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DUKAS_173956961_EYE
Cabbage and potatoes are not the only vegetables: can these female farmers persuade Mongolia to change its diet?
In a country where nearly a third of under-fives are anaemic, a lack of vegetables has contributed to poor health and high cancer rates. Now, that’s beginning to change as tomatoes, cucumber and celery are cultivated.
The health consequences of Mongolia's national diet and vegetable deprivation are becoming apparent. The country has the highest rate of liver and stomach cancer cases in the world.
Nursery 71, on the outskirts of Ulaanbaatar, serves children from the ger district and makes sure all its pupils not only eat vegetables but also grow them.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_173956963_EYE
Cabbage and potatoes are not the only vegetables: can these female farmers persuade Mongolia to change its diet?
In a country where nearly a third of under-fives are anaemic, a lack of vegetables has contributed to poor health and high cancer rates. Now, that’s beginning to change as tomatoes, cucumber and celery are cultivated.
The health consequences of Mongolia's national diet and vegetable deprivation are becoming apparent. The country has the highest rate of liver and stomach cancer cases in the world.
Nursery 71, on the outskirts of Ulaanbaatar, serves children from the ger district and makes sure all its pupils not only eat vegetables but also grow them. Khud Erdenechimeg, the nursery’s director.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_173949876_EYE
Mongolia's ambitious programme to tackle cancer death rates reaches 40% of population
Screening project aims to reduce highest cancer mortality rate in the world, but nomadic way of life means many in rural areas are unaware of services.
An ambitious project in Mongolia to tackle cancer mortality rates has reached 40% of the country’s population, according to the World Health Organisation.
Two years after the screening programme began in the world's worst place for cancer survival almost half its citizens have been tested for a number of non-communicable diseases, particularly cancers.
Erdenekhuu Nansalmaa, director general of Mongolia’s National Cancer Centre, says late diagnosis is behind the country’s high death rates.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_173949873_EYE
Mongolia's ambitious programme to tackle cancer death rates reaches 40% of population
Screening project aims to reduce highest cancer mortality rate in the world, but nomadic way of life means many in rural areas are unaware of services.
An ambitious project in Mongolia to tackle cancer mortality rates has reached 40% of the country’s population, according to the World Health Organisation.
Two years after the screening programme began in the world's worst place for cancer survival almost half its citizens have been tested for a number of non-communicable diseases, particularly cancers.
Undarmaa Tudev, head of early detection at Mongolia’s National Cancer Centre.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_173956965_EYE
Cabbage and potatoes are not the only vegetables: can these female farmers persuade Mongolia to change its diet?
In a country where nearly a third of under-fives are anaemic, a lack of vegetables has contributed to poor health and high cancer rates. Now, that’s beginning to change as tomatoes, cucumber and celery are cultivated.
The health consequences of Mongolia's national diet and vegetable deprivation are becoming apparent. The country has the highest rate of liver and stomach cancer cases in the world.
Zina Zaya with her daughter Naranchimeg, in a wheelchair after a car accident in 2006. They grow a variety of vegetables on their small farm not far from Mongolia’s capital, Ulaanbaatar
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_173956964_EYE
Cabbage and potatoes are not the only vegetables: can these female farmers persuade Mongolia to change its diet?
In a country where nearly a third of under-fives are anaemic, a lack of vegetables has contributed to poor health and high cancer rates. Now, that’s beginning to change as tomatoes, cucumber and celery are cultivated.
The health consequences of Mongolia's national diet and vegetable deprivation are becoming apparent. The country has the highest rate of liver and stomach cancer cases in the world.
Farmers on the west bank, Mongolia Byatshandaa Jargal in red, Badam Khand in yellow, Atarjargal in black, Alimaa in blue
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_173956962_EYE
Cabbage and potatoes are not the only vegetables: can these female farmers persuade Mongolia to change its diet?
In a country where nearly a third of under-fives are anaemic, a lack of vegetables has contributed to poor health and high cancer rates. Now, that’s beginning to change as tomatoes, cucumber and celery are cultivated.
The health consequences of Mongolia's national diet and vegetable deprivation are becoming apparent. The country has the highest rate of liver and stomach cancer cases in the world.
Alimaa, a member of the Mongolian Women Farmers Association, tends to a plant in the greenhouse
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_173956960_EYE
Cabbage and potatoes are not the only vegetables: can these female farmers persuade Mongolia to change its diet?
In a country where nearly a third of under-fives are anaemic, a lack of vegetables has contributed to poor health and high cancer rates. Now, that’s beginning to change as tomatoes, cucumber and celery are cultivated.
The health consequences of Mongolia's national diet and vegetable deprivation are becoming apparent. The country has the highest rate of liver and stomach cancer cases in the world.
Farmers on the west bank, Mongolia Byatshandaa Jargal in red, Badam Khand in yellow, Atarjargal in black, Alimaa in blue
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_173949878_EYE
Mongolia's ambitious programme to tackle cancer death rates reaches 40% of population
Screening project aims to reduce highest cancer mortality rate in the world, but nomadic way of life means many in rural areas are unaware of services.
An ambitious project in Mongolia to tackle cancer mortality rates has reached 40% of the country’s population, according to the World Health Organisation.
Two years after the screening programme began in the world's worst place for cancer survival almost half its citizens have been tested for a number of non-communicable diseases, particularly cancers.
Nergui, a herder whose wife, Tungalag Tamir, was diagnosed with cervical cancer. The couple have spent more on travel and medication for her treatment than they usually would in a year.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_173949874_EYE
Mongolia's ambitious programme to tackle cancer death rates reaches 40% of population
Screening project aims to reduce highest cancer mortality rate in the world, but nomadic way of life means many in rural areas are unaware of services.
An ambitious project in Mongolia to tackle cancer mortality rates has reached 40% of the country’s population, according to the World Health Organisation.
Two years after the screening programme began in the world's worst place for cancer survival almost half its citizens have been tested for a number of non-communicable diseases, particularly cancers.
Khyuvasuren Lkhagvasuren had never heard of a mammogram or breast cancer before her 2019 diagnosis.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_173949877_EYE
Mongolia's ambitious programme to tackle cancer death rates reaches 40% of population
Screening project aims to reduce highest cancer mortality rate in the world, but nomadic way of life means many in rural areas are unaware of services.
An ambitious project in Mongolia to tackle cancer mortality rates has reached 40% of the country’s population, according to the World Health Organisation.
Two years after the screening programme began in the world's worst place for cancer survival almost half its citizens have been tested for a number of non-communicable diseases, particularly cancers.
A bedroom at the National Cancer Centre in Ulaanbaatar. The bulk of Mongolia’s cancer facilities are in the city.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_173949875_EYE
Mongolia's ambitious programme to tackle cancer death rates reaches 40% of population
Screening project aims to reduce highest cancer mortality rate in the world, but nomadic way of life means many in rural areas are unaware of services.
An ambitious project in Mongolia to tackle cancer mortality rates has reached 40% of the country’s population, according to the World Health Organisation.
Two years after the screening programme began in the world's worst place for cancer survival almost half its citizens have been tested for a number of non-communicable diseases, particularly cancers.
Tsetsegsaikhan Batmunkh, director of Mongolia’s National Cancer Council, says between 50% and 60% of people diagnosed with cancer live outside the capital.
Byamba-Ochir / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_167585139_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_167585141_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_167585145_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_167585143_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_167585144_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_167585140_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_167585142_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_167585138_EYE
'We need to talk about choice': Paola Marra. woman who ended life at Dignitas urges change to UK law.
On the eve of her death in Switzerland Paola Marra told the Guardian about her journey and her wish that she could have died at home.
Paola a Canadian-born former music industry and charity worker had been suffering with terminal stage 4 bowel cancer since 2021.
Paola Marra (and her whippet Stanley).
08/03/2024.
Linda Nylind / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Linda Nylind -
DUKAS_157347337_EYE
Kris Hallenga founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
Kris Hallenga, 37, pictured at Rebecca Peach's house (CEO of Legacy of Lives), London, UK.
Kris is living with stage 4 breast cancer (since 2009) and is the founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
She recently has had a ‘living funeral’.
16 June 2023
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
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Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_157347302_EYE
Kris Hallenga founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
Kris Hallenga, 37, pictured at Rebecca Peach's house (CEO of Legacy of Lives), London, UK.
Kris is living with stage 4 breast cancer (since 2009) and is the founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
She recently has had a ‘living funeral’.
16 June 2023
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_157347336_EYE
Kris Hallenga founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
Kris Hallenga, 37, pictured at Rebecca Peach's house (CEO of Legacy of Lives), London, UK.
Kris is living with stage 4 breast cancer (since 2009) and is the founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
She recently has had a ‘living funeral’.
16 June 2023
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_157347322_EYE
Kris Hallenga founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
Kris Hallenga, 37, pictured at Rebecca Peach's house (CEO of Legacy of Lives), London, UK.
Kris is living with stage 4 breast cancer (since 2009) and is the founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
She recently has had a ‘living funeral’.
16 June 2023
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_157347335_EYE
Kris Hallenga founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
Kris Hallenga, 37, pictured at Rebecca Peach's house (CEO of Legacy of Lives), London, UK.
Kris is living with stage 4 breast cancer (since 2009) and is the founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
She recently has had a ‘living funeral’.
16 June 2023
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_157347334_EYE
Kris Hallenga founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
Kris Hallenga, 37, pictured at Rebecca Peach's house (CEO of Legacy of Lives), London, UK.
Kris is living with stage 4 breast cancer (since 2009) and is the founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
She recently has had a ‘living funeral’.
16 June 2023
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_157347338_EYE
Kris Hallenga founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
Kris Hallenga, 37, pictured at Rebecca Peach's house (CEO of Legacy of Lives), London, UK.
Kris is living with stage 4 breast cancer (since 2009) and is the founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
She recently has had a ‘living funeral’.
16 June 2023
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_157347301_EYE
Kris Hallenga founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
Kris Hallenga, 37, pictured at Rebecca Peach's house (CEO of Legacy of Lives), London, UK.
Kris is living with stage 4 breast cancer (since 2009) and is the founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
She recently has had a ‘living funeral’.
16 June 2023
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_157347333_EYE
Kris Hallenga founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
Kris Hallenga, 37, pictured at Rebecca Peach's house (CEO of Legacy of Lives), London, UK.
Kris is living with stage 4 breast cancer (since 2009) and is the founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
She recently has had a ‘living funeral’.
16 June 2023
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_157347330_EYE
Kris Hallenga founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
Kris Hallenga, 37, pictured at Rebecca Peach's house (CEO of Legacy of Lives), London, UK.
Kris is living with stage 4 breast cancer (since 2009) and is the founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
She recently has had a ‘living funeral’.
16 June 2023
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_157347331_EYE
Kris Hallenga founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
Kris Hallenga, 37, pictured at Rebecca Peach's house (CEO of Legacy of Lives), London, UK.
Kris is living with stage 4 breast cancer (since 2009) and is the founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
She recently has had a ‘living funeral’.
16 June 2023
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_157347332_EYE
Kris Hallenga founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
Kris Hallenga, 37, pictured at Rebecca Peach's house (CEO of Legacy of Lives), London, UK.
Kris is living with stage 4 breast cancer (since 2009) and is the founder of breast cancer awareness charity CoppaFeel!
She recently has had a ‘living funeral’.
16 June 2023
© Rii Schroer / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
Rii Schroer / eyevine -
DUKAS_149160035_EYE
Akshata Murty attends a Reception for Breast Cancer Research
11/01/2023. London, United Kingdom. Akshata Murty, the Prime Ministers Wife and Susie Cleverly, the wife of the Foreign Secretary attends a Breakfast Reception for Breast Cancer Research in 10 Downing Street. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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DUKAS_149160106_EYE
Akshata Murty attends a Reception for Breast Cancer Research
11/01/2023. London, United Kingdom. Akshata Murty, the Prime Ministers Wife and Susie Cleverly, the wife of the Foreign Secretary attends a Breakfast Reception for Breast Cancer Research in 10 Downing Street. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© No10 Crown Copyright / eyevine -
DUKAS_149160003_EYE
Akshata Murty attends a Reception for Breast Cancer Research
11/01/2023. London, United Kingdom. Akshata Murty, the Prime Ministers Wife and Susie Cleverly, the wife of the Foreign Secretary attends a Breakfast Reception for Breast Cancer Research in 10 Downing Street. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© No10 Crown Copyright / eyevine -
DUKAS_149160032_EYE
Akshata Murty attends a Reception for Breast Cancer Research
11/01/2023. London, United Kingdom. Akshata Murty, the Prime Ministers Wife and Susie Cleverly, the wife of the Foreign Secretary attends a Breakfast Reception for Breast Cancer Research in 10 Downing Street. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© No10 Crown Copyright / eyevine -
DUKAS_149160037_EYE
Akshata Murty attends a Reception for Breast Cancer Research
11/01/2023. London, United Kingdom. Akshata Murty, the Prime Ministers Wife and Susie Cleverly, the wife of the Foreign Secretary attends a Breakfast Reception for Breast Cancer Research in 10 Downing Street. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© No10 Crown Copyright / eyevine -
DUKAS_149160107_EYE
Akshata Murty attends a Reception for Breast Cancer Research
11/01/2023. London, United Kingdom. Akshata Murty, the Prime Ministers Wife and Susie Cleverly, the wife of the Foreign Secretary attends a Breakfast Reception for Breast Cancer Research in 10 Downing Street. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© No10 Crown Copyright / eyevine -
DUKAS_149160109_EYE
Akshata Murty attends a Reception for Breast Cancer Research
11/01/2023. London, United Kingdom. Akshata Murty, the Prime Ministers Wife and Susie Cleverly, the wife of the Foreign Secretary attends a Breakfast Reception for Breast Cancer Research in 10 Downing Street. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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© No10 Crown Copyright / eyevine -
DUKAS_149160111_EYE
Akshata Murty attends a Reception for Breast Cancer Research
11/01/2023. London, United Kingdom. Akshata Murty, the Prime Ministers Wife and Susie Cleverly, the wife of the Foreign Secretary attends a Breakfast Reception for Breast Cancer Research in 10 Downing Street. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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DUKAS_149160041_EYE
Akshata Murty attends a Reception for Breast Cancer Research
11/01/2023. London, United Kingdom. Akshata Murty, the Prime Ministers Wife and Susie Cleverly, the wife of the Foreign Secretary attends a Breakfast Reception for Breast Cancer Research in 10 Downing Street. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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DUKAS_149160108_EYE
Akshata Murty attends a Reception for Breast Cancer Research
11/01/2023. London, United Kingdom. Akshata Murty, the Prime Ministers Wife and Susie Cleverly, the wife of the Foreign Secretary attends a Breakfast Reception for Breast Cancer Research in 10 Downing Street. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_149160018_EYE
Akshata Murty attends a Reception for Breast Cancer Research
11/01/2023. London, United Kingdom. Akshata Murty, the Prime Ministers Wife and Susie Cleverly, the wife of the Foreign Secretary attends a Breakfast Reception for Breast Cancer Research in 10 Downing Street. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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DUKAS_149160033_EYE
Akshata Murty attends a Reception for Breast Cancer Research
11/01/2023. London, United Kingdom. Akshata Murty, the Prime Ministers Wife and Susie Cleverly, the wife of the Foreign Secretary attends a Breakfast Reception for Breast Cancer Research in 10 Downing Street. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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DUKAS_149160004_EYE
Akshata Murty attends a Reception for Breast Cancer Research
11/01/2023. London, United Kingdom. Akshata Murty, the Prime Ministers Wife and Susie Cleverly, the wife of the Foreign Secretary attends a Breakfast Reception for Breast Cancer Research in 10 Downing Street. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_149160034_EYE
Akshata Murty attends a Reception for Breast Cancer Research
11/01/2023. London, United Kingdom. Akshata Murty, the Prime Ministers Wife and Susie Cleverly, the wife of the Foreign Secretary attends a Breakfast Reception for Breast Cancer Research in 10 Downing Street. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_149160019_EYE
Akshata Murty attends a Reception for Breast Cancer Research
11/01/2023. London, United Kingdom. Akshata Murty, the Prime Ministers Wife and Susie Cleverly, the wife of the Foreign Secretary attends a Breakfast Reception for Breast Cancer Research in 10 Downing Street. Picture by Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street / eyevine
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DUKAS_144742661_EYE
This nine-year-old was enslaved in the US. Her story could help stop a chemical plant
The life stories of enslaved people are crucial to a legal battle over a Louisiana petrochemical facility that could triple residents' exposure to carcinogens.
The details of Rachel's existence have been lost to time. But historians say that even at that young age, enslaved children likely would have been expected to work in some capacity.
What we do know for certain is that Rachel passed away before her 10th birthday, thanks to a sobering document uncovered not long ago at a Louisiana archive. It lists Rachel among many others who died while enslaved.
Nearly 190 years later, community members living near the same area where the Buena Vista plantation was once located are fighting the construction of a $9.4bn (£8.2bn) petrochemical plant proposed by Taiwanese industrial giant Formosa - and the document on Rachel is an important find.
It is part of an effort to piece together the life story of Rachel and other enslaved people, and with that information, to strengthen a political and legal case for preventing the facility, named the Sunshine Project, from being built.
Handwritten correspondence from 1832 details the sale of slaves, including a young girl named Rachel, who would have died on the grounds of the Buena Vista plantation in St. James Parish before age 10.
© Edmund D. Fountain / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_144742659_EYE
This nine-year-old was enslaved in the US. Her story could help stop a chemical plant
The life stories of enslaved people are crucial to a legal battle over a Louisiana petrochemical facility that could triple residents' exposure to carcinogens.
The details of Rachel's existence have been lost to time. But historians say that even at that young age, enslaved children likely would have been expected to work in some capacity.
What we do know for certain is that Rachel passed away before her 10th birthday, thanks to a sobering document uncovered not long ago at a Louisiana archive. It lists Rachel among many others who died while enslaved.
Nearly 190 years later, community members living near the same area where the Buena Vista plantation was once located are fighting the construction of a $9.4bn (£8.2bn) petrochemical plant proposed by Taiwanese industrial giant Formosa - and the document on Rachel is an important find.
It is part of an effort to piece together the life story of Rachel and other enslaved people, and with that information, to strengthen a political and legal case for preventing the facility, named the Sunshine Project, from being built.
A billboard encourages St. James Parish, Louisiana residents to oppose Taiwanese industrial giant Formosa’s plans to build a $9.4 billion petrochemical plant equivalent in size to 80 football fields in the region. Local residents fear it could triple their exposure to carcinogens in an area already known as “cancer alley” due to the high concentration of heavy industry.
© Edmund D Fountain / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_144742646_EYE
This nine-year-old was enslaved in the US. Her story could help stop a chemical plant
The life stories of enslaved people are crucial to a legal battle over a Louisiana petrochemical facility that could triple residents' exposure to carcinogens.
The details of Rachel's existence have been lost to time. But historians say that even at that young age, enslaved children likely would have been expected to work in some capacity.
What we do know for certain is that Rachel passed away before her 10th birthday, thanks to a sobering document uncovered not long ago at a Louisiana archive. It lists Rachel among many others who died while enslaved.
Nearly 190 years later, community members living near the same area where the Buena Vista plantation was once located are fighting the construction of a $9.4bn (£8.2bn) petrochemical plant proposed by Taiwanese industrial giant Formosa - and the document on Rachel is an important find.
It is part of an effort to piece together the life story of Rachel and other enslaved people, and with that information, to strengthen a political and legal case for preventing the facility, named the Sunshine Project, from being built.
Lenora Gobert, of New Orleans, points out the site of the former Buena Vista plantation on a map at the Hill Memorial Library at Louisiana State University on September 7, 2022. Gobert is the in-house genealogy expert for a local environmental justice group known as the Louisiana Bucket Brigade. Gobert scours 19th century archives trying to put faces and names to the gravesites where Taiwanese petrochemical company Formosa wants to build. The site of the plantation is where Formosa wants to build a massive petrochemical facility.
© Edmund D Fountain / Guardian / eyevine
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© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.