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DUKAS_191020843_PAP
THE CANADIAN PRESS 2024-10-24
The Saskatchewan Legislative Building can be seen from Trafalgar Overlook in Regina, Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Heywood Yu (FOTO: DUKAS/PA PHOTOS)
The Canadian Press/PA Images -
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THE CANADIAN PRESS 2025-08-31
Saskatchewan Roughriders defensive back Tevaughn Campbell (26) intercepts the ball in front of Winnipeg Blue Bombers receiver Dalton Schoen (83) during a two point conversion in the second half of CFL football action in Regina, Sunday, Aug. 31, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Heywood Yu (FOTO: DUKAS/PA PHOTOS)
The Canadian Press/PA Images -
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THE CANADIAN PRESS 2025-11-08
Saskatchewan Roughriders quarterback Trevor Harris (7) throws against the B.C. Lions during the first half of CFL West Division Final football action in Regina, on Saturday, November 8, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Heywood Yu (FOTO: DUKAS/PA PHOTOS)
The Canadian Press/PA Images -
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THE CANADIAN PRESS 2025-09-13
Montreal Alouettes quarterback McLeod Bethel-Thompson (4) throws the football against the Saskatchewan Roughriders during first half CFL football action in Regina, on Saturday, September 13, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Heywood Yu (FOTO: DUKAS/PA PHOTOS)
The Canadian Press/PA Images -
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THE CANADIAN PRESS 2025-09-28
Shawn Mendes performs at Budweiser Stage in Toronto, on Sunday, Sept. 28, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sammy Kogan (FOTO: DUKAS/PA PHOTOS)
The Canadian Press/PA Images -
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THE CANADIAN PRESS 2025-10-25
Saskatchewan Roughriders quarterback Trevor Harris (7) throws against the B.C. Lions during the first half of CFL football action in Regina, on Saturday, October 25, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Heywood Yu (FOTO: DUKAS/PA PHOTOS)
The Canadian Press/PA Images -
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FEATURE - Pix of the Day: Bilder des Tages
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Yogendra Kumar/Hindustan Times/REX/Shutterstock (10043441b)
Gurugram Police Commissioner KK Rao speaks to media about 2018 crime data, at old CP office, in Civil Lines
Gurugram Police Commissioner KK Rao Press Conference, Gurugram, India - 29 Dec 2018
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Indien: Überschwemmungen nach starkem Regen in Mumbai
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Hindustan Times/REX/Shutterstock (9754402c)
A tree fell on the car which belongs to Additional CP - S.Jay Kumar due to heavy rain and water logging near King Circle on July 9, 2018 in Mumbai, India. India?s financial capital and its surrounding districts were in for another rude shock on Monday following another round of intense rainfall that crippled the city?s transportation operations and left lakhs stranded. The BMC recorded 15 severely waterlogged areas, 11 wall or slab collapses, 23 tree-fall incidents, and 32 electrical short-circuits, in addition to the cancellation of several suburban train services.
Non-Stop Rain in Mumbai, India - 10 Jul 2018
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Indien: Überschwemmungen nach starkem Regen in Mumbai
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Hindustan Times/REX/Shutterstock (9754402d)
A tree fell on the car which belongs to Additional CP - S.Jay Kumar due to heavy rain and water logging near King Circle on July 9, 2018 in Mumbai, India. India?s financial capital and its surrounding districts were in for another rude shock on Monday following another round of intense rainfall that crippled the city?s transportation operations and left lakhs stranded. The BMC recorded 15 severely waterlogged areas, 11 wall or slab collapses, 23 tree-fall incidents, and 32 electrical short-circuits, in addition to the cancellation of several suburban train services.
Non-Stop Rain in Mumbai, India - 10 Jul 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10096493_058
NEWS - Indien: Überschwemmungen nach starkem Regen in Mumbai
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Hindustan Times/REX/Shutterstock (9754402a)
A tree fell on the car which belongs to Additional CP - S.Jay Kumar due to heavy rain and water logging near King Circle on July 9, 2018 in Mumbai, India. India?s financial capital and its surrounding districts were in for another rude shock on Monday following another round of intense rainfall that crippled the city?s transportation operations and left lakhs stranded. The BMC recorded 15 severely waterlogged areas, 11 wall or slab collapses, 23 tree-fall incidents, and 32 electrical short-circuits, in addition to the cancellation of several suburban train services.
Non-Stop Rain in Mumbai, India - 10 Jul 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10096493_047
NEWS - Indien: Überschwemmungen nach starkem Regen in Mumbai
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Hindustan Times/REX/Shutterstock (9754402b)
A tree fell on the car which belongs to Additional CP - S.Jay Kumar due to heavy rain and water logging near King Circle on July 9, 2018 in Mumbai, India. India?s financial capital and its surrounding districts were in for another rude shock on Monday following another round of intense rainfall that crippled the city?s transportation operations and left lakhs stranded. The BMC recorded 15 severely waterlogged areas, 11 wall or slab collapses, 23 tree-fall incidents, and 32 electrical short-circuits, in addition to the cancellation of several suburban train services.
Non-Stop Rain in Mumbai, India - 10 Jul 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_31293061_POL
Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. The Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers, led by Sharon Moon, a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. The Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers, led by Sharon Moon, a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: Stanley Wangewa leads a yoga class for special needs students. "They have taught me patience and compassion," Wangewa says, referring to his pupils. Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. The Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers led by Sharon Moon, a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: Deaf students rest in Savasana or corpse pose after a yoga class led by deaf instructors from Africa Yoga Project.Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers led by Sharon Moon a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_31293031_POL
Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: A young boy demonstrated his strength to the amusement of his peers. Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers led by Sharon Moon a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: A student bangs on the corrugated plastic windows where others are practicing yoga. Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers led by Sharon Moon a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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Yoga transforms lives of Kenyans
March 28, 2013 - Nairobi, Kenya: Students play after a yoga class. Yoga is taught to special needs students at Dagoretti Children's Center. Africa Yoga Project and volunteer teachers led by Sharon Moon a Jois fellow, teach yoga to handicapped, autistic and deaf children as part of the outreach program that seeks to provide free yoga classes across Nairobi to marginalized communities. Each week 70 yoga teachers find their way into prisons, special needs schools, social centers for the disabled and into the shanty towns to offer free yoga classes to Kenya's most marginalized populations. Most of the teachers began lives among the people they now serve. The teachers, most born into the grinding poverty of Nairobi's slums, have been trained and offered teaching jobs with Africa Yoga Project, a charity organization. Africa Yoga Project was founded by American Yoga teacher Paige Elenson after a Safari to Kenya with her parents. She befriended a group of acrobats and offered a few lessons in yoga. The acrobats invited her back for more. She came back to teach and stayed to found the organization.Africa Yoga project continues to train Kenyan and other African yoga teachers. This year they held the first ever international teacher training session where American and Canadian students studied side by side with Students from Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Uganda and South Africa. Elenson predicts that in addition to changing lives a blossoming yoga culture will have an economic impact on East Africa in the years to come. That transformation is already apparent in the lives of the teachers, formerly unemployed youth, who now earn a living teaching yoga across the city. (Brendan Bannon / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
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DUKAS_19328191_REX
Prince William and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge Royal Tour of Ottawa, Canada - 30 Jun 2011
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Canadian Press / Rex Features ( 1362789au )
The Duke and the Duchess of Cambridge take part in a ceremony at the National War Memorial in Ottawa on Thursday, June 30, 2011. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick
Prince William and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge Royal Tour of Ottawa, Canada - 30 Jun 2011
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX