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Training Beneath Annapurna
Young Nepali boys train to become British Gurkhas, carrying dokos on their backs, with the Annapurna range in the background in Annapurna, Nepal, on September 26, 2025. (Photo by Yunish Gurung/NurPhoto) -
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Monsoon In Mumbai
A man carries a child on his back while wading through a waterlogged street during heavy monsoon rains in Mumbai, India, on August 19, 2025. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_187913156_NUR
Monsoon In Mumbai
People carry children on their backs while wading through a waterlogged street during heavy monsoon rains in Mumbai, India, on August 19, 2025. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto) -
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NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251a)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_014
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251b)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_013
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251c)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_012
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251d)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_011
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251e)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_010
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251f)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_009
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251h)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_008
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251g)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_007
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251j)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_006
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251l)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_005
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251k)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_004
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251m)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_003
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251i)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_002
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251o)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK10148533_001
NEWS - Ukraine-Konflikt: Das 140 Millionen Pfund teure Herrenhaus des flüchtigen Ex-Oligarchen Andrej Borodin in Henley-on-Thames
Exclusive All Round: In the UK: Web: £350 Set fee £50pp. Print and all other territories please call for pricing.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (12843251n)
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin’s £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion
The sprawling 55,000 sq foot abode was once the most expensive in the UK when it was purchased by the former President of Bank of Moscow in 2012.
The luxury property, which backs on to the River Thames, boasts has a helipad, spa complex, home cinema, high-tech security system and polo facilities.
The house, built in the Renaissance style, also has at least ten bedrooms complete with en suite bathrooms, and a whopping 30,000 sq ft of living space.
Borodin, who resides at the stately home with his model wife Tatiana, fell foul of the Kremlin after being accused of fraud by the Putin administration in 2011, and was granted political asylum in the UK in 2013.
Exclusive - Fugitive ex-oligarch Andrey Borodin's £140m 18th century Grade II-listed mansion, Henley-on-Thames, UK - 10 Mar 2022
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Hitzewelle - Europa sucht Abkühlung
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Martin Dalton/REX/Shutterstock (9771018e)
On what is predicted to be be the hottest July day on record visitors to Cambridge try to cool down in the 33c heat by taking to the Backs in River Punts.
Seasonal weather, Cambridgeshire, UK - 26 Jul 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10099155_064
NEWS - Hitzewelle - Europa sucht Abkühlung
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Martin Dalton/REX/Shutterstock (9771018h)
On what is predicted to be be the hottest July day on record visitors to Cambridge try to cool down in the 33c heat by taking to the Backs in River Punts.
Seasonal weather, Cambridgeshire, UK - 26 Jul 2018
(c) Dukas -
DUK10099155_063
NEWS - Hitzewelle - Europa sucht Abkühlung
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Martin Dalton/REX/Shutterstock (9771018p)
On what is predicted to be be the hottest July day on record visitors to Cambridge try to cool down in the 33c heat by taking to the Backs in River Punts.
Seasonal weather, Cambridgeshire, UK - 26 Jul 2018
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Winter in Europa
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Peter MacDiarmid/REX/Shutterstock (9445533a)
As more snow fell overnight traffic backs up on a road near Fetcham after an accident.
Seasonal weather, UK - 28 Feb 2018
(c) Dukas -
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PEOPLE - Grossandrang: Wenn Lady Gaga in Camden Bier einkauft
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Beretta/Sims/REX Shutterstock (5426309ag)
Lady Gaga stands aside as a woman with a buggy backs out of the convenience store
Lady Gaga out and about, London, Britain - 24 Nov 2015
Visiting a convenience store in Camden and arriving at a recording studio
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
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PEOPLE - Grossandrang: Wenn Lady Gaga in Camden Bier einkauft
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Beretta/Sims/REX Shutterstock (5426309am)
Lady Gaga stands aside as a woman with a buggy backs out of the convenience store
Lady Gaga out and about, London, Britain - 24 Nov 2015
Visiting a convenience store in Camden and arriving at a recording studio
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
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PEOPLE - Grossandrang: Wenn Lady Gaga in Camden Bier einkauft
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Beretta/Sims/REX Shutterstock (5426309an)
Lady Gaga stands aside as a woman with a buggy backs out of the convenience store
Lady Gaga out and about, London, Britain - 24 Nov 2015
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
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PEOPLE - Grossandrang: Wenn Lady Gaga in Camden Bier einkauft
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Beretta/Sims/REX Shutterstock (5426309ao)
Lady Gaga stands aside as a woman with a buggy backs out of the convenience store
Lady Gaga out and about, London, Britain - 24 Nov 2015
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
(c) Dukas -
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Prince William and Catherine Duchess of Cambridge Royal Tour, Slave Lake, Alberta, Canada - 06 Jul 2011
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Tim Rooke/REX (1371331ae)
Catherine Duchess of Cambridge
Prince William and Catherine Duchess of Cambridge Royal Tour, Slave Lake, Alberta, Canada - 06 Jul 2011
Prince William and Catherine Duchess of Cambridge tour areas devastated by a bush fire on 15 May this year. 372 homes were destroyed and 300 apartments. Luckily no lives were lost.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
Zusammenstellung: Vergleich Kate - Letizia
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Prince William and Catherine Duchess of Cambridge Royal Tour, Slave Lake, Alberta, Canada - 06 Jul 2011
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Tim Rooke/REX (1371331ap)
Catherine Duchess of Cambridge
Prince William and Catherine Duchess of Cambridge Royal Tour, Slave Lake, Alberta, Canada - 06 Jul 2011
Prince William and Catherine Duchess of Cambridge tour areas devastated by a bush fire on 15 May this year. 372 homes were destroyed and 300m apartments luckily no lives were lost.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
Zusammenstellung: Vergleich Kate - Letizia
DUKAS/REX DUKAS -
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The women of Peru's illegal gold mines, Peru - May 2014
MANDATORY CREDIT: Omar Lucas/REX Shutterstock. Only for use in this story. Editorial Use Only. No books, advertising or merchandising without photographer's permission
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Omar Lucas/REX Shutterstock (4916329a)
Finding gold is not easy. The women load sacks onto their backs, which can contain up to 20 kilograms of rock. More often that not, the rocks don't contain "sparks" of gold. Sometimes covering their hands with rudimentary gloves, the women pick the remains of the stone in search of those that hold the precious gold
The women of Peru's illegal gold mines, Peru - May 2014
FULL COPY: http://www.rexfeatures.com/nanolink/qqky
Peru now exports more illegally-produced gold than it does cocaine and Peru is one of the world's largest gold exporters.
Though there are many who profit from this gold rush, there is a population of women that are slaves to the process, known as the Daughters of Awichita.
Peruvian photographer Omar Lucas has captured a series of thought-provoking images of the women working in the gold mines.
The photos were taken in La Rinconada, a place that is five hours away from Lake Titicaca, where there is a population of about 70,000 people who live on the gold they extract from the edges of a snowy mountain.
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Aerial view of Cambridge, Britain - 03 May 2014
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Geoff Robinson Photography/REX (3755179w)
Aerial view of colleges,River Cam and The Backs in Cambridge, England, Britain
Aerial view of Cambridge, Britain - 03 May 2014
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Aerial view of Cambridge, Britain - 03 May 2014
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Geoff Robinson Photography/REX (3755179v)
Aerial view of colleges,River Cam and The Backs in Cambridge, England, Britain
Aerial view of Cambridge, Britain - 03 May 2014
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Aerial view of Cambridge, Britain - 03 May 2014
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Geoff Robinson Photography/REX (3755179u)
Aerial view of colleges,River Cam and The Backs in Cambridge, England, Britain
Aerial view of Cambridge, Britain - 03 May 2014
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Aerial view of Cambridge, Britain - 03 May 2014
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Geoff Robinson Photography/REX (3755179t)
Aerial view of colleges,River Cam and The Backs in Cambridge, England, Britain
Aerial view of Cambridge, Britain - 03 May 2014
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
DUKAS/REX -
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Aerial view of Cambridge, Britain - 03 May 2014
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Geoff Robinson Photography/REX (3755179s)
Aerial view of colleges, River Cam and The Backs in Cambridge, England, Britain
Aerial view of Cambridge, Britain - 03 May 2014
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Global Fund Celebration, Spring Summer 2014, London Fashion Week, Britain - 16 Sep 2013
Mandatory Credit: Photo by David Fisher/REX (3025416af)
Sienna Miller
Global Fund Celebration, Spring Summer 2014, London Fashion Week, Britain - 16 Sep 2013
Event during LFW to celebrate the Global Fund, hosted by The Earl and Countess of Mornington, Anna Wintour, Livia Firth and Natalie Massenet WEARING DOLCE & GABBANA
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Kate Middleton Fashion Compilation
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Canadian Press / Rex Features (1369258af)
Catherine Duchess of Cambridge waves to wellwishers as she arrives in Summerside
Prince William and Catherine Duchess of Cambridge Royal Tour, Prince Edward Island, Canada - 04 Jul 2011
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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Michelle Obama grassroots campaign rally, Broward College, Davie, Florida, America - 22 Oct 2012
Mandatory Credit: Photo by MediaPunch / Rex Features (1937830e)
Michelle Obama
Michelle Obama grassroots campaign rally, Broward College, Davie, Florida, America - 22 Oct 2012
(FOTO:DUKAS/REX)
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REPORTAGE - Soldatinnen und Soldaten prägen das Alltagsbild in Nordkorea
ARMY TIME IN NORTH KOREA
The very first order you receive from your guide when arriving in North Korea is NOT to take pictures of the soldiers. This is difficult as you see them everywhere at any occasion, so the temptation is high†!
Their uniforms seem to come from the 50s. and it is†! The Korean Peopleís Army was created in 1948 in the Soviet occupation zone of Korea. So, the uniforms were copied from the USSR.
You will see soldiers in the morning, in the main squares of Pyongyang, when soldiers rehearse their parade for hours. They do not like to have witnesses as everything is not -yet- perfect but have no choice as they need huge spaces to train. Each soldier has a number to allow the officers to tell who is good and who is bad.
You will see them in the countryside when you leave the big towns.
Many soldiers are used as a labor force to compensate for the ineffective North Korean economy, so the army is not only about military organization.
During my 6 trips in North Korea, i saw so many soldiers collecting wood and carrying it along the roads. Wood for heating and for eating. North Korean soldiers can be seen working in fields, farms, or on construction sites in many places, far from military exercises.
You will see them in pictures when visiting the school or the universities†: at the entrance, some letters are displayed on the walls, showing the picture of a young man in uniform above a short text. They are letters from former school students that joined the army and who tell about their lifes as soldiers. Of course everything is fantastic and they write they are so proud to serve their nation.
In North Korea, most of the soldiers serve in military for 10 years, female soldiers serve for seven years. Some high level students only serve few years to work quickly and to be more efficient than when they carry woodÖ
Once in the army, the contacts with the families is very complicated as the whole country is not covered with mobile phones.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10058298_017
REPORTAGE - Soldatinnen und Soldaten prägen das Alltagsbild in Nordkorea
ARMY TIME IN NORTH KOREA
The very first order you receive from your guide when arriving in North Korea is NOT to take pictures of the soldiers. This is difficult as you see them everywhere at any occasion, so the temptation is high†!
Their uniforms seem to come from the 50s. and it is†! The Korean Peopleís Army was created in 1948 in the Soviet occupation zone of Korea. So, the uniforms were copied from the USSR.
You will see soldiers in the morning, in the main squares of Pyongyang, when soldiers rehearse their parade for hours. They do not like to have witnesses as everything is not -yet- perfect but have no choice as they need huge spaces to train. Each soldier has a number to allow the officers to tell who is good and who is bad.
You will see them in the countryside when you leave the big towns.
Many soldiers are used as a labor force to compensate for the ineffective North Korean economy, so the army is not only about military organization.
During my 6 trips in North Korea, i saw so many soldiers collecting wood and carrying it along the roads. Wood for heating and for eating. North Korean soldiers can be seen working in fields, farms, or on construction sites in many places, far from military exercises.
You will see them in pictures when visiting the school or the universities†: at the entrance, some letters are displayed on the walls, showing the picture of a young man in uniform above a short text. They are letters from former school students that joined the army and who tell about their lifes as soldiers. Of course everything is fantastic and they write they are so proud to serve their nation.
In North Korea, most of the soldiers serve in military for 10 years, female soldiers serve for seven years. Some high level students only serve few years to work quickly and to be more efficient than when they carry woodÖ
Once in the army, the contacts with the families is very complicated as the whole country is not covered with mobile phones.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10058298_015
REPORTAGE - Soldatinnen und Soldaten prägen das Alltagsbild in Nordkorea
ARMY TIME IN NORTH KOREA
The very first order you receive from your guide when arriving in North Korea is NOT to take pictures of the soldiers. This is difficult as you see them everywhere at any occasion, so the temptation is high†!
Their uniforms seem to come from the 50s. and it is†! The Korean Peopleís Army was created in 1948 in the Soviet occupation zone of Korea. So, the uniforms were copied from the USSR.
You will see soldiers in the morning, in the main squares of Pyongyang, when soldiers rehearse their parade for hours. They do not like to have witnesses as everything is not -yet- perfect but have no choice as they need huge spaces to train. Each soldier has a number to allow the officers to tell who is good and who is bad.
You will see them in the countryside when you leave the big towns.
Many soldiers are used as a labor force to compensate for the ineffective North Korean economy, so the army is not only about military organization.
During my 6 trips in North Korea, i saw so many soldiers collecting wood and carrying it along the roads. Wood for heating and for eating. North Korean soldiers can be seen working in fields, farms, or on construction sites in many places, far from military exercises.
You will see them in pictures when visiting the school or the universities†: at the entrance, some letters are displayed on the walls, showing the picture of a young man in uniform above a short text. They are letters from former school students that joined the army and who tell about their lifes as soldiers. Of course everything is fantastic and they write they are so proud to serve their nation.
In North Korea, most of the soldiers serve in military for 10 years, female soldiers serve for seven years. Some high level students only serve few years to work quickly and to be more efficient than when they carry woodÖ
Once in the army, the contacts with the families is very complicated as the whole country is not covered with mobile phones.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10058298_049
REPORTAGE - Soldatinnen und Soldaten prägen das Alltagsbild in Nordkorea
ARMY TIME IN NORTH KOREA
The very first order you receive from your guide when arriving in North Korea is NOT to take pictures of the soldiers. This is difficult as you see them everywhere at any occasion, so the temptation is high†!
Their uniforms seem to come from the 50s. and it is†! The Korean Peopleís Army was created in 1948 in the Soviet occupation zone of Korea. So, the uniforms were copied from the USSR.
You will see soldiers in the morning, in the main squares of Pyongyang, when soldiers rehearse their parade for hours. They do not like to have witnesses as everything is not -yet- perfect but have no choice as they need huge spaces to train. Each soldier has a number to allow the officers to tell who is good and who is bad.
You will see them in the countryside when you leave the big towns.
Many soldiers are used as a labor force to compensate for the ineffective North Korean economy, so the army is not only about military organization.
During my 6 trips in North Korea, i saw so many soldiers collecting wood and carrying it along the roads. Wood for heating and for eating. North Korean soldiers can be seen working in fields, farms, or on construction sites in many places, far from military exercises.
You will see them in pictures when visiting the school or the universities†: at the entrance, some letters are displayed on the walls, showing the picture of a young man in uniform above a short text. They are letters from former school students that joined the army and who tell about their lifes as soldiers. Of course everything is fantastic and they write they are so proud to serve their nation.
In North Korea, most of the soldiers serve in military for 10 years, female soldiers serve for seven years. Some high level students only serve few years to work quickly and to be more efficient than when they carry woodÖ
Once in the army, the contacts with the families is very complicated as the whole country is not covered with mobile phones.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10058298_053
REPORTAGE - Soldatinnen und Soldaten prägen das Alltagsbild in Nordkorea
ARMY TIME IN NORTH KOREA
The very first order you receive from your guide when arriving in North Korea is NOT to take pictures of the soldiers. This is difficult as you see them everywhere at any occasion, so the temptation is high†!
Their uniforms seem to come from the 50s. and it is†! The Korean Peopleís Army was created in 1948 in the Soviet occupation zone of Korea. So, the uniforms were copied from the USSR.
You will see soldiers in the morning, in the main squares of Pyongyang, when soldiers rehearse their parade for hours. They do not like to have witnesses as everything is not -yet- perfect but have no choice as they need huge spaces to train. Each soldier has a number to allow the officers to tell who is good and who is bad.
You will see them in the countryside when you leave the big towns.
Many soldiers are used as a labor force to compensate for the ineffective North Korean economy, so the army is not only about military organization.
During my 6 trips in North Korea, i saw so many soldiers collecting wood and carrying it along the roads. Wood for heating and for eating. North Korean soldiers can be seen working in fields, farms, or on construction sites in many places, far from military exercises.
You will see them in pictures when visiting the school or the universities†: at the entrance, some letters are displayed on the walls, showing the picture of a young man in uniform above a short text. They are letters from former school students that joined the army and who tell about their lifes as soldiers. Of course everything is fantastic and they write they are so proud to serve their nation.
In North Korea, most of the soldiers serve in military for 10 years, female soldiers serve for seven years. Some high level students only serve few years to work quickly and to be more efficient than when they carry woodÖ
Once in the army, the contacts with the families is very complicated as the whole country is not covered with mobile phones.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10058298_052
REPORTAGE - Soldatinnen und Soldaten prägen das Alltagsbild in Nordkorea
ARMY TIME IN NORTH KOREA
The very first order you receive from your guide when arriving in North Korea is NOT to take pictures of the soldiers. This is difficult as you see them everywhere at any occasion, so the temptation is high†!
Their uniforms seem to come from the 50s. and it is†! The Korean Peopleís Army was created in 1948 in the Soviet occupation zone of Korea. So, the uniforms were copied from the USSR.
You will see soldiers in the morning, in the main squares of Pyongyang, when soldiers rehearse their parade for hours. They do not like to have witnesses as everything is not -yet- perfect but have no choice as they need huge spaces to train. Each soldier has a number to allow the officers to tell who is good and who is bad.
You will see them in the countryside when you leave the big towns.
Many soldiers are used as a labor force to compensate for the ineffective North Korean economy, so the army is not only about military organization.
During my 6 trips in North Korea, i saw so many soldiers collecting wood and carrying it along the roads. Wood for heating and for eating. North Korean soldiers can be seen working in fields, farms, or on construction sites in many places, far from military exercises.
You will see them in pictures when visiting the school or the universities†: at the entrance, some letters are displayed on the walls, showing the picture of a young man in uniform above a short text. They are letters from former school students that joined the army and who tell about their lifes as soldiers. Of course everything is fantastic and they write they are so proud to serve their nation.
In North Korea, most of the soldiers serve in military for 10 years, female soldiers serve for seven years. Some high level students only serve few years to work quickly and to be more efficient than when they carry woodÖ
Once in the army, the contacts with the families is very complicated as the whole country is not covered with mobile phones.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10058298_050
REPORTAGE - Soldatinnen und Soldaten prägen das Alltagsbild in Nordkorea
ARMY TIME IN NORTH KOREA
The very first order you receive from your guide when arriving in North Korea is NOT to take pictures of the soldiers. This is difficult as you see them everywhere at any occasion, so the temptation is high†!
Their uniforms seem to come from the 50s. and it is†! The Korean Peopleís Army was created in 1948 in the Soviet occupation zone of Korea. So, the uniforms were copied from the USSR.
You will see soldiers in the morning, in the main squares of Pyongyang, when soldiers rehearse their parade for hours. They do not like to have witnesses as everything is not -yet- perfect but have no choice as they need huge spaces to train. Each soldier has a number to allow the officers to tell who is good and who is bad.
You will see them in the countryside when you leave the big towns.
Many soldiers are used as a labor force to compensate for the ineffective North Korean economy, so the army is not only about military organization.
During my 6 trips in North Korea, i saw so many soldiers collecting wood and carrying it along the roads. Wood for heating and for eating. North Korean soldiers can be seen working in fields, farms, or on construction sites in many places, far from military exercises.
You will see them in pictures when visiting the school or the universities†: at the entrance, some letters are displayed on the walls, showing the picture of a young man in uniform above a short text. They are letters from former school students that joined the army and who tell about their lifes as soldiers. Of course everything is fantastic and they write they are so proud to serve their nation.
In North Korea, most of the soldiers serve in military for 10 years, female soldiers serve for seven years. Some high level students only serve few years to work quickly and to be more efficient than when they carry woodÖ
Once in the army, the contacts with the families is very complicated as the whole country is not covered with mobile phones.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10058298_030
REPORTAGE - Soldatinnen und Soldaten prägen das Alltagsbild in Nordkorea
ARMY TIME IN NORTH KOREA
The very first order you receive from your guide when arriving in North Korea is NOT to take pictures of the soldiers. This is difficult as you see them everywhere at any occasion, so the temptation is high†!
Their uniforms seem to come from the 50s. and it is†! The Korean Peopleís Army was created in 1948 in the Soviet occupation zone of Korea. So, the uniforms were copied from the USSR.
You will see soldiers in the morning, in the main squares of Pyongyang, when soldiers rehearse their parade for hours. They do not like to have witnesses as everything is not -yet- perfect but have no choice as they need huge spaces to train. Each soldier has a number to allow the officers to tell who is good and who is bad.
You will see them in the countryside when you leave the big towns.
Many soldiers are used as a labor force to compensate for the ineffective North Korean economy, so the army is not only about military organization.
During my 6 trips in North Korea, i saw so many soldiers collecting wood and carrying it along the roads. Wood for heating and for eating. North Korean soldiers can be seen working in fields, farms, or on construction sites in many places, far from military exercises.
You will see them in pictures when visiting the school or the universities†: at the entrance, some letters are displayed on the walls, showing the picture of a young man in uniform above a short text. They are letters from former school students that joined the army and who tell about their lifes as soldiers. Of course everything is fantastic and they write they are so proud to serve their nation.
In North Korea, most of the soldiers serve in military for 10 years, female soldiers serve for seven years. Some high level students only serve few years to work quickly and to be more efficient than when they carry woodÖ
Once in the army, the contacts with the families is very complicated as the whole country is not covered with mobile phones.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10058298_024
REPORTAGE - Soldatinnen und Soldaten prägen das Alltagsbild in Nordkorea
ARMY TIME IN NORTH KOREA
The very first order you receive from your guide when arriving in North Korea is NOT to take pictures of the soldiers. This is difficult as you see them everywhere at any occasion, so the temptation is high†!
Their uniforms seem to come from the 50s. and it is†! The Korean Peopleís Army was created in 1948 in the Soviet occupation zone of Korea. So, the uniforms were copied from the USSR.
You will see soldiers in the morning, in the main squares of Pyongyang, when soldiers rehearse their parade for hours. They do not like to have witnesses as everything is not -yet- perfect but have no choice as they need huge spaces to train. Each soldier has a number to allow the officers to tell who is good and who is bad.
You will see them in the countryside when you leave the big towns.
Many soldiers are used as a labor force to compensate for the ineffective North Korean economy, so the army is not only about military organization.
During my 6 trips in North Korea, i saw so many soldiers collecting wood and carrying it along the roads. Wood for heating and for eating. North Korean soldiers can be seen working in fields, farms, or on construction sites in many places, far from military exercises.
You will see them in pictures when visiting the school or the universities†: at the entrance, some letters are displayed on the walls, showing the picture of a young man in uniform above a short text. They are letters from former school students that joined the army and who tell about their lifes as soldiers. Of course everything is fantastic and they write they are so proud to serve their nation.
In North Korea, most of the soldiers serve in military for 10 years, female soldiers serve for seven years. Some high level students only serve few years to work quickly and to be more efficient than when they carry woodÖ
Once in the army, the contacts with the families is very complicated as the whole country is not covered with mobile phones.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10058298_023
REPORTAGE - Soldatinnen und Soldaten prägen das Alltagsbild in Nordkorea
ARMY TIME IN NORTH KOREA
The very first order you receive from your guide when arriving in North Korea is NOT to take pictures of the soldiers. This is difficult as you see them everywhere at any occasion, so the temptation is high†!
Their uniforms seem to come from the 50s. and it is†! The Korean Peopleís Army was created in 1948 in the Soviet occupation zone of Korea. So, the uniforms were copied from the USSR.
You will see soldiers in the morning, in the main squares of Pyongyang, when soldiers rehearse their parade for hours. They do not like to have witnesses as everything is not -yet- perfect but have no choice as they need huge spaces to train. Each soldier has a number to allow the officers to tell who is good and who is bad.
You will see them in the countryside when you leave the big towns.
Many soldiers are used as a labor force to compensate for the ineffective North Korean economy, so the army is not only about military organization.
During my 6 trips in North Korea, i saw so many soldiers collecting wood and carrying it along the roads. Wood for heating and for eating. North Korean soldiers can be seen working in fields, farms, or on construction sites in many places, far from military exercises.
You will see them in pictures when visiting the school or the universities†: at the entrance, some letters are displayed on the walls, showing the picture of a young man in uniform above a short text. They are letters from former school students that joined the army and who tell about their lifes as soldiers. Of course everything is fantastic and they write they are so proud to serve their nation.
In North Korea, most of the soldiers serve in military for 10 years, female soldiers serve for seven years. Some high level students only serve few years to work quickly and to be more efficient than when they carry woodÖ
Once in the army, the contacts with the families is very complicated as the whole country is not covered with mobile phones.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10058298_022
REPORTAGE - Soldatinnen und Soldaten prägen das Alltagsbild in Nordkorea
ARMY TIME IN NORTH KOREA
The very first order you receive from your guide when arriving in North Korea is NOT to take pictures of the soldiers. This is difficult as you see them everywhere at any occasion, so the temptation is high†!
Their uniforms seem to come from the 50s. and it is†! The Korean Peopleís Army was created in 1948 in the Soviet occupation zone of Korea. So, the uniforms were copied from the USSR.
You will see soldiers in the morning, in the main squares of Pyongyang, when soldiers rehearse their parade for hours. They do not like to have witnesses as everything is not -yet- perfect but have no choice as they need huge spaces to train. Each soldier has a number to allow the officers to tell who is good and who is bad.
You will see them in the countryside when you leave the big towns.
Many soldiers are used as a labor force to compensate for the ineffective North Korean economy, so the army is not only about military organization.
During my 6 trips in North Korea, i saw so many soldiers collecting wood and carrying it along the roads. Wood for heating and for eating. North Korean soldiers can be seen working in fields, farms, or on construction sites in many places, far from military exercises.
You will see them in pictures when visiting the school or the universities†: at the entrance, some letters are displayed on the walls, showing the picture of a young man in uniform above a short text. They are letters from former school students that joined the army and who tell about their lifes as soldiers. Of course everything is fantastic and they write they are so proud to serve their nation.
In North Korea, most of the soldiers serve in military for 10 years, female soldiers serve for seven years. Some high level students only serve few years to work quickly and to be more efficient than when they carry woodÖ
Once in the army, the contacts with the families is very complicated as the whole country is not covered with mobile phones.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10058298_020
REPORTAGE - Soldatinnen und Soldaten prägen das Alltagsbild in Nordkorea
ARMY TIME IN NORTH KOREA
The very first order you receive from your guide when arriving in North Korea is NOT to take pictures of the soldiers. This is difficult as you see them everywhere at any occasion, so the temptation is high†!
Their uniforms seem to come from the 50s. and it is†! The Korean Peopleís Army was created in 1948 in the Soviet occupation zone of Korea. So, the uniforms were copied from the USSR.
You will see soldiers in the morning, in the main squares of Pyongyang, when soldiers rehearse their parade for hours. They do not like to have witnesses as everything is not -yet- perfect but have no choice as they need huge spaces to train. Each soldier has a number to allow the officers to tell who is good and who is bad.
You will see them in the countryside when you leave the big towns.
Many soldiers are used as a labor force to compensate for the ineffective North Korean economy, so the army is not only about military organization.
During my 6 trips in North Korea, i saw so many soldiers collecting wood and carrying it along the roads. Wood for heating and for eating. North Korean soldiers can be seen working in fields, farms, or on construction sites in many places, far from military exercises.
You will see them in pictures when visiting the school or the universities†: at the entrance, some letters are displayed on the walls, showing the picture of a young man in uniform above a short text. They are letters from former school students that joined the army and who tell about their lifes as soldiers. Of course everything is fantastic and they write they are so proud to serve their nation.
In North Korea, most of the soldiers serve in military for 10 years, female soldiers serve for seven years. Some high level students only serve few years to work quickly and to be more efficient than when they carry woodÖ
Once in the army, the contacts with the families is very complicated as the whole country is not covered with mobile phones.
(c) Dukas -
DUK10058298_018
REPORTAGE - Soldatinnen und Soldaten prägen das Alltagsbild in Nordkorea
ARMY TIME IN NORTH KOREA
The very first order you receive from your guide when arriving in North Korea is NOT to take pictures of the soldiers. This is difficult as you see them everywhere at any occasion, so the temptation is high†!
Their uniforms seem to come from the 50s. and it is†! The Korean Peopleís Army was created in 1948 in the Soviet occupation zone of Korea. So, the uniforms were copied from the USSR.
You will see soldiers in the morning, in the main squares of Pyongyang, when soldiers rehearse their parade for hours. They do not like to have witnesses as everything is not -yet- perfect but have no choice as they need huge spaces to train. Each soldier has a number to allow the officers to tell who is good and who is bad.
You will see them in the countryside when you leave the big towns.
Many soldiers are used as a labor force to compensate for the ineffective North Korean economy, so the army is not only about military organization.
During my 6 trips in North Korea, i saw so many soldiers collecting wood and carrying it along the roads. Wood for heating and for eating. North Korean soldiers can be seen working in fields, farms, or on construction sites in many places, far from military exercises.
You will see them in pictures when visiting the school or the universities†: at the entrance, some letters are displayed on the walls, showing the picture of a young man in uniform above a short text. They are letters from former school students that joined the army and who tell about their lifes as soldiers. Of course everything is fantastic and they write they are so proud to serve their nation.
In North Korea, most of the soldiers serve in military for 10 years, female soldiers serve for seven years. Some high level students only serve few years to work quickly and to be more efficient than when they carry woodÖ
Once in the army, the contacts with the families is very complicated as the whole country is not covered with mobile phones.
(c) Dukas