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ICE Operation Midway Blitz
September 16, 2025, Chicago, Illinois, USA: Holding a sign that reads 'The Most Dangerous Immigrants Arrived In 1492!' High school students gather at Trump Tower in downtown Chicago to protest against increased immigration enforcement in the area. (Credit Image: © Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune via ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
� 2025 by TNS via ZUMA Press Wire -
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ICE Operation Midway Blitz
September 16, 2025, Chicago, Illinois, USA: High school students gather at Trump Tower in downtown Chicago to protest against increased immigration enforcement in the area. (Credit Image: © Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune via ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
� 2025 by TNS via ZUMA Press Wire -
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ICE Operation Midway Blitz
September 5, 2025, Broadview, Illinois, USA: A protester, who declined to be named, leads other protestors and activists to gather and chant at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview, Illinois. (Credit Image: © Dominic Di Palermo/Chicago Tribune via ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
� 2025 by TNS via ZUMA Press Wire -
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ICE Operation Midway Blitz
May 7, 2025, Springfield, Illinois, USA : Department of Homeland Security Secretary KRISTI NOEM tours a regional HSI facility in Springfield to observe the processing of two Guatemalan nationals. (Credit Image: © E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune via ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
� 2025 by Chicago Tribune/ZUMA Press Wire -
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ICE Operation Midway Blitz
April 4 2025, Broadview, Illinois, USA: Venezuelan migrant brothers JOSE GREGORIO GONZALEZ, left, and ALFREDO PACHECO are reunited in Broadview after Gonzalez was released from ICE custody to donate a kidney to his brother. Pacheco was diagnosed with end-stage kidney failure earlier this year. (Credit Image: © Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune via ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
� 2025 by Chicago Tribune/ZUMA Press Wire -
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ICE Operation Midway Blitz
June 18, 2025, Broadview, Illinois, USA: Illinois Reps. DANNY K. DAVIS, JESSE GARCIA, DELIA C. RAMIREZ and JONATHAN JACKSON show their identification to a security camera as they attempt entry into the U.S. Immigration and Enforcement processing center in Broadview, Illinois,. The was told they needed to make a request first with ICE. (Credit Image: © Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune via ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
� 2025 by Chicago Tribune/ZUMA Press Wire -
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ICE Operation Midway Blitz
June 11, 2025, Chicago, Illinois, USA: Following her kindergarten graduation, GABRIELA PINEDA, 6, swings outside her home in Chicago. Pineda's mother, Wendy Sarai Pineda, was detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement on June 4, 2025, and is now in a detention center in Kentucky, awaiting deportation to Honduras. (Credit Image: © Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune via ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
� 2025 by Chicago Tribune/ZUMA Press Wire -
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ICE Operation Midway Blitz
June 4, 2025, Chicago, Illinois, USA: Visibly distressed, several people in handcuffs are escorted by federal agents to white vans parked outside the Intensive Supervision Appearance Program office run by Immigration and Customs Enforcement in the South Loop of Chicago. (Credit Image: © Eileen T. Meslar/Chicago Tribune via ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
� 2025 by TNS via ZUMA Press Wire -
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USA News - August 2, 2024
August 2, 2024, Chicago, IL, USA: Chappell Roan performs on the T-Mobile stage during Lollapalooza at Grant Park on Aug. 1, 2024, in Chicago. (Credit Image: © Eileen T. Meslar/Chicago Tribune via ZUMA Press _DALLE (FOTO: DUKAS/DALLE) --- NO WEB USAGE ---
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PEOPLE - R. Kelly in Missbrauchsprozess verurteilt
September 27, 2021, New York, New York, USA: R. KELLY was found guilty Monday of sexually abusing women, boys and girls for decades — capping the ’90s R&B superstar’s stunning fall from grace. The singer, 54, was convicted on all nine counts including racketeering and violations of the Mann Act, which prohibits the transport of ''any woman or girl'' across state lines for any ''immoral purpose.'' He faces 10 years to life in prison. FILE PHOTO SHOT: Sept. 17, 2019, Chicago, Illinois, USA: Singer R. KELLY, left, turns to exit during a hearing at the Leighton Criminal Court Building in Chicago. (Credit Image: © Antonio Perez/TNS via ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
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REPORTAGE - Südafrika: Urbane Gebiete aus der Vogelschau
MANDATORY CREDIT: Johnny Miller/Millefoto/Rex Shutterstock. Editorial use only. Only for use in context of 'Unequal Scenes' photo project. Please link to website if possible: www.unequalscenes.com. Strictly no stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Johnny Miller/Millefoto/REX/Shutterstock (5733931b)
Masiphumelele / Lake Michelle. Picturesque suburbs look out onto the glistening waters of Lake Michelle, 20km from Cape Town?s city centre. Separated by wetlands, a guard house and an electrified fence, the 38,000 inhabitants of the neighbouring tin shacks of Masiphumelele are a world away. There is no police station, only one small day clinic, and it?s estimated that up to 35% of the population is infected with HIV or TB
Unequal Scenes: Segregation of urban spaces in South Africa - 2016
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/sgkr
A photographer has captured a stark view of the urban economic segregation in South Africa.
Johnny Miller has used drone technology to take an aerial view of the divide in standards of living between the poor and the wealthy.
His work highlights how the manicured suburbs of the middle classes sit only several hundred metres away from the ramshackle shanty towns of the poorest members of society.
An example include a God's-eye view of the picturesque suburbs looking out onto the glistening waters of Lake Michelle, 20km from Cape Town?s city centre. Separated by wetlands, a guard house and an electrified fence, the 38,000 inhabitants of the neighbouring tin shacks of Masiphumelele are a world away.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
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Unequal Scenes: Segregation of urban spaces in South Africa - 2016
MANDATORY CREDIT: Johnny Miller/Millefoto/Rex Shutterstock. Editorial use only. Only for use in context of 'Unequal Scenes' photo project. Please link to website if possible: www.unequalscenes.com. Strictly no stock, books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Johnny Miller/Millefoto/REX/Shutterstock (5733931b)
Masiphumelele / Lake Michelle. Picturesque suburbs look out onto the glistening waters of Lake Michelle, 20km from Cape Town?s city centre. Separated by wetlands, a guard house and an electrified fence, the 38,000 inhabitants of the neighbouring tin shacks of Masiphumelele are a world away. There is no police station, only one small day clinic, and it?s estimated that up to 35% of the population is infected with HIV or TB
Unequal Scenes: Segregation of urban spaces in South Africa - 2016
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/sgkr
A photographer has captured a stark view of the urban economic segregation in South Africa.
Johnny Miller has used drone technology to take an aerial view of the divide in standards of living between the poor and the wealthy.
His work highlights how the manicured suburbs of the middle classes sit only several hundred metres away from the ramshackle shanty towns of the poorest members of society.
An example include a God's-eye view of the picturesque suburbs looking out onto the glistening waters of Lake Michelle, 20km from Cape Town?s city centre. Separated by wetlands, a guard house and an electrified fence, the 38,000 inhabitants of the neighbouring tin shacks of Masiphumelele are a world away.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Tuberculosis spreads in Haiti
February 7, 2013, Port-au-Prince, Haiti. A Haitian man with drug resistant tuberculosis is resting inside his tent at a local Port-au-Prince hospital. Even before the 2010 earthquake, the country had the highest tuberculosis rate in the Americans (roughly 30,000 new cases each year). With the health infrastructure still mostly in ruins, TB has been on the rise. (Jonathan Alpeyrie/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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Pakistan: TB
November 6, 2008, Peshawar, NWFP, Pakistan: Patients recieving treatment and care for TB at The Lady Reading Hospital in Peshawar, Pakistan.
Patients admitted for treatment range from teenagers to the elderly. The hosiptal has a policy of non-isolation. Patients can lead normal lives and do not be isolated. According to chest specialist Dr Shahzada Athat, patients already bear the burden of social stigma that people create around a patient suffering with TB. They advocate treatment, which can be provided at home.
The hospital follows the DOTS (Directly Observed Treatment Courses) policy directive issued from World Health Organisation (WHO) where a person of social standing or responsibility (teacher or health worker) observes the administration of medicines by the patient.
Following an intensive phase of initial therapy and further eight months of treatment, the patient becomes non-infectious. Patient care at the hospital is free courtesy of government funding.
. Credit: Jason Tanner / Polaris (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
Jason Tanner 2008 -
DUKAS_08120143_POL
Pakistan: TB
November 6, 2008, Peshawar, NWFP, Pakistan: Patients recieving treatment and care for TB at The Lady Reading Hospital in Peshawar, Pakistan.
Patients admitted for treatment range from teenagers to the elderly. The hosiptal has a policy of non-isolation. Patients can lead normal lives and do not be isolated. According to chest specialist Dr Shahzada Athat, patients already bear the burden of social stigma that people create around a patient suffering with TB. They advocate treatment, which can be provided at home.
The hospital follows the DOTS (Directly Observed Treatment Courses) policy directive issued from World Health Organisation (WHO) where a person of social standing or responsibility (teacher or health worker) observes the administration of medicines by the patient.
Following an intensive phase of initial therapy and further eight months of treatment, the patient becomes non-infectious. Patient care at the hospital is free courtesy of government funding.
. Credit: Jason Tanner / Polaris (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
Jason Tanner 2008 -
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Pakistan: TB
November 6, 2008, Peshawar, NWFP, Pakistan: Patients has a chest drain inserted into his lung to drain fluid and obtain a biopsy for suspected pulmonary tuberculosis.
Patients admitted for treatment range from teenagers to the elderly. The hosiptal has a policy of non-isolation. Patients can lead normal lives and do not be isolated. According to chest specialist Dr Shahzada Athat, patients already bear the burden of social stigma that people create around a patient suffering with TB. They advocate treatment, which can be provided at home.
The hospital follows the DOTS (Directly Observed Treatment Courses) policy directive issued from World Health Organisation (WHO) where a person of social standing or responsibility (teacher or health worker) observes the administration of medicines by the patient.
Following an intensive phase of initial therapy and further eight months of treatment, the patient becomes non-infectious. Patient care at the hospital is free courtesy of government funding.
. Credit: Jason Tanner / Polaris (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
Jason Tanner 2008 -
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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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Orphaned badger triplets, Secret World Animal Rescue Centre, Britain - 08 Mar 2007
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Richard Austin / Rex Features ( 648946b )
Orphaned badger triplet cubs are the first of this year's baby animals to come into the Secret World Animal Rescue Center. Their future may well be in doubt with the call for culling of badgers in the South West by farmers worried over the TB crisis which has in some quarters been blamed on the badger population.
Animal Magic - The Work Of Richard Austin
ANIMAL MAGIC - THE WORK OF RICHARD AUSTIN
Richard Austin is known throughout the photography world as one of the best in the business at capturing unique animal images. So far he has released four books showcasing some of his work, including 'Animal Magic' and 'Dogs and Puppies'.
Richard started off as newspaper photographer, but whose brighter pictures began to creep into his work as they became a more popular alternative to the typical "gloom and doom" stories he found himself stuck with.
"I've always been interested in wildlife, ever since I was a kid. My heroes were the Daily Mirror's Arthur Sidey and the Daily Mail's Mike Hollist - they were really good animal photographers. I remember some cracking images that they took and I was always attracted to that."
Although he is perhaps more associated with cute images of piglets in deckchairs or lambs playing with ducklings, plenty of his photography is of animals in the wild in their natural habitats.
However, he is quick to point out the difference between his work and that of a National Geographic photographer for example:
"There's wildlife photography and then there's animal photography," said Richard, "I'm not the kind of photographer that sits down a rabbit hole for three days with a couple of cheese sandwiches and a flask of coffee. I've got to know that something's happening somewhere. The most I'll give it is an hour. And if nothing's happened I'll go and come back again later.
"There are s...
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DUKAS/REX