually run through wetlands, densely populated urban areas and jungle. The BSF, Border Security Forces, are known to shoot at anyone attempting to cross the border illegally. In some cases, the fence has separated farmers from their fields and split families in half. The border is approximately 2,500 miles long and is guarded by an estimated 40,000 BSF members. According to current projections, the fence will be finished by the end of 2007. **ALL FRANCOPHONE COUNTRIES OUT** (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Bangladesh The India-Bangladesh Border Fence
Children walk on the other side of the border in the town of Choudagram, Bangladesh, on Friday, March 2, 2007. India is building a border fence between itself and Bangladesh in an effort to curb illegal immigration. Bangladesh is not opposed to the fence. A thirty year old accord, written not long after Bangladesh gained independence, states that no barrier can be built within 150 yards of the border, which is currently delineated by concrete markers. India is keeping the fence at that distance in most areas but not all. Also the fence must eventually run through wetlands, densely populated urban areas and jungle. The BSF, Border Security Forces, are known to shoot at anyone attempting to cross the border illegally. In some cases, the fence has separated farmers from their fields and split families in half. The border is approximately 2,500 miles long and is guarded by an estimated 40,000 BSF members. According to current projections, the fence will be finished by the end of 2007.
**ALL FRANCOPHONE COUNTRIES OUT** (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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India The India-Bangladesh Border Fence
Two Indians who crossed the fence illegally to exchange wood for vegetables with their Bangladeshi neighbours, walk in a field near the border with India, in Tripura, Bangladesh on Friday, March 2, 2007. They had to give money to the BSF guards to do so.
India is building a border fence between itself and Bangladesh in an effort to curb illegal immigration. Bangladesh is not opposed to the fence. A thirty year old accord, written not long after Bangladesh gained independence, states that no barrier can be built within 150 yards of the border, which is currently delineated by concrete markers. India is keeping the fence at that distance in most areas but not all. Also the fence must eventually run through wetlands, densely populated urban areas and jungle. The BSF, Border Security Forces, are known to shoot at anyone attempting to cross the border illegally. In some cases, the fence has separated farmers from their fields and split families in half. The border is approximately 2,500 miles long and is guarded by an estimated 40,000 BSF members. According to current projections, the fence will be finished by the end of 2007. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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India The India-Bangladesh Border Fence
Soldiers walk near the border with India, in Bangladesh on Tuesday, Feb. 27, 2007. India is building a border fence between itself and Bangladesh in an effort to curb illegal immigration. Bangladesh is not opposed to the fence. A thirty year old accord, written not long after Bangladesh gained independence, states that no barrier can be built within 150 yards of the border, which is currently delineated by concrete markers. India is keeping the fence at that distance in most areas but not all. Also the fence must eventually run through wetlands, densely populated urban areas and jungle. The BSF, Border Security Forces, are known to shoot at anyone attempting to cross the border illegally. In some cases, the fence has separated farmers from their fields and split families in half. The border is approximately 2,500 miles long and is guarded by an estimated 40,000 BSF members. According to current projections, the fence will be finished by the end of 2007. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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India The India-Bangladesh Border Fence
A Border Security Forces guard keeps watching over the fence at the border with Bangladesh in Siliguri, India on Monday, Feb. 26, 2007. He has to make sure that nobody's is crossing over. Soon, the fence will be electrified to avoid illegal immigration. India is building a border fence between itself and Bangladesh in an effort to curb illegal immigration. Bangladesh is not opposed to the fence. A thirty year old accord, written not long after Bangladesh gained independence, states that no barrier can be built within 150 yards of the border, which is currently delineated by concrete markers. India is keeping the fence at that distance in most areas but not all. Also the fence must eventually run through wetlands, densely populated urban areas and jungle. The BSF, Border Security Forces, are known to shoot at anyone attempting to cross the border illegally. In some cases, the fence has separated farmers from their fields and split families in half. The border is approximately 2,500 miles long and is guarded by an estimated 40,000 BSF members. According to current projections, the fence will be finished by the end of 2007. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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India The India-Bangladesh Border Fence
A Border Security Forces guard keeps watching over the fence which should be electrified very soon, in Siliguri, India, at the border with Bangladesh, on Monday, February 27, 2007.
India is building a border fence between itself and Bangladesh in an effort to curb illegal immigration. Bangladesh is not opposed to the fence. A thirty year old accord, written not long after Bangladesh gained independence, states that no barrier can be built within 150 yards of the border, which is currently delineated by concrete markers. India is keeping the fence at that distance in most areas but not all. Also the fence must eventually run through wetlands, densely populated urban areas and jungle. The BSF, Border Security Forces, are known to shoot at anyone attempting to cross the border illegally. In some cases, the fence has separated farmers from their fields and split families in half. The border is approximately 2,500 miles long and is guarded by an estimated 40,000 BSF members. According to current projections, the fence will be finished by the end of 2007. **ALL FRANCOPHONE COUNTRIES OUT** (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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DUKAS_3251409_WPN
India The India-Bangladesh Border Fence
Children ride a bike near the border with Bangladesh, in India on Monday, Feb. 26, 2007. India is building a border fence between itself and Bangladesh in an effort to curb illegal immigration. Bangladesh is not opposed to the fence. A thirty year old accord, written not long after Bangladesh gained independence, states that no barrier can be built within 150 yards of the border, which is currently delineated by concrete markers. India is keeping the fence at that distance in most areas but not all. Also the fence must eventually run through wetlands, densely populated urban areas and jungle. The BSF, Border Security Forces, are known to shoot at anyone attempting to cross the border illegally. In some cases, the fence has separated farmers from their fields and split families in half. The border is approximately 2,500 miles long and is guarded by an estimated 40,000 BSF members. According to current projections, the fence will be finished by the end of 2007. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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India The India-Bangladesh Border Fence
A woman with her child in Calcutta, India, on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2007, where most of the illegal Bangladeshi immigrants live in huts in extremely difficult conditions.
India is building a border fence between itself and Bangladesh in an effort to curb illegal immigration. Bangladesh is not opposed to the fence. A thirty year old accord, written not long after Bangladesh gained independence, states that no barrier can be built within 150 yards of the border, which is currently delineated by concrete markers. India is keeping the fence at that distance in most areas but not all. Also the fence must eventually run through wetlands, densely populated urban areas and jungle. The BSF, Border Security Forces, are known to shoot at anyone attempting to cross the border illegally. In some cases, the fence has separated farmers from their fields and split families in half. The border is approximately 2,500 miles long and is guarded by an estimated 40,000 BSF members. According to current projections, the fence will be finished by the end of 2007. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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