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DUKAS_124750720_EYE
Everything but the gull: how Ben Watt fought the Covid blues with birdsong. Blackcap! Chiffchaff! Warbler! The Everything But the Girl star is fighting to save a nature reserve in the heart of the city. As his new album Storm Shelter is released, we join
Everything but the gull: how Ben Watt fought the Covid blues with birdsong. Blackcap! Chiffchaff! Warbler! The Everything But the Girl star is fighting to save a nature reserve in the heart of the city. As his new album Storm Shelter is released, we join him for some birdwatching.
Musician Ben Watt who has kick-started a campaign to clean up Brent Reservoir (Welsh Harp reservoir) in north west London, April 2021
© Jill Mead / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_124750911_EYE
Everything but the gull: how Ben Watt fought the Covid blues with birdsong. Blackcap! Chiffchaff! Warbler! The Everything But the Girl star is fighting to save a nature reserve in the heart of the city. As his new album Storm Shelter is released, we join
Everything but the gull: how Ben Watt fought the Covid blues with birdsong. Blackcap! Chiffchaff! Warbler! The Everything But the Girl star is fighting to save a nature reserve in the heart of the city. As his new album Storm Shelter is released, we join him for some birdwatching.
Musician Ben Watt who has kick-started a campaign to clean up Brent Reservoir (Welsh Harp reservoir) in north west London, April 2021
© Jill Mead / 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_124750723_EYE
Everything but the gull: how Ben Watt fought the Covid blues with birdsong. Blackcap! Chiffchaff! Warbler! The Everything But the Girl star is fighting to save a nature reserve in the heart of the city. As his new album Storm Shelter is released, we join
Everything but the gull: how Ben Watt fought the Covid blues with birdsong. Blackcap! Chiffchaff! Warbler! The Everything But the Girl star is fighting to save a nature reserve in the heart of the city. As his new album Storm Shelter is released, we join him for some birdwatching.
Musician Ben Watt who has kick-started a campaign to clean up Brent Reservoir (Welsh Harp reservoir) in north west London, April 2021
© Jill Mead / 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_124750475_EYE
Everything but the gull: how Ben Watt fought the Covid blues with birdsong. Blackcap! Chiffchaff! Warbler! The Everything But the Girl star is fighting to save a nature reserve in the heart of the city. As his new album Storm Shelter is released, we join
Everything but the gull: how Ben Watt fought the Covid blues with birdsong. Blackcap! Chiffchaff! Warbler! The Everything But the Girl star is fighting to save a nature reserve in the heart of the city. As his new album Storm Shelter is released, we join him for some birdwatching.
Musician Ben Watt who has kick-started a campaign to clean up Brent Reservoir (Welsh Harp reservoir) in north west London, April 2021
© Jill Mead / 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_124750924_EYE
Everything but the gull: how Ben Watt fought the Covid blues with birdsong. Blackcap! Chiffchaff! Warbler! The Everything But the Girl star is fighting to save a nature reserve in the heart of the city. As his new album Storm Shelter is released, we join
Everything but the gull: how Ben Watt fought the Covid blues with birdsong. Blackcap! Chiffchaff! Warbler! The Everything But the Girl star is fighting to save a nature reserve in the heart of the city. As his new album Storm Shelter is released, we join him for some birdwatching.
Musician Ben Watt who has kick-started a campaign to clean up Brent Reservoir (Welsh Harp reservoir) in north west London, April 2021
© Jill Mead / 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_124750490_EYE
Everything but the gull: how Ben Watt fought the Covid blues with birdsong. Blackcap! Chiffchaff! Warbler! The Everything But the Girl star is fighting to save a nature reserve in the heart of the city. As his new album Storm Shelter is released, we join
Everything but the gull: how Ben Watt fought the Covid blues with birdsong. Blackcap! Chiffchaff! Warbler! The Everything But the Girl star is fighting to save a nature reserve in the heart of the city. As his new album Storm Shelter is released, we join him for some birdwatching.
Musician Ben Watt who has kick-started a campaign to clean up Brent Reservoir (Welsh Harp reservoir) in north west London, April 2021
© Jill Mead / 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_124750517_EYE
Everything but the gull: how Ben Watt fought the Covid blues with birdsong. Blackcap! Chiffchaff! Warbler! The Everything But the Girl star is fighting to save a nature reserve in the heart of the city. As his new album Storm Shelter is released, we join
Everything but the gull: how Ben Watt fought the Covid blues with birdsong. Blackcap! Chiffchaff! Warbler! The Everything But the Girl star is fighting to save a nature reserve in the heart of the city. As his new album Storm Shelter is released, we join him for some birdwatching.
Musician Ben Watt who has kick-started a campaign to clean up Brent Reservoir (Welsh Harp reservoir) in north west London, April 2021
© Jill Mead / 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_124228629_EYE
‘Clients want us to clean the air’: how the pandemic took hygiene to a whole new level. The past year has turbo-charged our relationship with cleanliness, raising expectations and turning many into germophobes. Has it gone too far?
ÔClients want us to clean the airÕ: how the pandemic took hygiene to a whole new level. The past year has turbo-charged our relationship with cleanliness, raising expectations and turning many into germophobes. Has it gone too far? These days there are no funny looks, the pandemic having made germophobes of many of us. Between March and May of 2020, UK sales of liquid disinfectant were 74.9% higher, and bleach 32% higher, than the year before. Until the vaccine came along, hygiene seemed to be our best defence against a deadly enemy that threatened our entire way of life, and we diligently held that line. What did you do in the war effort, Mummy? I triple-sanitised the door handle, darling.
Cleanliness is once again up there next to godliness, as the Victorian embroidery samplers proclaimed. Or is cleaning the new rockÕnÕroll? Still life cleaning image.
© Lol Keegan / 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_124228631_EYE
‘Clients want us to clean the air’: how the pandemic took hygiene to a whole new level. The past year has turbo-charged our relationship with cleanliness, raising expectations and turning many into germophobes. Has it gone too far?
ÔClients want us to clean the airÕ: how the pandemic took hygiene to a whole new level. The past year has turbo-charged our relationship with cleanliness, raising expectations and turning many into germophobes. Has it gone too far? These days there are no funny looks, the pandemic having made germophobes of many of us. Between March and May of 2020, UK sales of liquid disinfectant were 74.9% higher, and bleach 32% higher, than the year before. Until the vaccine came along, hygiene seemed to be our best defence against a deadly enemy that threatened our entire way of life, and we diligently held that line. What did you do in the war effort, Mummy? I triple-sanitised the door handle, darling.
Cleanliness is once again up there next to godliness, as the Victorian embroidery samplers proclaimed. Or is cleaning the new rockÕnÕroll? Still life cleaning image.
© Lol Keegan / 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_124228630_EYE
‘Clients want us to clean the air’: how the pandemic took hygiene to a whole new level. The past year has turbo-charged our relationship with cleanliness, raising expectations and turning many into germophobes. Has it gone too far?
ÔClients want us to clean the airÕ: how the pandemic took hygiene to a whole new level. The past year has turbo-charged our relationship with cleanliness, raising expectations and turning many into germophobes. Has it gone too far? These days there are no funny looks, the pandemic having made germophobes of many of us. Between March and May of 2020, UK sales of liquid disinfectant were 74.9% higher, and bleach 32% higher, than the year before. Until the vaccine came along, hygiene seemed to be our best defence against a deadly enemy that threatened our entire way of life, and we diligently held that line. What did you do in the war effort, Mummy? I triple-sanitised the door handle, darling.
Cleanliness is once again up there next to godliness, as the Victorian embroidery samplers proclaimed. Or is cleaning the new rockÕnÕroll? Still life cleaning image.
© Lol Keegan / 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_124228628_EYE
‘Clients want us to clean the air’: how the pandemic took hygiene to a whole new level. The past year has turbo-charged our relationship with cleanliness, raising expectations and turning many into germophobes. Has it gone too far?
ÔClients want us to clean the airÕ: how the pandemic took hygiene to a whole new level. The past year has turbo-charged our relationship with cleanliness, raising expectations and turning many into germophobes. Has it gone too far? These days there are no funny looks, the pandemic having made germophobes of many of us. Between March and May of 2020, UK sales of liquid disinfectant were 74.9% higher, and bleach 32% higher, than the year before. Until the vaccine came along, hygiene seemed to be our best defence against a deadly enemy that threatened our entire way of life, and we diligently held that line. What did you do in the war effort, Mummy? I triple-sanitised the door handle, darling.
Cleanliness is once again up there next to godliness, as the Victorian embroidery samplers proclaimed. Or is cleaning the new rockÕnÕroll? Still life cleaning image.
© Lol Keegan / 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_124228627_EYE
‘Clients want us to clean the air’: how the pandemic took hygiene to a whole new level. The past year has turbo-charged our relationship with cleanliness, raising expectations and turning many into germophobes. Has it gone too far?
ÔClients want us to clean the airÕ: how the pandemic took hygiene to a whole new level. The past year has turbo-charged our relationship with cleanliness, raising expectations and turning many into germophobes. Has it gone too far? These days there are no funny looks, the pandemic having made germophobes of many of us. Between March and May of 2020, UK sales of liquid disinfectant were 74.9% higher, and bleach 32% higher, than the year before. Until the vaccine came along, hygiene seemed to be our best defence against a deadly enemy that threatened our entire way of life, and we diligently held that line. What did you do in the war effort, Mummy? I triple-sanitised the door handle, darling.
Cleanliness is once again up there next to godliness, as the Victorian embroidery samplers proclaimed. Or is cleaning the new rockÕnÕroll? Still life cleaning image.
© Lol Keegan / 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_124228626_EYE
‘Clients want us to clean the air’: how the pandemic took hygiene to a whole new level. The past year has turbo-charged our relationship with cleanliness, raising expectations and turning many into germophobes. Has it gone too far?
ÔClients want us to clean the airÕ: how the pandemic took hygiene to a whole new level. The past year has turbo-charged our relationship with cleanliness, raising expectations and turning many into germophobes. Has it gone too far? These days there are no funny looks, the pandemic having made germophobes of many of us. Between March and May of 2020, UK sales of liquid disinfectant were 74.9% higher, and bleach 32% higher, than the year before. Until the vaccine came along, hygiene seemed to be our best defence against a deadly enemy that threatened our entire way of life, and we diligently held that line. What did you do in the war effort, Mummy? I triple-sanitised the door handle, darling.
Cleanliness is once again up there next to godliness, as the Victorian embroidery samplers proclaimed. Or is cleaning the new rockÕnÕroll? Still life cleaning image.
© Lol Keegan / 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_124228625_EYE
‘Clients want us to clean the air’: how the pandemic took hygiene to a whole new level. The past year has turbo-charged our relationship with cleanliness, raising expectations and turning many into germophobes. Has it gone too far?
ÔClients want us to clean the airÕ: how the pandemic took hygiene to a whole new level. The past year has turbo-charged our relationship with cleanliness, raising expectations and turning many into germophobes. Has it gone too far? These days there are no funny looks, the pandemic having made germophobes of many of us. Between March and May of 2020, UK sales of liquid disinfectant were 74.9% higher, and bleach 32% higher, than the year before. Until the vaccine came along, hygiene seemed to be our best defence against a deadly enemy that threatened our entire way of life, and we diligently held that line. What did you do in the war effort, Mummy? I triple-sanitised the door handle, darling.
Cleanliness is once again up there next to godliness, as the Victorian embroidery samplers proclaimed. Or is cleaning the new rockÕnÕroll? Still life cleaning image.
© Lol Keegan / 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. -
DUK10142543_011
NEWS - Schockierende Bilder zeigen Plastikmüll in Fischfängen, Indien
A wildlife conservationist has captured disturbing scenes of plastic in fishing nets.
Srikanth Mannepuri documented a catch in the Indian port city of Visakhapatnam in March 2021. It shows fish trapped within carrier bags and a large amount of plastic wrapping from brands including Snickers and Head & Shoulders shampoo.
Srikanth explains: “We all know the curse of plastics. It’s permanence. They do not disintegrate, they do not disappear. Now, look at the scale. A fishing net no bigger than 1km pulled out more plastic than fishes. And these are products that we use on a daily basis. Milk, Noodles, chocolates, chips. Imagine the scale of plastic floating in these oceans for years as death-traps and choking hazards. It is this plastic that gets consumed by fishes and enters our bodies as micro plastics. If this were to continue, the fisherman wouldn’t be pulling out fishes anymore. It would only be plastic. Imagine this future. Next time we casually discard a plastic wrapper - Remember this. We are staring at a bleak future as we enter the era of - The dawn of the plastic man.”
Where: Visakhapatnam, India
When: 31 Mar 2021
Credit: Srikanth Mannepuri/Cover-Images.com
**Editorial use only** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10142543_010
NEWS - Schockierende Bilder zeigen Plastikmüll in Fischfängen, Indien
A wildlife conservationist has captured disturbing scenes of plastic in fishing nets.
Srikanth Mannepuri documented a catch in the Indian port city of Visakhapatnam in March 2021. It shows fish trapped within carrier bags and a large amount of plastic wrapping from brands including Snickers and Head & Shoulders shampoo.
Srikanth explains: “We all know the curse of plastics. It’s permanence. They do not disintegrate, they do not disappear. Now, look at the scale. A fishing net no bigger than 1km pulled out more plastic than fishes. And these are products that we use on a daily basis. Milk, Noodles, chocolates, chips. Imagine the scale of plastic floating in these oceans for years as death-traps and choking hazards. It is this plastic that gets consumed by fishes and enters our bodies as micro plastics. If this were to continue, the fisherman wouldn’t be pulling out fishes anymore. It would only be plastic. Imagine this future. Next time we casually discard a plastic wrapper - Remember this. We are staring at a bleak future as we enter the era of - The dawn of the plastic man.”
Where: Visakhapatnam, India
When: 31 Mar 2021
Credit: Srikanth Mannepuri/Cover-Images.com
**Editorial use only** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10142543_009
NEWS - Schockierende Bilder zeigen Plastikmüll in Fischfängen, Indien
A wildlife conservationist has captured disturbing scenes of plastic in fishing nets.
Srikanth Mannepuri documented a catch in the Indian port city of Visakhapatnam in March 2021. It shows fish trapped within carrier bags and a large amount of plastic wrapping from brands including Snickers and Head & Shoulders shampoo.
Srikanth explains: “We all know the curse of plastics. It’s permanence. They do not disintegrate, they do not disappear. Now, look at the scale. A fishing net no bigger than 1km pulled out more plastic than fishes. And these are products that we use on a daily basis. Milk, Noodles, chocolates, chips. Imagine the scale of plastic floating in these oceans for years as death-traps and choking hazards. It is this plastic that gets consumed by fishes and enters our bodies as micro plastics. If this were to continue, the fisherman wouldn’t be pulling out fishes anymore. It would only be plastic. Imagine this future. Next time we casually discard a plastic wrapper - Remember this. We are staring at a bleak future as we enter the era of - The dawn of the plastic man.”
Where: Visakhapatnam, India
When: 31 Mar 2021
Credit: Srikanth Mannepuri/Cover-Images.com
**Editorial use only** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10142543_008
NEWS - Schockierende Bilder zeigen Plastikmüll in Fischfängen, Indien
A wildlife conservationist has captured disturbing scenes of plastic in fishing nets.
Srikanth Mannepuri documented a catch in the Indian port city of Visakhapatnam in March 2021. It shows fish trapped within carrier bags and a large amount of plastic wrapping from brands including Snickers and Head & Shoulders shampoo.
Srikanth explains: “We all know the curse of plastics. It’s permanence. They do not disintegrate, they do not disappear. Now, look at the scale. A fishing net no bigger than 1km pulled out more plastic than fishes. And these are products that we use on a daily basis. Milk, Noodles, chocolates, chips. Imagine the scale of plastic floating in these oceans for years as death-traps and choking hazards. It is this plastic that gets consumed by fishes and enters our bodies as micro plastics. If this were to continue, the fisherman wouldn’t be pulling out fishes anymore. It would only be plastic. Imagine this future. Next time we casually discard a plastic wrapper - Remember this. We are staring at a bleak future as we enter the era of - The dawn of the plastic man.”
Where: Visakhapatnam, India
When: 31 Mar 2021
Credit: Srikanth Mannepuri/Cover-Images.com
**Editorial use only** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10142543_007
NEWS - Schockierende Bilder zeigen Plastikmüll in Fischfängen, Indien
A wildlife conservationist has captured disturbing scenes of plastic in fishing nets.
Srikanth Mannepuri documented a catch in the Indian port city of Visakhapatnam in March 2021. It shows fish trapped within carrier bags and a large amount of plastic wrapping from brands including Snickers and Head & Shoulders shampoo.
Srikanth explains: “We all know the curse of plastics. It’s permanence. They do not disintegrate, they do not disappear. Now, look at the scale. A fishing net no bigger than 1km pulled out more plastic than fishes. And these are products that we use on a daily basis. Milk, Noodles, chocolates, chips. Imagine the scale of plastic floating in these oceans for years as death-traps and choking hazards. It is this plastic that gets consumed by fishes and enters our bodies as micro plastics. If this were to continue, the fisherman wouldn’t be pulling out fishes anymore. It would only be plastic. Imagine this future. Next time we casually discard a plastic wrapper - Remember this. We are staring at a bleak future as we enter the era of - The dawn of the plastic man.”
Where: Visakhapatnam, India
When: 31 Mar 2021
Credit: Srikanth Mannepuri/Cover-Images.com
**Editorial use only** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10142543_006
NEWS - Schockierende Bilder zeigen Plastikmüll in Fischfängen, Indien
A wildlife conservationist has captured disturbing scenes of plastic in fishing nets.
Srikanth Mannepuri documented a catch in the Indian port city of Visakhapatnam in March 2021. It shows fish trapped within carrier bags and a large amount of plastic wrapping from brands including Snickers and Head & Shoulders shampoo.
Srikanth explains: “We all know the curse of plastics. It’s permanence. They do not disintegrate, they do not disappear. Now, look at the scale. A fishing net no bigger than 1km pulled out more plastic than fishes. And these are products that we use on a daily basis. Milk, Noodles, chocolates, chips. Imagine the scale of plastic floating in these oceans for years as death-traps and choking hazards. It is this plastic that gets consumed by fishes and enters our bodies as micro plastics. If this were to continue, the fisherman wouldn’t be pulling out fishes anymore. It would only be plastic. Imagine this future. Next time we casually discard a plastic wrapper - Remember this. We are staring at a bleak future as we enter the era of - The dawn of the plastic man.”
Where: Visakhapatnam, India
When: 31 Mar 2021
Credit: Srikanth Mannepuri/Cover-Images.com
**Editorial use only** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10142543_005
NEWS - Schockierende Bilder zeigen Plastikmüll in Fischfängen, Indien
A wildlife conservationist has captured disturbing scenes of plastic in fishing nets.
Srikanth Mannepuri documented a catch in the Indian port city of Visakhapatnam in March 2021. It shows fish trapped within carrier bags and a large amount of plastic wrapping from brands including Snickers and Head & Shoulders shampoo.
Srikanth explains: “We all know the curse of plastics. It’s permanence. They do not disintegrate, they do not disappear. Now, look at the scale. A fishing net no bigger than 1km pulled out more plastic than fishes. And these are products that we use on a daily basis. Milk, Noodles, chocolates, chips. Imagine the scale of plastic floating in these oceans for years as death-traps and choking hazards. It is this plastic that gets consumed by fishes and enters our bodies as micro plastics. If this were to continue, the fisherman wouldn’t be pulling out fishes anymore. It would only be plastic. Imagine this future. Next time we casually discard a plastic wrapper - Remember this. We are staring at a bleak future as we enter the era of - The dawn of the plastic man.”
Where: Visakhapatnam, India
When: 31 Mar 2021
Credit: Srikanth Mannepuri/Cover-Images.com
**Editorial use only** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10142543_004
NEWS - Schockierende Bilder zeigen Plastikmüll in Fischfängen, Indien
A wildlife conservationist has captured disturbing scenes of plastic in fishing nets.
Srikanth Mannepuri documented a catch in the Indian port city of Visakhapatnam in March 2021. It shows fish trapped within carrier bags and a large amount of plastic wrapping from brands including Snickers and Head & Shoulders shampoo.
Srikanth explains: “We all know the curse of plastics. It’s permanence. They do not disintegrate, they do not disappear. Now, look at the scale. A fishing net no bigger than 1km pulled out more plastic than fishes. And these are products that we use on a daily basis. Milk, Noodles, chocolates, chips. Imagine the scale of plastic floating in these oceans for years as death-traps and choking hazards. It is this plastic that gets consumed by fishes and enters our bodies as micro plastics. If this were to continue, the fisherman wouldn’t be pulling out fishes anymore. It would only be plastic. Imagine this future. Next time we casually discard a plastic wrapper - Remember this. We are staring at a bleak future as we enter the era of - The dawn of the plastic man.”
Where: Visakhapatnam, India
When: 31 Mar 2021
Credit: Srikanth Mannepuri/Cover-Images.com
**Editorial use only** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10142543_003
NEWS - Schockierende Bilder zeigen Plastikmüll in Fischfängen, Indien
A wildlife conservationist has captured disturbing scenes of plastic in fishing nets.
Srikanth Mannepuri documented a catch in the Indian port city of Visakhapatnam in March 2021. It shows fish trapped within carrier bags and a large amount of plastic wrapping from brands including Snickers and Head & Shoulders shampoo.
Srikanth explains: “We all know the curse of plastics. It’s permanence. They do not disintegrate, they do not disappear. Now, look at the scale. A fishing net no bigger than 1km pulled out more plastic than fishes. And these are products that we use on a daily basis. Milk, Noodles, chocolates, chips. Imagine the scale of plastic floating in these oceans for years as death-traps and choking hazards. It is this plastic that gets consumed by fishes and enters our bodies as micro plastics. If this were to continue, the fisherman wouldn’t be pulling out fishes anymore. It would only be plastic. Imagine this future. Next time we casually discard a plastic wrapper - Remember this. We are staring at a bleak future as we enter the era of - The dawn of the plastic man.”
Where: Visakhapatnam, India
When: 31 Mar 2021
Credit: Srikanth Mannepuri/Cover-Images.com
**Editorial use only** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10142543_002
NEWS - Schockierende Bilder zeigen Plastikmüll in Fischfängen, Indien
A wildlife conservationist has captured disturbing scenes of plastic in fishing nets.
Srikanth Mannepuri documented a catch in the Indian port city of Visakhapatnam in March 2021. It shows fish trapped within carrier bags and a large amount of plastic wrapping from brands including Snickers and Head & Shoulders shampoo.
Srikanth explains: “We all know the curse of plastics. It’s permanence. They do not disintegrate, they do not disappear. Now, look at the scale. A fishing net no bigger than 1km pulled out more plastic than fishes. And these are products that we use on a daily basis. Milk, Noodles, chocolates, chips. Imagine the scale of plastic floating in these oceans for years as death-traps and choking hazards. It is this plastic that gets consumed by fishes and enters our bodies as micro plastics. If this were to continue, the fisherman wouldn’t be pulling out fishes anymore. It would only be plastic. Imagine this future. Next time we casually discard a plastic wrapper - Remember this. We are staring at a bleak future as we enter the era of - The dawn of the plastic man.”
Where: Visakhapatnam, India
When: 31 Mar 2021
Credit: Srikanth Mannepuri/Cover-Images.com
**Editorial use only** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10142543_001
NEWS - Schockierende Bilder zeigen Plastikmüll in Fischfängen, Indien
A wildlife conservationist has captured disturbing scenes of plastic in fishing nets.
Srikanth Mannepuri documented a catch in the Indian port city of Visakhapatnam in March 2021. It shows fish trapped within carrier bags and a large amount of plastic wrapping from brands including Snickers and Head & Shoulders shampoo.
Srikanth explains: “We all know the curse of plastics. It’s permanence. They do not disintegrate, they do not disappear. Now, look at the scale. A fishing net no bigger than 1km pulled out more plastic than fishes. And these are products that we use on a daily basis. Milk, Noodles, chocolates, chips. Imagine the scale of plastic floating in these oceans for years as death-traps and choking hazards. It is this plastic that gets consumed by fishes and enters our bodies as micro plastics. If this were to continue, the fisherman wouldn’t be pulling out fishes anymore. It would only be plastic. Imagine this future. Next time we casually discard a plastic wrapper - Remember this. We are staring at a bleak future as we enter the era of - The dawn of the plastic man.”
Where: Visakhapatnam, India
When: 31 Mar 2021
Credit: Srikanth Mannepuri/Cover-Images.com
**Editorial use only** (FOTO: DUKAS/COVER IMAGES)
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_124720378_EYE
Scrap Thames tunnel or lose our support, activists tell Sadiq Khan. Campaigners and Labour youth groups urge London mayor to shelve plan for £2bn Silvertown tunnel
Choked Up air pollution campaign, pictured is Anjali Raman-Middleton (centre), Nyeleti Brauer-Maxaeia (left), Destiny Boka Batesa.
Young people concerned about the climate crisis and air pollution are urging the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, to abandon his plans for a new four-lane road tunnel under the Thames or risk losing their support. Climate justice campaigners, anti-pollution activists and key youth groups inside the Labour party say Khan, who is standing for re-election on Thursday, is ignoring climate scientists, economists and health experts by pressing ahead with the £2bn Silvertown tunnel scheme in east London. They warn that unless he cancels the plans he, and the Labour party, could lose the backing of a generation of young voters.
Anjali Raman-Middleton, a co-founder of the Choked Up anti-pollution campaign set up by a group who describe themselves as Òblack and brown teenagers from south LondonÓ, said: ÒIt is becoming a real issue. The tunnel risks losing support from younger generations because it is us that will have to live with the consequences of this decision for years to come É It makes us feel like we have no one to vote for who really gets this stuff and is prepared to act.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_124720384_EYE
Scrap Thames tunnel or lose our support, activists tell Sadiq Khan. Campaigners and Labour youth groups urge London mayor to shelve plan for £2bn Silvertown tunnel
Choked Up air pollution campaign, pictured is Anjali Raman-Middleton (centre), Nyeleti Brauer-Maxaeia (left), Destiny Boka Batesa.
Young people concerned about the climate crisis and air pollution are urging the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, to abandon his plans for a new four-lane road tunnel under the Thames or risk losing their support. Climate justice campaigners, anti-pollution activists and key youth groups inside the Labour party say Khan, who is standing for re-election on Thursday, is ignoring climate scientists, economists and health experts by pressing ahead with the £2bn Silvertown tunnel scheme in east London. They warn that unless he cancels the plans he, and the Labour party, could lose the backing of a generation of young voters.
Anjali Raman-Middleton, a co-founder of the Choked Up anti-pollution campaign set up by a group who describe themselves as Òblack and brown teenagers from south LondonÓ, said: ÒIt is becoming a real issue. The tunnel risks losing support from younger generations because it is us that will have to live with the consequences of this decision for years to come É It makes us feel like we have no one to vote for who really gets this stuff and is prepared to act.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_124720385_EYE
Scrap Thames tunnel or lose our support, activists tell Sadiq Khan. Campaigners and Labour youth groups urge London mayor to shelve plan for £2bn Silvertown tunnel
Choked Up air pollution campaign, pictured is Anjali Raman-Middleton (centre), Nyeleti Brauer-Maxaeia (left), Destiny Boka Batesa.
Young people concerned about the climate crisis and air pollution are urging the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, to abandon his plans for a new four-lane road tunnel under the Thames or risk losing their support. Climate justice campaigners, anti-pollution activists and key youth groups inside the Labour party say Khan, who is standing for re-election on Thursday, is ignoring climate scientists, economists and health experts by pressing ahead with the £2bn Silvertown tunnel scheme in east London. They warn that unless he cancels the plans he, and the Labour party, could lose the backing of a generation of young voters.
Anjali Raman-Middleton, a co-founder of the Choked Up anti-pollution campaign set up by a group who describe themselves as Òblack and brown teenagers from south LondonÓ, said: ÒIt is becoming a real issue. The tunnel risks losing support from younger generations because it is us that will have to live with the consequences of this decision for years to come É It makes us feel like we have no one to vote for who really gets this stuff and is prepared to act.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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DUKAS_124720379_EYE
Scrap Thames tunnel or lose our support, activists tell Sadiq Khan. Campaigners and Labour youth groups urge London mayor to shelve plan for £2bn Silvertown tunnel
Choked Up air pollution campaign, pictured is Anjali Raman-Middleton (centre), Nyeleti Brauer-Maxaeia (left), Destiny Boka Batesa.
Young people concerned about the climate crisis and air pollution are urging the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, to abandon his plans for a new four-lane road tunnel under the Thames or risk losing their support. Climate justice campaigners, anti-pollution activists and key youth groups inside the Labour party say Khan, who is standing for re-election on Thursday, is ignoring climate scientists, economists and health experts by pressing ahead with the £2bn Silvertown tunnel scheme in east London. They warn that unless he cancels the plans he, and the Labour party, could lose the backing of a generation of young voters.
Anjali Raman-Middleton, a co-founder of the Choked Up anti-pollution campaign set up by a group who describe themselves as Òblack and brown teenagers from south LondonÓ, said: ÒIt is becoming a real issue. The tunnel risks losing support from younger generations because it is us that will have to live with the consequences of this decision for years to come É It makes us feel like we have no one to vote for who really gets this stuff and is prepared to act.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_123184188_EYE
Choked Up air pollution campaign
Choked Up air pollution campaign.
Anjali Raman-Middleton (centre), Nyeleti Brauer-Maxaeia (left), Destiny Boka Batesa.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_124720377_EYE
Scrap Thames tunnel or lose our support, activists tell Sadiq Khan. Campaigners and Labour youth groups urge London mayor to shelve plan for £2bn Silvertown tunnel
Choked Up air pollution campaign, pictured is Anjali Raman-Middleton.
Young people concerned about the climate crisis and air pollution are urging the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, to abandon his plans for a new four-lane road tunnel under the Thames or risk losing their support. Climate justice campaigners, anti-pollution activists and key youth groups inside the Labour party say Khan, who is standing for re-election on Thursday, is ignoring climate scientists, economists and health experts by pressing ahead with the £2bn Silvertown tunnel scheme in east London. They warn that unless he cancels the plans he, and the Labour party, could lose the backing of a generation of young voters.
Anjali Raman-Middleton, a co-founder of the Choked Up anti-pollution campaign set up by a group who describe themselves as ìblack and brown teenagers from south Londonî, said: ìIt is becoming a real issue. The tunnel risks losing support from younger generations because it is us that will have to live with the consequences of this decision for years to come Ö It makes us feel like we have no one to vote for who really gets this stuff and is prepared to act.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_124720381_EYE
Scrap Thames tunnel or lose our support, activists tell Sadiq Khan. Campaigners and Labour youth groups urge London mayor to shelve plan for £2bn Silvertown tunnel
Choked Up air pollution campaign, pictured is Anjali Raman-Middleton.
Young people concerned about the climate crisis and air pollution are urging the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, to abandon his plans for a new four-lane road tunnel under the Thames or risk losing their support. Climate justice campaigners, anti-pollution activists and key youth groups inside the Labour party say Khan, who is standing for re-election on Thursday, is ignoring climate scientists, economists and health experts by pressing ahead with the £2bn Silvertown tunnel scheme in east London. They warn that unless he cancels the plans he, and the Labour party, could lose the backing of a generation of young voters.
Anjali Raman-Middleton, a co-founder of the Choked Up anti-pollution campaign set up by a group who describe themselves as Òblack and brown teenagers from south LondonÓ, said: ÒIt is becoming a real issue. The tunnel risks losing support from younger generations because it is us that will have to live with the consequences of this decision for years to come É It makes us feel like we have no one to vote for who really gets this stuff and is prepared to act.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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DUKAS_124720382_EYE
Scrap Thames tunnel or lose our support, activists tell Sadiq Khan. Campaigners and Labour youth groups urge London mayor to shelve plan for £2bn Silvertown tunnel
Choked Up air pollution campaign, pictured is Anjali Raman-Middleton.
Young people concerned about the climate crisis and air pollution are urging the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, to abandon his plans for a new four-lane road tunnel under the Thames or risk losing their support. Climate justice campaigners, anti-pollution activists and key youth groups inside the Labour party say Khan, who is standing for re-election on Thursday, is ignoring climate scientists, economists and health experts by pressing ahead with the £2bn Silvertown tunnel scheme in east London. They warn that unless he cancels the plans he, and the Labour party, could lose the backing of a generation of young voters.
Anjali Raman-Middleton, a co-founder of the Choked Up anti-pollution campaign set up by a group who describe themselves as Òblack and brown teenagers from south LondonÓ, said: ÒIt is becoming a real issue. The tunnel risks losing support from younger generations because it is us that will have to live with the consequences of this decision for years to come É It makes us feel like we have no one to vote for who really gets this stuff and is prepared to act.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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DUKAS_124720380_EYE
Scrap Thames tunnel or lose our support, activists tell Sadiq Khan. Campaigners and Labour youth groups urge London mayor to shelve plan for £2bn Silvertown tunnel
Choked Up air pollution campaign, pictured is Anjali Raman-Middleton.
Young people concerned about the climate crisis and air pollution are urging the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, to abandon his plans for a new four-lane road tunnel under the Thames or risk losing their support. Climate justice campaigners, anti-pollution activists and key youth groups inside the Labour party say Khan, who is standing for re-election on Thursday, is ignoring climate scientists, economists and health experts by pressing ahead with the £2bn Silvertown tunnel scheme in east London. They warn that unless he cancels the plans he, and the Labour party, could lose the backing of a generation of young voters.
Anjali Raman-Middleton, a co-founder of the Choked Up anti-pollution campaign set up by a group who describe themselves as Òblack and brown teenagers from south LondonÓ, said: ÒIt is becoming a real issue. The tunnel risks losing support from younger generations because it is us that will have to live with the consequences of this decision for years to come É It makes us feel like we have no one to vote for who really gets this stuff and is prepared to act.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_124720383_EYE
.
Choked Up
air pollution campaign
Anjali Raman-Middleton
11-03-2021
Photograph by Martin Godwin
© Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_123184185_EYE
Choked Up air pollution campaign
Choked Up air pollution campaign.
© Martin Godwin / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_122539248_EYE
'It's a toxic blend': where the kids are warned not to swallow the bath water. Predominantly Latino towns in California like East Orosi face huge obstacles getting clean drinking water
An invisible line splits the rural road of Avenue 416 in California’s Tulare county, at the point where the nut trees stretch east toward the towering Sierra Nevada mountains in the distance. On one side of the line, residents have clean water. On the other side, they do not. On the other side lies East Orosi, an unincorporated community of about 700 where children grow up learning to never open their eyes or mouths while they shower. They know that what comes out of their faucets may harm them, and parents warn they must not swallow when they brush their teeth. They spend their lives sustaining themselves on bottled water while just one mile down Avenue 416, the same children they go to school with in the community of Orosi can drink from their taps freely and bathe without a second thought.
East Orosi is one of many predominantly Latino communities that suffer from contaminated drinking water that has exceeded federal limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency. This is an issue that affects 5.25m people across California.The farmworking Lopez family hangs out outside their home in East Orosi, California on January 23, 2021. East Orosi's drinking water isn't safe to drink due to nitrate contamination from surrounding farms.
© Max Whittaker / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_122539244_EYE
'It's a toxic blend': where the kids are warned not to swallow the bath water. Predominantly Latino towns in California like East Orosi face huge obstacles getting clean drinking water
An invisible line splits the rural road of Avenue 416 in California’s Tulare county, at the point where the nut trees stretch east toward the towering Sierra Nevada mountains in the distance. On one side of the line, residents have clean water. On the other side, they do not. On the other side lies East Orosi, an unincorporated community of about 700 where children grow up learning to never open their eyes or mouths while they shower. They know that what comes out of their faucets may harm them, and parents warn they must not swallow when they brush their teeth. They spend their lives sustaining themselves on bottled water while just one mile down Avenue 416, the same children they go to school with in the community of Orosi can drink from their taps freely and bathe without a second thought.
East Orosi is one of many predominantly Latino communities that suffer from contaminated drinking water that has exceeded federal limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency. This is an issue that affects 5.25m people across California.The farmworking Lopez family hangs out outside their home in East Orosi, California on January 23, 2021. East Orosi's drinking water isn't safe to drink due to nitrate contamination from surrounding farms.
© Max Whittaker / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_122539270_EYE
'It's a toxic blend': where the kids are warned not to swallow the bath water. Predominantly Latino towns in California like East Orosi face huge obstacles getting clean drinking water
An invisible line splits the rural road of Avenue 416 in California’s Tulare county, at the point where the nut trees stretch east toward the towering Sierra Nevada mountains in the distance. On one side of the line, residents have clean water. On the other side, they do not. On the other side lies East Orosi, an unincorporated community of about 700 where children grow up learning to never open their eyes or mouths while they shower. They know that what comes out of their faucets may harm them, and parents warn they must not swallow when they brush their teeth. They spend their lives sustaining themselves on bottled water while just one mile down Avenue 416, the same children they go to school with in the community of Orosi can drink from their taps freely and bathe without a second thought.
East Orosi is one of many predominantly Latino communities that suffer from contaminated drinking water that has exceeded federal limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency. This is an issue that affects 5.25m people across California.East Orosi, California is surrounded by orchards, mainly citrus, on January 22, 2021. East Orosi's drinking water isn't safe to drink due to nitrate contamination from surrounding farms.
© Max Whittaker / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_122539258_EYE
'It's a toxic blend': where the kids are warned not to swallow the bath water. Predominantly Latino towns in California like East Orosi face huge obstacles getting clean drinking water
An invisible line splits the rural road of Avenue 416 in California’s Tulare county, at the point where the nut trees stretch east toward the towering Sierra Nevada mountains in the distance. On one side of the line, residents have clean water. On the other side, they do not. On the other side lies East Orosi, an unincorporated community of about 700 where children grow up learning to never open their eyes or mouths while they shower. They know that what comes out of their faucets may harm them, and parents warn they must not swallow when they brush their teeth. They spend their lives sustaining themselves on bottled water while just one mile down Avenue 416, the same children they go to school with in the community of Orosi can drink from their taps freely and bathe without a second thought.
East Orosi is one of many predominantly Latino communities that suffer from contaminated drinking water that has exceeded federal limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency. This is an issue that affects 5.25m people across California.A scene in Orosi, California on January 23, 2021. East Orosi's drinking water isn't safe to drink due to nitrate contamination from surrounding farms.
© Max Whittaker / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_122539286_EYE
'It's a toxic blend': where the kids are warned not to swallow the bath water. Predominantly Latino towns in California like East Orosi face huge obstacles getting clean drinking water
An invisible line splits the rural road of Avenue 416 in California’s Tulare county, at the point where the nut trees stretch east toward the towering Sierra Nevada mountains in the distance. On one side of the line, residents have clean water. On the other side, they do not. On the other side lies East Orosi, an unincorporated community of about 700 where children grow up learning to never open their eyes or mouths while they shower. They know that what comes out of their faucets may harm them, and parents warn they must not swallow when they brush their teeth. They spend their lives sustaining themselves on bottled water while just one mile down Avenue 416, the same children they go to school with in the community of Orosi can drink from their taps freely and bathe without a second thought.
East Orosi is one of many predominantly Latino communities that suffer from contaminated drinking water that has exceeded federal limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency. This is an issue that affects 5.25m people across California.East Orosi resident OBdulia Diaz fills up her drinking water supplies at a kiosk in Orosi, California on January 23, 2021. East Orosi's drinking water isn't safe to drink due to nitrate contamination from surrounding farms.
© Max Whittaker / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_122539257_EYE
'It's a toxic blend': where the kids are warned not to swallow the bath water. Predominantly Latino towns in California like East Orosi face huge obstacles getting clean drinking water
An invisible line splits the rural road of Avenue 416 in California’s Tulare county, at the point where the nut trees stretch east toward the towering Sierra Nevada mountains in the distance. On one side of the line, residents have clean water. On the other side, they do not. On the other side lies East Orosi, an unincorporated community of about 700 where children grow up learning to never open their eyes or mouths while they shower. They know that what comes out of their faucets may harm them, and parents warn they must not swallow when they brush their teeth. They spend their lives sustaining themselves on bottled water while just one mile down Avenue 416, the same children they go to school with in the community of Orosi can drink from their taps freely and bathe without a second thought.
East Orosi is one of many predominantly Latino communities that suffer from contaminated drinking water that has exceeded federal limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency. This is an issue that affects 5.25m people across California.East Orosi resident Jesse Garcia fills up his drinking water supplies at a kiosk in Orosi, California on January 23, 2021. East Orosi's drinking water isn't safe to drink due to nitrate contamination from surrounding farms.
© Max Whittaker / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_122539228_EYE
'It's a toxic blend': where the kids are warned not to swallow the bath water. Predominantly Latino towns in California like East Orosi face huge obstacles getting clean drinking water
An invisible line splits the rural road of Avenue 416 in California’s Tulare county, at the point where the nut trees stretch east toward the towering Sierra Nevada mountains in the distance. On one side of the line, residents have clean water. On the other side, they do not. On the other side lies East Orosi, an unincorporated community of about 700 where children grow up learning to never open their eyes or mouths while they shower. They know that what comes out of their faucets may harm them, and parents warn they must not swallow when they brush their teeth. They spend their lives sustaining themselves on bottled water while just one mile down Avenue 416, the same children they go to school with in the community of Orosi can drink from their taps freely and bathe without a second thought.
East Orosi is one of many predominantly Latino communities that suffer from contaminated drinking water that has exceeded federal limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency. This is an issue that affects 5.25m people across California.East Orosi resident Jesse Garcia fills up his drinking water supplies at a kiosk in Orosi, California on January 23, 2021. East Orosi's drinking water isn't safe to drink due to nitrate contamination from surrounding farms.
© Max Whittaker / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_122539284_EYE
'It's a toxic blend': where the kids are warned not to swallow the bath water. Predominantly Latino towns in California like East Orosi face huge obstacles getting clean drinking water
An invisible line splits the rural road of Avenue 416 in California’s Tulare county, at the point where the nut trees stretch east toward the towering Sierra Nevada mountains in the distance. On one side of the line, residents have clean water. On the other side, they do not. On the other side lies East Orosi, an unincorporated community of about 700 where children grow up learning to never open their eyes or mouths while they shower. They know that what comes out of their faucets may harm them, and parents warn they must not swallow when they brush their teeth. They spend their lives sustaining themselves on bottled water while just one mile down Avenue 416, the same children they go to school with in the community of Orosi can drink from their taps freely and bathe without a second thought.
East Orosi is one of many predominantly Latino communities that suffer from contaminated drinking water that has exceeded federal limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency. This is an issue that affects 5.25m people across California.East Orosi resident Jesse Garcia, left, fills up his drinking water supplies at a kiosk in Orosi, California on January 23, 2021. East Orosi's drinking water isn't safe to drink due to nitrate contamination from surrounding farms.
© Max Whittaker / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_122539260_EYE
'It's a toxic blend': where the kids are warned not to swallow the bath water. Predominantly Latino towns in California like East Orosi face huge obstacles getting clean drinking water
An invisible line splits the rural road of Avenue 416 in California’s Tulare county, at the point where the nut trees stretch east toward the towering Sierra Nevada mountains in the distance. On one side of the line, residents have clean water. On the other side, they do not. On the other side lies East Orosi, an unincorporated community of about 700 where children grow up learning to never open their eyes or mouths while they shower. They know that what comes out of their faucets may harm them, and parents warn they must not swallow when they brush their teeth. They spend their lives sustaining themselves on bottled water while just one mile down Avenue 416, the same children they go to school with in the community of Orosi can drink from their taps freely and bathe without a second thought.
East Orosi is one of many predominantly Latino communities that suffer from contaminated drinking water that has exceeded federal limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency. This is an issue that affects 5.25m people across California.A woman fills up drinking water containers from a kiosk in Orosi, California on January 23, 2021. East Orosi's drinking water isn't safe to drink due to nitrate contamination from surrounding farms.
© Max Whittaker / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_122539242_EYE
'It's a toxic blend': where the kids are warned not to swallow the bath water. Predominantly Latino towns in California like East Orosi face huge obstacles getting clean drinking water
An invisible line splits the rural road of Avenue 416 in California’s Tulare county, at the point where the nut trees stretch east toward the towering Sierra Nevada mountains in the distance. On one side of the line, residents have clean water. On the other side, they do not. On the other side lies East Orosi, an unincorporated community of about 700 where children grow up learning to never open their eyes or mouths while they shower. They know that what comes out of their faucets may harm them, and parents warn they must not swallow when they brush their teeth. They spend their lives sustaining themselves on bottled water while just one mile down Avenue 416, the same children they go to school with in the community of Orosi can drink from their taps freely and bathe without a second thought.
East Orosi is one of many predominantly Latino communities that suffer from contaminated drinking water that has exceeded federal limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency. This is an issue that affects 5.25m people across California.A neighborhood in East Orosi, California on January 23, 2021. East Orosi's drinking water isn't safe to drink due to nitrate contamination from surrounding farms.
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DUKAS_122539265_EYE
'It's a toxic blend': where the kids are warned not to swallow the bath water. Predominantly Latino towns in California like East Orosi face huge obstacles getting clean drinking water
An invisible line splits the rural road of Avenue 416 in California’s Tulare county, at the point where the nut trees stretch east toward the towering Sierra Nevada mountains in the distance. On one side of the line, residents have clean water. On the other side, they do not. On the other side lies East Orosi, an unincorporated community of about 700 where children grow up learning to never open their eyes or mouths while they shower. They know that what comes out of their faucets may harm them, and parents warn they must not swallow when they brush their teeth. They spend their lives sustaining themselves on bottled water while just one mile down Avenue 416, the same children they go to school with in the community of Orosi can drink from their taps freely and bathe without a second thought.
East Orosi is one of many predominantly Latino communities that suffer from contaminated drinking water that has exceeded federal limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency. This is an issue that affects 5.25m people across California.A neighborhood in East Orosi, California on January 23, 2021. East Orosi's drinking water isn't safe to drink due to nitrate contamination from surrounding farms.
© Max Whittaker / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_122539288_EYE
'It's a toxic blend': where the kids are warned not to swallow the bath water. Predominantly Latino towns in California like East Orosi face huge obstacles getting clean drinking water
An invisible line splits the rural road of Avenue 416 in California’s Tulare county, at the point where the nut trees stretch east toward the towering Sierra Nevada mountains in the distance. On one side of the line, residents have clean water. On the other side, they do not. On the other side lies East Orosi, an unincorporated community of about 700 where children grow up learning to never open their eyes or mouths while they shower. They know that what comes out of their faucets may harm them, and parents warn they must not swallow when they brush their teeth. They spend their lives sustaining themselves on bottled water while just one mile down Avenue 416, the same children they go to school with in the community of Orosi can drink from their taps freely and bathe without a second thought.
East Orosi is one of many predominantly Latino communities that suffer from contaminated drinking water that has exceeded federal limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency. This is an issue that affects 5.25m people across California.A neighborhood in East Orosi, California on January 23, 2021. East Orosi's drinking water isn't safe to drink due to nitrate contamination from surrounding farms.
© Max Whittaker / 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_122539282_EYE
'It's a toxic blend': where the kids are warned not to swallow the bath water. Predominantly Latino towns in California like East Orosi face huge obstacles getting clean drinking water
An invisible line splits the rural road of Avenue 416 in California’s Tulare county, at the point where the nut trees stretch east toward the towering Sierra Nevada mountains in the distance. On one side of the line, residents have clean water. On the other side, they do not. On the other side lies East Orosi, an unincorporated community of about 700 where children grow up learning to never open their eyes or mouths while they shower. They know that what comes out of their faucets may harm them, and parents warn they must not swallow when they brush their teeth. They spend their lives sustaining themselves on bottled water while just one mile down Avenue 416, the same children they go to school with in the community of Orosi can drink from their taps freely and bathe without a second thought.
East Orosi is one of many predominantly Latino communities that suffer from contaminated drinking water that has exceeded federal limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency. This is an issue that affects 5.25m people across California.An irrigation ditch in East Orosi, California on January 23, 2021. East Orosi's drinking water isn't safe to drink due to nitrate contamination from surrounding farms.
© Max Whittaker / 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_122539246_EYE
'It's a toxic blend': where the kids are warned not to swallow the bath water. Predominantly Latino towns in California like East Orosi face huge obstacles getting clean drinking water
An invisible line splits the rural road of Avenue 416 in California’s Tulare county, at the point where the nut trees stretch east toward the towering Sierra Nevada mountains in the distance. On one side of the line, residents have clean water. On the other side, they do not. On the other side lies East Orosi, an unincorporated community of about 700 where children grow up learning to never open their eyes or mouths while they shower. They know that what comes out of their faucets may harm them, and parents warn they must not swallow when they brush their teeth. They spend their lives sustaining themselves on bottled water while just one mile down Avenue 416, the same children they go to school with in the community of Orosi can drink from their taps freely and bathe without a second thought.
East Orosi is one of many predominantly Latino communities that suffer from contaminated drinking water that has exceeded federal limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency. This is an issue that affects 5.25m people across California.An irrigation ditch in East Orosi, California on January 23, 2021. East Orosi's drinking water isn't safe to drink due to nitrate contamination from surrounding farms.
© Max Whittaker / 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.