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  • REPORTAGE -  Südafrika: Urbane Gebiete aus der Vogelschau
    DUK10031096_024
    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 (5733931z)
    Sandton is the economic capital of Southern Africa. The Johannesburg Stock Exchange is located there, as well as headquarters for most financial firms in SA. Just across the highway (literally, across the road) is the township of Alexandra - a crime-infested urban warren of shacks, hostels (basically large communal dwellings once used for mine workers), and home to hundreds of thousands of black Africans. Neighbouring Sandton is very white
    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

     

  • Unequal Scenes: Segregation of urban spaces in South Africa - 2016
    DUKAS_66962859_REX
    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 (5733931z)
    Sandton is the economic capital of Southern Africa. The Johannesburg Stock Exchange is located there, as well as headquarters for most financial firms in SA. Just across the highway (literally, across the road) is the township of Alexandra - a crime-infested urban warren of shacks, hostels (basically large communal dwellings once used for mine workers), and home to hundreds of thousands of black Africans. Neighbouring Sandton is very white
    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)

    DUKAS/REX