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Thailand Tsunami Mass Grave
A Thai cemetery worker fixes the fire for the body of Soj Chaiyapetch, who is cremated in Bang Muang Cemetery in Bang Muang, Phang-Nga, Thailand, Saturday, Jan. 8, 2005. Ms. Chaiyapetch's body is cremated because her nephews identified the body through a DNA test and thus claimed it. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Thailand Tsunami Mass Grave
About 700 bodies of Thai Tsunami victims are kept in the shallow graves in Bang Muang Cemetery in Bang Muang, Phang-Nga, Thailand, Saturday, Jan. 8, 2005. The bodies have already been DNA tested by Thai forensics, but await to be reexamined by the international standards and to be claimed by victims' relatives. The bodies are to be transferred to a mass forensic site in Yan Yao Temple in Takuapa in the next few days. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Thailand Phi Phi Island
Smoke rises from a pile of trash at the damaged site of Phi Phi Princess Resort in Phi Phi Island, Thailand, Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2005. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Thailand Phi Phi Island
Thai merchants attempt to clean up the badly damaged shopping area on Tong Sai Bay in Phi Phi Island, Thailand, Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2005. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Thailand Phi Phi Island
Smoke rises from a pile of trash at a damaged site of Phi Phi Princess Resort in Phi Phi Island, Thailand, Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2005. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Thailand Phi Phi Island
Chay Kyme of Middlesborough, England, Andrea Whittington of London, England, and Marc Berube of Calgary, Canada, diving instructors for Phi Phi Princess Resort, revisit the island for the first time since the tsunami, Phi Phi Island, Thailand, Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2005. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Thailand Phi Phi Island
Chay Kyme of Middlesborough, England, a diving instructor for Phi Phi Princess Resort,
surveys the damage of the swimming pool in Phi Phi Island, Thailand, Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2005. This is the first time he has returned to the island since the tsunami. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Thailand Search for Missing Family Members
Maria Ekdahl, left, picks up a shell on Pakarang Resort Beach, where she and her family had stayed on the day of the tsunami attack, Khao Lak, Thailand, Friday, Dec. 31, 2004. Ekdahl of Malmoe, Sweden, and Bob Stigsson of Gothenburg, Sweden, together search for their missing family members on New Year's Eve. Stigsson is looking for his wife, Johanna and two daughters Kajsa, 6, and Klara, 3. Ekdahl is looking for her husband, Kent, and two sons, John, 8, and Henry, 6. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Thailand Search for Missing Family Members
Bob Stigsson, right, and Maria Ekdahl revisit the resort in the Pakarang Resort Beach, where Ekdahl and her family had stayed on the day of the tsunami attack, Khao Lak, Thailand, Friday, Dec. 31, 2004. Maria Ekdahl of Malmoe, Sweden, and Bob Stigsson of Gothenburg, Sweden, together search for their missing family members on New Year's Eve. Stigsson is looking for his wife, Johanna and two daughters Kajsa, 6, and Klara, 3. Ekdahl is looking for her husband, Kent, and two sons, John, 8, and Henry, 6. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Thailand Death Toll Rises
An unidentified woman covers her face as she watches dead bodies of victims of tsunami arrive at the morgue in Patong Hospital, Phuket, Thailand, Tuesday, Dec. 28, 2004. Behind her is a stack of temporary coffins for the dead. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Thailand Tsunami Mortuaries
Members of the Thai military who serve as forensic workers inspect dead bodies with dry ice in front of refrigerated containers at Bang Muang Temple, Phang Nga, Thailand, Saturday, Jan. 8, 2005. Some forensics say that the bodies were out on the ground to get microchips injected. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Thailand Tsunami Mortuaries
A Thai woman condoles a mother, below, who just identified her 23-year-old son at a mortuary in Yan Yao Temple, Takua Pa, Phang Nga, Thailand, Saturday, Jan. 8, 2005. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Thailand Tsunami Mortuaries
Dead bodies are kept with dry ice before being transferred to refrigerated containers at Bang Muang Temple, Phang Nga, Thailand, Saturday, Jan. 8, 2005. Some forensics say that the bodies were out on the ground to get microchips injected. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Thailand Tsunami Mortuaries
Members of the Thai military who serve as forensic workers inspect dead bodies in front of refrigerated containers at Bang Muang Temple, Phang Nga, Thailand, Saturday, Jan. 8, 2005. Some forensics say that the bodies were out on the ground to get microchips injected. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Thailand Tsunami Mortuaries
A scene of a temple building where dental forensic work is being conducted by foreign forensics at Yan Yao Temple, Takua Pa, Phang Nga, Thailand, Saturday, Jan. 8, 2005. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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AFGHANISTAN Maternal Mortality: Qamar's Story
Azibullah, 30, cries next to the dead body of his wife, Qamar, center, a 26-year-old tuberculosis patient who died of postpartum complications two weeks after the delivery, and her baby, in their house in the village in Shohada district in Badakshan province, Afghanistan, Monday, May 21, 2007. Qamar, who already lost her first child from the natural delivery about two years ago, delivered the second baby by the cesarean section this time. However, her health became deteriorated with an unknown cause, and she suffered from postpartum complications such as meningitis, hypothermia, and toxoplasmosis. She later died in the hospital on May 20 leaving the baby and the husband behind.
Afghanistan has the second highest maternal mortality rate in the world only after Sierra Leone. An astonishing number of 25,000 women die from obstetric causes per year, or 1 woman dies every 27 minutes. A UN report released in 2000 indicates that the national MMR in Afghanistan was 1,900 per 100,000 live births, whereas it was 17 in the United States. Sierra Leone's maternal death rate was 2,000. Ragh district in Badakshan province showed the highest mortality risk ever recorded in human history, with 64% - more than half of women - of reproductive age died during 1999 and 2002. The causes of deaths were analyzed mainly in two parts: direct and indirect. Direct causes include hemorrhage, obstructed labour, cardiomyopathy, sepsis, obstetric embolism, and pregnancy-induced hypertension; and the indirect causes were tuberculosis, malaria, and obstetric tetanus. According to the survey of Afghan women who died postpartum by Dr. Linda Bartlett in 2002, 94% died within 42 days. 56% of these women died in the first 24 hours.
US President George W. Bush and Afghani President Hamid Karzai began talks on August 6, 2007 to discuss the dangerous situation in Afghanistan. Despite some recent success on the ground fighting the Taliban, NATO and Coalition troop (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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AFGHANISTAN Maternal Mortality: Qamar's Story
Qamar's son lies on a mattress in the house in Shohada district in Badakshan province, Afghanistan, Monday, May 21, 2007. Qamar is a 26-year-old tuberculosis patient who died of postpartum complications two weeks after the delivery. Qamar, who already lost her first child from the natural delivery about two years ago, delivered the second baby by the cesarean section this time. However, her health became deteriorated with an unknown cause, and she suffered from postpartum complications such as meningitis, hypothermia, and toxoplasmosis. She later died in the hospital on May 20 leaving the baby and the husband behind.
Afghanistan has the second highest maternal mortality rate in the world only after Sierra Leone. An astonishing number of 25,000 women die from obstetric causes per year, or 1 woman dies every 27 minutes. A UN report released in 2000 indicates that the national MMR in Afghanistan was 1,900 per 100,000 live births, whereas it was 17 in the United States. Sierra Leone's maternal death rate was 2,000. Ragh district in Badakshan province showed the highest mortality risk ever recorded in human history, with 64% - more than half of women - of reproductive age died during 1999 and 2002. The causes of deaths were analyzed mainly in two parts: direct and indirect. Direct causes include hemorrhage, obstructed labour, cardiomyopathy, sepsis, obstetric embolism, and pregnancy-induced hypertension; and the indirect causes were tuberculosis, malaria, and obstetric tetanus. According to the survey of Afghan women who died postpartum by Dr. Linda Bartlett in 2002, 94% died within 42 days. 56% of these women died in the first 24 hours. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Maternal Mortality: Qamar's Story
Women weep as they sit around the dead body of Qamar, center, a 26-year-old tuberculosis patient who died of postpartum complications two weeks after the delivery, in their house in Shohada district in Badakshan province, Afghanistan, Monday, May 21, 2007. Qamar, who already lost her first child from the natural delivery about two years ago, delivered the second baby by the cesarean section this time. However, her health became deteriorated with an unknown cause, and she suffered from postpartum complications such as meningitis, hypothermia, and toxoplasmosis. She later died in the hospital on May 20 leaving the baby and the husband behind. The family was so poor that they could not afford the blood which costs about $100 USD.
Afghanistan has the second highest maternal mortality rate in the world only after Sierra Leone. An astonishing number of 25,000 women die from obstetric causes per year, or 1 woman dies every 27 minutes. A UN report released in 2000 indicates that the national MMR in Afghanistan was 1,900 per 100,000 live births, whereas it was 17 in the United States. Sierra Leone's maternal death rate was 2,000. Ragh district in Badakshan province showed the highest mortality risk ever recorded in human history, with 64% - more than half of women - of reproductive age died during 1999 and 2002. The causes of deaths were analyzed mainly in two parts: direct and indirect. Direct causes include hemorrhage, obstructed labour, cardiomyopathy, sepsis, obstetric embolism, and pregnancy-induced hypertension; and the indirect causes were tuberculosis, malaria, and obstetric tetanus. According to the survey of Afghan women who died postpartum by Dr. Linda Bartlett in 2002, 94% died within 42 days. 56% of these women died in the first 24 hours. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Drug Eradication
Afghan children eat the seeds inside the pod of the poppy in the middle of the poppy field in a village near Jalalabad, Afghanistan on Wednesday, April 25, 2007. The provincial government of Nangarhar began a drug eradication program early this year, aiming to eradicate 100 percent of the illegal poppy fields. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Drug Eradication
Afghan children eat the seeds inside the pod of the poppy in the middle of the poppy field in a village near Jalalabad, Afghanistan on Wednesday, April 25, 2007. The provincial government of Nangarhar began a drug eradication program early this year, aiming to eradicate 100 percent of the illegal poppy fields. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Drug Eradication
Afghan children eat the seeds inside the pod of the poppy in the middle of the poppy field in a village near Jalalabad, Afghanistan on Wednesday, April 25, 2007. The provincial government of Nangarhar began a drug eradication program early this year, aiming to eradicate 100 percent of the illegal poppy fields. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Drug Eradication
An Afghan policeman shows the seeds inside the pod in the poppy field in a village near Jalalabad, Afghanistan on Wednesday, April 25, 2007. The provincial government of Nangarhar began a drug eradication program early this year, aiming to eradicate 100 percent of the illegal poppy fields. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Drug Eradication
An Afghan farmer at right shows the poppy pod with juice as children watch Afghan villagers and the policemen destroy the poppy field as part of the drug eradication campaign in a village near Jalalabad, Afghanistan on Monday, April 23, 2007. The provincial government of Nangarhar began a drug eradication program early this year, aiming to eradicate 100 percent of the illegal poppy fields. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Drug Eradication
Afghan villagers and the policemen destroy the poppy field as part of the drug eradication campaign in a village near Jalalabad, Afghanistan on Monday, April 23, 2007. The provincial government of Nangarhar began a drug eradication program early this year, aiming to eradicate 100 percent of the illegal poppy fields. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Drug Eradication
Afghan villagers and the policemen destroy the poppy field as part of the drug eradication campaign in a village near Jalalabad, Afghanistan on Monday, April 23, 2007. The provincial government of Nangarhar began a drug eradication program early this year, aiming to eradicate 100 percent of the illegal poppy fields. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Drug Eradication
Afghan villagers and the policemen destroy the poppy field as part of the drug eradication campaign in a village near Jalalabad, Afghanistan on Monday, April 23, 2007. The provincial government of Nangarhar began a drug eradication program early this year, aiming to eradicate 100 percent of the illegal poppy fields. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Drug Eradication
An Afghan policeman with a rocket-propelled grenade as Afghan villagers and the policemen destroy the poppy field as part of the drug eradication campaign in a village near Jalalabad, Afghanistan on Monday, April 23, 2007. The provincial government of Nangarhar began a drug eradication program early this year, aiming to eradicate 100 percent of the illegal poppy fields. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan The Afghan Kite Maker
Esan, 13, the eldest son of Noor Agha, at left, and Saboor, 6, at right, fly the kites next to his house inside the cemetery, Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, March 10, 2007. Noor Agha is a renowned kite maker who has made kites for the movie makers of the best-selling novel, The Kite Runner. Noor Agha's wives, using their special glue, help him produce enough kites to serve the clients' needs. Some of his children can also make their own kites with plastic bags and bamboo sticks. As the Afghan New Year's Day (Nawruz) approaches on March 21, the finger tips of Noor Agha's family become busier in order to mass produce kites.
The film 'The Kite Runner' is scheduled for U.S. release in November 2007. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Security in Bagram
A US soldier walks through the entrance of the Bagram Air Base, in Bagram, Afghanistan on Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2007. Security around Bagram Airfield has been tightened as a suicide bomber killed at least 14 people and wounded about a dozen more outside the main U.S. military base in Afghanistan yesterday, during a visit by U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Security in Bagram
Afghan private security personnel search the bodies of Afghan workers as a US soldier stands guard inside the Bagram Air Base, in Bagram, Afghanistan on Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2007. Security around Bagram Airfield has been tightened as a suicide bomber killed at least 14 people and wounded about a dozen more outside the main U.S. military base in Afghanistan yesterday, during a visit by U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Security in Bagram
Afghan private security personnel search the bodies of Afghan workers inside the Bagram Air Base, in Bagram, Afghanistan on Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2007. Security around Bagram Airfield has been tightened as a suicide bomber killed at least 14 people and wounded about a dozen more outside the main U.S. military base in Afghanistan yesterday, during a visit by U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Security in Bagram
Afghan private security personnel search the bodies of Afghan workers inside the Bagram Air Base, in Bagram, Afghanistan on Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2007. Security around Bagram Airfield has been tightened as a suicide bomber killed at least 14 people and wounded about a dozen more outside the main U.S. military base in Afghanistan yesterday, during a visit by U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Security in Bagram
US soldiers walk past as Afghan private security personnel search the bodies of Afghan workers inside the Bagram Air Base, in Bagram, Afghanistan on Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2007. Security around Bagram Airfield has been tightened as a suicide bomber killed at least 14 people and wounded about a dozen more outside the main U.S. military base in Afghanistan yesterday, during a visit by U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Afghanistan Korean Troops Mourn for Soldier
A self-portrait of Sgt. Yoon Jang-ho, 27, a South Korean member of coalition forces, who was killed in a suicide bombing, at the Bagram Air Base, in Bagram, Afghanistan on Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2007. (HandOut/WpN) **SOUTH KOREA OUT** (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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Performing arts archive
Adura Onashile (Woman In Club), Babou Ceesay (Gerard) and Lucian Msamati (Policeman) in "The Overwhelming" @ Cottesloe, National Theatre
(opening 17-05-06)
05-06
© Tristram Kenton / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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Thailand Search for Missing Family Members
Maria Ekdahl remembers her family as she revisits the resort in the Pakarang Resort Beach, where Ekdahl and her family had stayed on the day of the tsunami, in Khao Lak, Thailand, Friday, Dec. 31, 2004.
Ekdahl of Malmoe, Sweden, and Bob Stigsson of Gothenburg, Sweden, together search for their missing family members on New Year's Eve. Stigsson is looking for his wife, Johanna and two daughters Kajsa, 6, and Klara, 3. Ekdahl is looking for her husband, Kent, and two sons, John, 8, and Henry, 6. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
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