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  • Gen Z Marches In Mexico City
    DUKAS_191282375_ZUM
    Gen Z Marches In Mexico City
    November 20, 2025, Mexico, Cdmx, Mexico: Around 100 Gen Z demonstrators marched down Paseo de la Reforma to protest insecurity, corruption, and drug trafficking. Riot police twice blocked their path due to the Mexican Revolution military parade, detaining them briefly before allowing the march toward Mexico City’s main square. The protest remained peaceful, with Black Bloc members again carrying a One Piece flag. (Credit Image: © Josue Perez/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • FEATURE - San Diego Comic-Con 2022, California
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    FEATURE - San Diego Comic-Con 2022, California
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Chris Chew/UPI/Shutterstock (13044515l)
    Pirate Ron Maggi (L) and unicorn Alberto Hurtado attend Day 2 of Comic-Con at the San Diego Convention Center in San Diego, California on Friday, July 22, 2022. The pandemic had prevented the fan favorite convention from being held in-person in 2020 and 2021.
    San Diego Comic-Con 2022, California, United States - 22 Jul 2022

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - San Diego Comic-Con 2022, California
    DUK10150934_007
    FEATURE - San Diego Comic-Con 2022, California
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Chris Chew/UPI/Shutterstock (13044515k)
    Cosplayers and fans are back attending in person at Comic-Con at the San Diego Convention Center in San Diego, California on Friday, July 22, 2022. The pandemic had prevented the fan favorite convention from being held in-person in 2020 and 2021.
    San Diego Comic-Con 2022, California, United States - 22 Jul 2022

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - San Diego Comic-Con 2022, California
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    FEATURE - San Diego Comic-Con 2022, California
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Chris Chew/UPI/Shutterstock (13044515a)
    Cosplayers and fans are back attending in person at Comic-Con at the San Diego Convention Center in San Diego, California on Friday, July 22, 2022. The pandemic had prevented the fan favorite convention from being held in-person in 2020 and 2021.
    San Diego Comic-Con 2022, California, United States - 22 Jul 2022

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Pix of the Day: Bilder des Tages
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    FEATURE - Pix of the Day: Bilder des Tages
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Cris Faga/REX/Shutterstock (9295717f)
    Cyclists protested this afternoon (16) on Avenida Paulista in São Paulo. In the traditional descent to Santos that occurred on December 10, cyclists were prevented and repressed with bombs and rubber bullets by the Military Police. They protest for the recognition of the bicycle as a means of transport.
    Bicycle Rights March, Sao Paulo, Brazil - 16 Dec 2017

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Die Schottischen Highlands
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    FEATURE - Die Schottischen Highlands
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Camillo Berenos/REX Shutterstock

    Editorial use only. Only for use in context of story about Camillo Berenos' photo series on the Scottish Highlands. No stock, books, merchandising or advertising without photographer's permission
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Camillo Berenos/REX/Shutterstock (5770146d)
    This is just another take of the classic view over Sgurr Fiona and the impressive ridge of An Teallach (Dundonell, NW Scotland) taken at sunset on a wild camping trip at the end of auutumn. Unfortunately the cloud cover prevented an explosion of colours at sunset, but visibility remained decent, so no complaining from me. I would have loved to get lower to emphasize the sandstone rocks a little more, but this would have concealed Loch Toll an Lochain.
    Stunning photos of the Scottish Highlands, Britain - 2016
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/sjo1

    A photographer has released a stunning series of photos that show the raw beauty of the Scottish Highlands.

    Scotland-based photographer Camillo Berenos has spent the past few years travelling though the highlands, capturing breath-taking pictures along the way.

    Camillo said: "Unlike many who undertake such projects, I haven't focused on a single defined geographical area, though the majority of my photographic forays have taken me to the Western and North-Western Highlands.

    "From the vast but also familiar landscapes of Rannoch Moor and Glen Coe, to the relentlessly steep slopes of the hills in Kintail and the rugged and shapely mountain massifs of Torridon and Wester Ross, I have spent many hours in the hills, with specific destinations often primarily being determined by where the weather forecast looked most favourable."
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    DUKAS_44090427_REX
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Eric Lusito/Rex Features. Only for use in story about Eric Lusito's "After the Wall: Traces of the Soviet Empire" photo project. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Eric Lusito/REX (4033703j)
    LATVIA / Irbene. Document recovered from a Soviet military base abandoned after the collapse of the USSR. Photograph printed from black and white roll film found at Irbene, Latvia. Some 2,000 soldiers and scientists lived and worked in this secret army base, the former Soviet Space Communication Centre 'Zvezdoshka'. Its existence
    was not revealed until 1993. The base housed the
    radiotelescopes RT-16 and RT-32 (known as 'Little Star') which, when it was built, was reputed to be one of the most advanced in the world. Soviet withdrawal led to sabotage but international pressure from the scientific world prevented its total destruction.
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/p8ug

    These haunting photographs show the remnants of the once all-powerful Soviet empire.

    They are the work of Eric Lusito, who spent six years travelling throughout the former Soviet world from East Germany to Mongolia, from Poland to Kazakhstan to seek out remains of the military installations that embodied the ambition and the might of the USSR.

    Describing himself as working like an archaeologist, the French photographer says his project "Traces of the Soviet Empire" is a photographic record of the land and architecture - haunted by the symbols and history of a once powerful Empire.

    The on-going project takes the form of three series: exteriors, interiors, and found photographs "images from another time, another space and another world".

    What he found was colourful propaganda wall art, faded frescos of Lenin, discarded gas masks, and huge monuments, including those in the shapes of a soldier and a sword.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    DUKAS_44090424_REX
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Eric Lusito/Rex Features. Only for use in story about Eric Lusito's "After the Wall: Traces of the Soviet Empire" photo project. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Eric Lusito/REX (4033703i)
    LATVIA / Irbene. Document recovered from a Soviet military base abandoned after the collapse of the USSR. Photograph printed from black and white roll film found at Irbene, Latvia. Some 2,000 soldiers and scientists lived and worked in this secret army base, the former Soviet Space Communication Centre 'Zvezdoshka'. Its existence
    was not revealed until 1993. The base housed the
    radio telescopes RT-16 and RT-32 (known as 'Little Star') which, when it was built, was reputed to be one of the most advanced in the world. Soviet withdrawal led to sabotage but international pressure from the scientific world prevented its total destruction.
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/p8ug

    These haunting photographs show the remnants of the once all-powerful Soviet empire.

    They are the work of Eric Lusito, who spent six years travelling throughout the former Soviet world from East Germany to Mongolia, from Poland to Kazakhstan to seek out remains of the military installations that embodied the ambition and the might of the USSR.

    Describing himself as working like an archaeologist, the French photographer says his project "Traces of the Soviet Empire" is a photographic record of the land and architecture - haunted by the symbols and history of a once powerful Empire.

    The on-going project takes the form of three series: exteriors, interiors, and found photographs "images from another time, another space and another world".

    What he found was colourful propaganda wall art, faded frescos of Lenin, discarded gas masks, and huge monuments, including those in the shapes of a soldier and a sword.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    DUKAS_44090385_REX
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Eric Lusito/Rex Features. Only for use in story about Eric Lusito's "After the Wall: Traces of the Soviet Empire" photo project. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Eric Lusito/REX (4033703ak)
    LATVIA / Irbene / 2007. Abandoned Soviet military base after the collapse of the USSR. Gas masks, sabotaged to avoid reuse.Some 2,000 soldiers and scientists lived and worked in this secret army base, the former Soviet Space Communication Centre 'Zvezdoshka'. Its existence was not revealed until 1993. The base housed the radiotelescopes RT-16 and RT-32 (known as 'Little Star') which, when it was built, was reputed to be one of the most advanced in the world. Soviet withdrawal led to sabotage but international pressure from the scientific world prevented its total destruction.
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/p8ug

    These haunting photographs show the remnants of the once all-powerful Soviet empire.

    They are the work of Eric Lusito, who spent six years travelling throughout the former Soviet world from East Germany to Mongolia, from Poland to Kazakhstan to seek out remains of the military installations that embodied the ambition and the might of the USSR.

    Describing himself as working like an archaeologist, the French photographer says his project "Traces of the Soviet Empire" is a photographic record of the land and architecture - haunted by the symbols and history of a once powerful Empire.

    The on-going project takes the form of three series: exteriors, interiors, and found photographs "images from another time, another space and another world".

    What he found was colourful propaganda wall art, faded frescos of Lenin, discarded gas masks, and huge monuments, including those in the shapes of a soldier and a sword.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    DUKAS_44090353_REX
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Eric Lusito/Rex Features. Only for use in story about Eric Lusito's "After the Wall: Traces of the Soviet Empire" photo project. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Eric Lusito/REX (4033703l)
    LATVIA / Irbene. Document recovered from a Soviet military base abandoned after the collapse of the USSR. Photograph printed from black and white roll film found at Irbene, Latvia. Some 2,000 soldiers and scientists lived and worked in this secret army base, the former Soviet Space Communication Centre 'Zvezdoshka'. Its existence
    was not revealed until 1993. The base housed the
    radiotelescopes RT-16 and RT-32 (known as 'Little Star') which, when it was built, was reputed to be one of the most advanced in the world. Soviet withdrawal led to sabotage but international pressure from the scientific world prevented its total destruction.
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/p8ug

    These haunting photographs show the remnants of the once all-powerful Soviet empire.

    They are the work of Eric Lusito, who spent six years travelling throughout the former Soviet world from East Germany to Mongolia, from Poland to Kazakhstan to seek out remains of the military installations that embodied the ambition and the might of the USSR.

    Describing himself as working like an archaeologist, the French photographer says his project "Traces of the Soviet Empire" is a photographic record of the land and architecture - haunted by the symbols and history of a once powerful Empire.

    The on-going project takes the form of three series: exteriors, interiors, and found photographs "images from another time, another space and another world".

    What he found was colourful propaganda wall art, faded frescos of Lenin, discarded gas masks, and huge monuments, including those in the shapes of a soldier and a sword.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    DUKAS_44090350_REX
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Eric Lusito/Rex Features. Only for use in story about Eric Lusito's "After the Wall: Traces of the Soviet Empire" photo project. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Eric Lusito/REX (4033703k)
    LATVIA / Irbene. Document recovered from a Soviet military base abandoned after the collapse of the USSR. Photograph printed from black and white roll film found at Irbene, Latvia. Some 2,000 soldiers and scientists lived and worked in this secret army base, the former Soviet Space Communication Centre 'Zvezdoshka'. Its existence
    was not revealed until 1993. The base housed the
    radio telescopes RT-16 and RT-32 (known as 'Little Star') which, when it was built, was reputed to be one of the most advanced in the world. Soviet withdrawal led to sabotage but international pressure from the scientific world prevented its total destruction.
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/p8ug

    These haunting photographs show the remnants of the once all-powerful Soviet empire.

    They are the work of Eric Lusito, who spent six years travelling throughout the former Soviet world from East Germany to Mongolia, from Poland to Kazakhstan to seek out remains of the military installations that embodied the ambition and the might of the USSR.

    Describing himself as working like an archaeologist, the French photographer says his project "Traces of the Soviet Empire" is a photographic record of the land and architecture - haunted by the symbols and history of a once powerful Empire.

    The on-going project takes the form of three series: exteriors, interiors, and found photographs "images from another time, another space and another world".

    What he found was colourful propaganda wall art, faded frescos of Lenin, discarded gas masks, and huge monuments, including those in the shapes of a soldier and a sword.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    DUKAS_44090305_REX
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Eric Lusito/Rex Features. Only for use in story about Eric Lusito's "After the Wall: Traces of the Soviet Empire" photo project. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Eric Lusito/REX (4033703bm)
    LATVIA / Irbene / 2007.Abandoned Soviet military base after the collapse of the USSR. Some 2,000 soldiers and scientists lived and worked in this secret army base, the former Soviet Space Communication Centre 'Zvezdoshka'. Its existence was not revealed until 1993. The base housed the radiotelescopes RT-16 and RT-32 (known as 'Little Star') which, when it was built, was reputed to be one of the most advanced in the world. Soviet withdrawal led to sabotage but international pressure from the scientific world prevented its total destruction.
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/p8ug

    These haunting photographs show the remnants of the once all-powerful Soviet empire.

    They are the work of Eric Lusito, who spent six years travelling throughout the former Soviet world from East Germany to Mongolia, from Poland to Kazakhstan to seek out remains of the military installations that embodied the ambition and the might of the USSR.

    Describing himself as working like an archaeologist, the French photographer says his project "Traces of the Soviet Empire" is a photographic record of the land and architecture - haunted by the symbols and history of a once powerful Empire.

    The on-going project takes the form of three series: exteriors, interiors, and found photographs "images from another time, another space and another world".

    What he found was colourful propaganda wall art, faded frescos of Lenin, discarded gas masks, and huge monuments, including those in the shapes of a soldier and a sword.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    DUKAS_44090306_REX
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    MANDATORY CREDIT: Eric Lusito/Rex Features. Only for use in story about Eric Lusito's "After the Wall: Traces of the Soviet Empire" photo project. Editorial Use Only. No stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Eric Lusito/REX (4033703al)
    LATVIA / Irbene / 2007. Abandoned Soviet military base after the collapse of the USSR. Some 2,000 soldiers and scientists lived and worked in this secret army base, the former Soviet Space Communication Centre 'Zvezdoshka'. Its existence was not revealed until 1993. The base housed the radio telescopes RT-16 and RT-32 (known as 'Little Star') which, when it was built, was reputed to be one of the most advanced in the world. Soviet withdrawal led to sabotage but international pressure from the scientific world prevented its total destruction.
    Eric Lusito - Traces of the Soviet Empire
    FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/p8ug

    These haunting photographs show the remnants of the once all-powerful Soviet empire.

    They are the work of Eric Lusito, who spent six years travelling throughout the former Soviet world from East Germany to Mongolia, from Poland to Kazakhstan to seek out remains of the military installations that embodied the ambition and the might of the USSR.

    Describing himself as working like an archaeologist, the French photographer says his project "Traces of the Soviet Empire" is a photographic record of the land and architecture - haunted by the symbols and history of a once powerful Empire.

    The on-going project takes the form of three series: exteriors, interiors, and found photographs "images from another time, another space and another world".

    What he found was colourful propaganda wall art, faded frescos of Lenin, discarded gas masks, and huge monuments, including those in the shapes of a soldier and a sword.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • PEOPLE - Zu Eugenies Hochzeit: Kinderfotos der Prinzessin
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    PEOPLE - Zu Eugenies Hochzeit: Kinderfotos der Prinzessin
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Murray Sanders/Daily Mail/REX/Shutterstock (1166282a)
    Duchess Of York Arrives At Her Rented House With Princess Beatrice And Princess Eugenie And Nanny Alison Wardley. The Royal Family Was Thrown Into A New Crisis Last Night Over A Tape Recording Said To Be Of The Princess Of Wales. On The Day The Duchess Of York Left Balmoral For Ever Details Of What Was Claimed To Be An 'intimate' Telephone Conversation Were Leaking Out. The Existence Of The Tape Has Been Known To Royal Observers For More Than Two Years But Doubts About Its Authenticity And The Circumstances Under Which It Was Recorded Have Previously Prevented Publication. Pkt 417 - 87844
    Duchess Of York Arrives At Her Rented House With Princess Beatrice And Princess Eugenie And Nanny Alison Wardley. The Royal Family Was Thrown Into A New Crisis Last Night Over A Tape Recording Said To Be Of The Princess Of Wales. On The Day The Duche

    (c) Dukas