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DUK10112929_025
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160v)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_024
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160d)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_023
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160c)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_022
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160b)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_021
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160a)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_020
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160l)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_019
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160k)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_018
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160j)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_017
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160h)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_016
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160e)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_015
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160g)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_014
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160i)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_013
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160m)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_012
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160f)
School children Joana, 9, and sister Jessica, 11, from London look at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_011
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160s)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_010
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160n)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_009
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160t)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_008
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160r)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_007
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160o)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_006
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160w)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_005
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160u)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_004
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160x)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_003
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160p)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_002
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160y)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10112929_001
NEWS - London: 'WaterAid 800 Schoolbags' Aktion vor der St.Pauls Cathedral
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Oliver Dixon/REX/Shutterstock (10071160q)
Actor and WaterAid Ambassador Dougray Scott looks at the 800 schoolbags laid by WaterAid on the steps of St Paul's Cathedral in a moving tribute to the number of children who die every day from dirty water, never reaching their fifth birthday or first day at school.
WaterAid 800 schoolbags, St Pauls Cathedral, London, UK - 23 Jan 2019
WaterAid placed 800 children’s schoolbags on the famous steps of St Paul’s Cathedral today as a stark reminder of the number of young children’s lives lost every single day due to dirty water and poor sanitation. Each of the Cathedral’s 24 entrance steps represented one hour – and the 33 children younger than five who die every hour – a whole class that never even made it to school, all for the lack of something as basic as clean water. On the bags in the front row were the names of real children whose lives were tragically cut short by diarrhoeal diseases linked to dirty water and poor sanitation, some as young as 9-month-old Arena from Madagascar, and some just about to start school, like from 5-year-old Jennifer from Zambia.
(c) Dukas