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DUKAS_184366639_NUR
Vatican To Deactivate Cell Service During Conclave
Cardinal Christoph Schonborn is seen using a mobile phone in this file photo taken on 27 April, 205 in Rome, Italy. The Vatican today announced it is suspending all mobile cell services at the Vatican on the day of the Conclave on the 7th of May. The deactivation will not effect mobile signals on St Peter's square the Vatican said. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184366609_NUR
Vatican To Deactivate Cell Service During Conclave
A member of the clergy is seen using a mobile phone near the Santa Maria Maggiore Basilica in this file photo taken on 27 April, 205 in Rome, Italy. The Vatican today announced it is suspending all mobile cell services at the Vatican on the day of the Conclave on the 7th of May. The deactivation will not effect mobile signals on St Peter's square the Vatican said. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184366519_NUR
Vatican To Deactivate Cell Service During Conclave
Cardinal Christoph Schonborn speaks to journalists in front of the Santa Maria Maggiore Basilica in this file photo taken on 27 April, 205 in Rome, Italy. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184366483_NUR
Vatican To Deactivate Cell Service During Conclave
Cardinal Christoph Schonborn is seen using a mobile phone in this file photo taken on 27 April, 205 in Rome, Italy. The Vatican today announced it is suspending all mobile cell services at the Vatican on the day of the Conclave on the 7th of May. The deactivation will not effect mobile signals on St Peter's square the Vatican said. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184366833_NUR
Vatican To Deactivate Cell Service During Conclave
A nun is seen using a mobiel phone in this file photo taken on 27 April, 205 in Rome, Italy. The Vatican today announced it is suspending all mobile cell services at the Vatican on the day of the Conclave on the 7th of May. The deactivation will not effect mobile signals on St Peter's square the Vatican said. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184366825_NUR
Vatican To Deactivate Cell Service During Conclave
Cardinal Christoph Schonborn is seen using a mobile phone in this file photo taken on 27 April, 205 in Rome, Italy. The Vatican today announced it is suspending all mobile cell services at the Vatican on the day of the Conclave on the 7th of May. The deactivation will not effect mobile signals on St Peter's square the Vatican said. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184366390_NUR
Vatican To Deactivate Cell Service During Conclave
A member of the clergy is seen using a mobile phone near the Santa Maria Maggiore Basilica in this file photo taken on 27 April, 205 in Rome, Italy. The Vatican today announced it is suspending all mobile cell services at the Vatican on the day of the Conclave on the 7th of May. The deactivation will not effect mobile signals on St Peter's square the Vatican said. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184366235_NUR
Vatican To Deactivate Cell Service During Conclave
A member of the clergy is seen using a mobile phone near the Santa Maria Maggiore Basilica in this file photo taken on 27 April, 205 in Rome, Italy. The Vatican today announced it is suspending all mobile cell services at the Vatican on the day of the Conclave on the 7th of May. The deactivation will not effect mobile signals on St Peter's square the Vatican said. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_184366231_NUR
Vatican To Deactivate Cell Service During Conclave
Cardinal Christoph Schonborn is seen using a mobile phone in this file photo taken on 27 April, 205 in Rome, Italy. The Vatican today announced it is suspending all mobile cell services at the Vatican on the day of the Conclave on the 7th of May. The deactivation will not effect mobile signals on St Peter's square the Vatican said. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_176683319_EYE
Gangs recruit skilled drone pilots to fly drugs and even ketchup into UK prisons
Police say specialists headhunted for lucrative missions, sometimes delivering several kilograms at a time.
Gangs are headhunting highly skilled drone pilots to make Amazon Prime-style deliveries of drugs, weapons and even condiments such as tomato ketchup to prison cell windows.
Greater Manchester Police carrying out Operation Avro at prison establishments around the county to try and prevent the conveyancing of banned items into prisons via visitors and by drones.
Police officers at HMP Manchester - known more widely as Strangeways prison - as part of Operation AVRO.
The chief inspector of prisons’ report recently branded Strangeways as squalid and the most violent in the country with with organised crime gangs and widespread supply of drugs into the Victorian jail.
Manchester, UK. 23 October 2024.
Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Christopher Thomond -
DUKAS_176683318_EYE
Gangs recruit skilled drone pilots to fly drugs and even ketchup into UK prisons
Police say specialists headhunted for lucrative missions, sometimes delivering several kilograms at a time.
Gangs are headhunting highly skilled drone pilots to make Amazon Prime-style deliveries of drugs, weapons and even condiments such as tomato ketchup to prison cell windows.
Greater Manchester Police carrying out Operation Avro at prison establishments around the county to try and prevent the conveyancing of banned items into prisons via visitors and by drones.
Police officers at HMP Manchester - known more widely as Strangeways prison - as part of Operation AVRO.
The chief inspector of prisons’ report recently branded Strangeways as squalid and the most violent in the country with with organised crime gangs and widespread supply of drugs into the Victorian jail.
Manchester, UK. 23 October 2024.
Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Christopher Thomond -
DUKAS_176683315_EYE
Gangs recruit skilled drone pilots to fly drugs and even ketchup into UK prisons
Police say specialists headhunted for lucrative missions, sometimes delivering several kilograms at a time.
Gangs are headhunting highly skilled drone pilots to make Amazon Prime-style deliveries of drugs, weapons and even condiments such as tomato ketchup to prison cell windows.
HMP Manchester governor Rob Knight (red tie) and Greater Manchester Police assistant chief constable John Webster ( cap, right) outside the jail as GMP carry out Operation Avro at prison establishments around the county to try and prevent the conveyancing of banned items into prisons via visitors and by drones.
Police officers at HMP Manchester - known more widely as Strangeways prison - as part of Operation AVRO.
The chief inspector of prisons’ report recently branded Strangeways as squalid and the most violent in the country with with organised crime gangs and widespread supply of drugs into the Victorian jail.
Manchester, UK. 23 October 2024.
Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Christopher Thomond -
DUKAS_176683317_EYE
Gangs recruit skilled drone pilots to fly drugs and even ketchup into UK prisons
Police say specialists headhunted for lucrative missions, sometimes delivering several kilograms at a time.
Gangs are headhunting highly skilled drone pilots to make Amazon Prime-style deliveries of drugs, weapons and even condiments such as tomato ketchup to prison cell windows.
Greater Manchester Police carrying out Operation Avro at prison establishments around the county to try and prevent the conveyancing of banned items into prisons via visitors and by drones.
Police officers at HMP Forest Bank in Salford and ANPR vehicles tracking the movements of visitors at and near the prison.
Manchester, UK. 23 October 2024.
Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Christopher Thomond -
DUKAS_173956961_EYE
Cabbage and potatoes are not the only vegetables: can these female farmers persuade Mongolia to change its diet?
In a country where nearly a third of under-fives are anaemic, a lack of vegetables has contributed to poor health and high cancer rates. Now, that’s beginning to change as tomatoes, cucumber and celery are cultivated.
The health consequences of Mongolia's national diet and vegetable deprivation are becoming apparent. The country has the highest rate of liver and stomach cancer cases in the world.
Nursery 71, on the outskirts of Ulaanbaatar, serves children from the ger district and makes sure all its pupils not only eat vegetables but also grow them.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_173956963_EYE
Cabbage and potatoes are not the only vegetables: can these female farmers persuade Mongolia to change its diet?
In a country where nearly a third of under-fives are anaemic, a lack of vegetables has contributed to poor health and high cancer rates. Now, that’s beginning to change as tomatoes, cucumber and celery are cultivated.
The health consequences of Mongolia's national diet and vegetable deprivation are becoming apparent. The country has the highest rate of liver and stomach cancer cases in the world.
Nursery 71, on the outskirts of Ulaanbaatar, serves children from the ger district and makes sure all its pupils not only eat vegetables but also grow them. Khud Erdenechimeg, the nursery’s director.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_173949876_EYE
Mongolia's ambitious programme to tackle cancer death rates reaches 40% of population
Screening project aims to reduce highest cancer mortality rate in the world, but nomadic way of life means many in rural areas are unaware of services.
An ambitious project in Mongolia to tackle cancer mortality rates has reached 40% of the country’s population, according to the World Health Organisation.
Two years after the screening programme began in the world's worst place for cancer survival almost half its citizens have been tested for a number of non-communicable diseases, particularly cancers.
Erdenekhuu Nansalmaa, director general of Mongolia’s National Cancer Centre, says late diagnosis is behind the country’s high death rates.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_173949873_EYE
Mongolia's ambitious programme to tackle cancer death rates reaches 40% of population
Screening project aims to reduce highest cancer mortality rate in the world, but nomadic way of life means many in rural areas are unaware of services.
An ambitious project in Mongolia to tackle cancer mortality rates has reached 40% of the country’s population, according to the World Health Organisation.
Two years after the screening programme began in the world's worst place for cancer survival almost half its citizens have been tested for a number of non-communicable diseases, particularly cancers.
Undarmaa Tudev, head of early detection at Mongolia’s National Cancer Centre.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_173956965_EYE
Cabbage and potatoes are not the only vegetables: can these female farmers persuade Mongolia to change its diet?
In a country where nearly a third of under-fives are anaemic, a lack of vegetables has contributed to poor health and high cancer rates. Now, that’s beginning to change as tomatoes, cucumber and celery are cultivated.
The health consequences of Mongolia's national diet and vegetable deprivation are becoming apparent. The country has the highest rate of liver and stomach cancer cases in the world.
Zina Zaya with her daughter Naranchimeg, in a wheelchair after a car accident in 2006. They grow a variety of vegetables on their small farm not far from Mongolia’s capital, Ulaanbaatar
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_173956964_EYE
Cabbage and potatoes are not the only vegetables: can these female farmers persuade Mongolia to change its diet?
In a country where nearly a third of under-fives are anaemic, a lack of vegetables has contributed to poor health and high cancer rates. Now, that’s beginning to change as tomatoes, cucumber and celery are cultivated.
The health consequences of Mongolia's national diet and vegetable deprivation are becoming apparent. The country has the highest rate of liver and stomach cancer cases in the world.
Farmers on the west bank, Mongolia Byatshandaa Jargal in red, Badam Khand in yellow, Atarjargal in black, Alimaa in blue
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_173956962_EYE
Cabbage and potatoes are not the only vegetables: can these female farmers persuade Mongolia to change its diet?
In a country where nearly a third of under-fives are anaemic, a lack of vegetables has contributed to poor health and high cancer rates. Now, that’s beginning to change as tomatoes, cucumber and celery are cultivated.
The health consequences of Mongolia's national diet and vegetable deprivation are becoming apparent. The country has the highest rate of liver and stomach cancer cases in the world.
Alimaa, a member of the Mongolian Women Farmers Association, tends to a plant in the greenhouse
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_173956960_EYE
Cabbage and potatoes are not the only vegetables: can these female farmers persuade Mongolia to change its diet?
In a country where nearly a third of under-fives are anaemic, a lack of vegetables has contributed to poor health and high cancer rates. Now, that’s beginning to change as tomatoes, cucumber and celery are cultivated.
The health consequences of Mongolia's national diet and vegetable deprivation are becoming apparent. The country has the highest rate of liver and stomach cancer cases in the world.
Farmers on the west bank, Mongolia Byatshandaa Jargal in red, Badam Khand in yellow, Atarjargal in black, Alimaa in blue
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_173949878_EYE
Mongolia's ambitious programme to tackle cancer death rates reaches 40% of population
Screening project aims to reduce highest cancer mortality rate in the world, but nomadic way of life means many in rural areas are unaware of services.
An ambitious project in Mongolia to tackle cancer mortality rates has reached 40% of the country’s population, according to the World Health Organisation.
Two years after the screening programme began in the world's worst place for cancer survival almost half its citizens have been tested for a number of non-communicable diseases, particularly cancers.
Nergui, a herder whose wife, Tungalag Tamir, was diagnosed with cervical cancer. The couple have spent more on travel and medication for her treatment than they usually would in a year.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_173949874_EYE
Mongolia's ambitious programme to tackle cancer death rates reaches 40% of population
Screening project aims to reduce highest cancer mortality rate in the world, but nomadic way of life means many in rural areas are unaware of services.
An ambitious project in Mongolia to tackle cancer mortality rates has reached 40% of the country’s population, according to the World Health Organisation.
Two years after the screening programme began in the world's worst place for cancer survival almost half its citizens have been tested for a number of non-communicable diseases, particularly cancers.
Khyuvasuren Lkhagvasuren had never heard of a mammogram or breast cancer before her 2019 diagnosis.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_173949877_EYE
Mongolia's ambitious programme to tackle cancer death rates reaches 40% of population
Screening project aims to reduce highest cancer mortality rate in the world, but nomadic way of life means many in rural areas are unaware of services.
An ambitious project in Mongolia to tackle cancer mortality rates has reached 40% of the country’s population, according to the World Health Organisation.
Two years after the screening programme began in the world's worst place for cancer survival almost half its citizens have been tested for a number of non-communicable diseases, particularly cancers.
A bedroom at the National Cancer Centre in Ulaanbaatar. The bulk of Mongolia’s cancer facilities are in the city.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_173949875_EYE
Mongolia's ambitious programme to tackle cancer death rates reaches 40% of population
Screening project aims to reduce highest cancer mortality rate in the world, but nomadic way of life means many in rural areas are unaware of services.
An ambitious project in Mongolia to tackle cancer mortality rates has reached 40% of the country’s population, according to the World Health Organisation.
Two years after the screening programme began in the world's worst place for cancer survival almost half its citizens have been tested for a number of non-communicable diseases, particularly cancers.
Tsetsegsaikhan Batmunkh, director of Mongolia’s National Cancer Council, says between 50% and 60% of people diagnosed with cancer live outside the capital.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_167585139_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
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Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_167585141_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_167585145_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_167585143_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_167585144_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_167585140_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_167585142_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_167585138_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_163220159_FER
New computer model works out how cancers spread
Ferrari Press Agency
Cancer 1
Ref 15332
28/11/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures MUST credit: Duke University
Biomedical engineers have created a computational model that simulates the movement of individual cancer cells across long distances within the entire human body.
Knowing how they move around is vital for early detection and targeted treatment.
Cancer cells in the bloodstream are influenced by bumping off of and moving around nearby red blood cells and other interactions.
It’s impossible to simulate the movement of every red blood cell in all of the body’s blood vessels and the new programme provides a way to work around those computational limitations.
The new project, called Adaptive Physics Refinement, captures detailed cellular interactions and their effects on cellular trajectory, offering invaluable insights into the travels of metastatic cancer cells.
It has been developed by a team at Duke University in North Carolina, the USA.
OPS:An artistic rendition of how a new computational modeling system simulates a cancer cell traveling through the human body. To account for millions of cellular interactions, it only creates detailed simulations of cells in the immediate vicinity of the cancer cell as it circulates in the blood stream.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_163220158_FER
New computer model works out how cancers spread
Ferrari Press Agency
Cancer 1
Ref 15332
28/11/2023
See Ferrari text
Pictures MUST credit: Duke University
Biomedical engineers have created a computational model that simulates the movement of individual cancer cells across long distances within the entire human body.
Knowing how they move around is vital for early detection and targeted treatment.
Cancer cells in the bloodstream are influenced by bumping off of and moving around nearby red blood cells and other interactions.
It’s impossible to simulate the movement of every red blood cell in all of the body’s blood vessels and the new programme provides a way to work around those computational limitations.
The new project, called Adaptive Physics Refinement, captures detailed cellular interactions and their effects on cellular trajectory, offering invaluable insights into the travels of metastatic cancer cells.
It has been developed by a team at Duke University in North Carolina, the USA.
OPS:An artistic rendition of how a new computational modeling system simulates a cancer cell traveling through the human body. To account for millions of cellular interactions, it only creates detailed simulations of cells in the immediate vicinity of the cancer cell as it circulates in the blood stream.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_161224443_EYE
'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.
Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.
He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.
By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.
Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.
Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.
28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk
© Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_161224439_EYE
'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.
Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.
He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.
By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.
Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.
Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.
28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk
© Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_161224440_EYE
'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.
Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.
He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.
By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.
Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.
Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.
28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk
© Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_161224442_EYE
'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.
Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.
He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.
By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.
Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.
Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.
28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk
© Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_161224441_EYE
'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.
Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.
He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.
By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.
Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.
Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.
28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk
© Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_161224438_EYE
'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.
Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.
He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.
By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.
Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.
Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.
28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk
© Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_161224444_EYE
'I could have had a job and kids': Oliver Campbell hopes for justice 30 years after murder charge
Exclusive: in 1991 Oliver Campbell, who has a mental impairment, received a life sentence for a crime he says he did not commit.
Gently spoken and with a propensity to worry, Oliver Campbell, 53, is a little anxious about how he is going to get to the court of appeal in London from his home in Suffolk later this month and quite what he will find when he gets there.
He remembers almost nothing of the 14 police interviews he endured three decades ago or even much of the trial at the Old Bailey where was sentenced to life for murder in December 1991.
By the time of his release on licence from prison in 2002, Campbell had clocked up time in at least seven institutions in his 11 years inside, but he has little to say of it beyond that he enjoyed tending to the horses at the stables near HMP Hollesley Bay, an open prison.
Campbell’s lack of recollection of the seismic moments in his life has been just one of the consequences of the brain damage he suffered from a heavy blow to his head as a baby.
Oliver Campbell, 53, telling his story at Suffolk County Council offices in Ipswich.
He spent 11 years in prison for a murder during a shop robbery which he says he did not commit, and could not have committed.
Campbell, who has learning disabilities due to an accident as an eight month old child, has had his case referred to the court of appeal by the criminal cases review commission and the first hearing is on 11 October.
He confessed to the crime back in 1991, during 14 police interviews, some without a lawyer, but the CCRC has agreed that his level of suggestibility had not been reflected in the original trial.
28/09/2023, Suffolk County Council, Endeavour House, 8 Russell Rd, Ipswich, Suffolk
© Joshua Bright / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_160297540_EYE
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.
Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Parsons Media / eyevine. -
DUKAS_160297539_EYE
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.
Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Parsons Media / eyevine. -
DUKAS_160297625_EYE
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.
Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Parsons Media / eyevine. -
DUKAS_160297618_EYE
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.
Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Parsons Media / eyevine. -
DUKAS_160297542_EYE
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.
Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Parsons Media / eyevine. -
DUKAS_160297541_EYE
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.
Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Parsons Media / eyevine. -
DUKAS_160297626_EYE
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.
Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Parsons Media / eyevine. -
DUKAS_160297623_EYE
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Down in London, UK.
12/09/2023. London, United Kingdom.
Princess of Wales visits HMP High Dow. The Princess of Wales, Patron of The Forward Trust, visits HMP High Down in Surrey to learn about how the charity is supporting those in the criminal justice system to manage and recover from their addictions. Ahead of Addiction Awareness Week, which will take place from 28th October to 4th November, The Princess will hear about the work that The Forward Trust do inside HMP High Down to support clients to manage their addiction and to help break the intergenerational trauma of addiction.
Picture by Andrew Parsons / Parsons Media / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http:///www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Parsons Media / eyevine.