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DUKAS_191549892_DDP
Nations League Football Women GERMANY - SPAIN 0-0
Christian Wueck head coach of Team Germany Bundestrainer, Chef- Trainer DFB Frauen,
in the Women s Nations League 2025 Final first leg match
GERMANY - SPAIN 0-0
on November 28, 2025 at Fritz-Walter-Stadion in Kaiserslautern, Germany.
Season 2025/2026
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
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DUKAS_191549888_DDP
Nations League Football Women GERMANY - SPAIN 0-0
Christian Wueck head coach of Team Germany Bundestrainer, Chef- Trainer DFB Frauen,
in the Women s Nations League 2025 Final first leg match
GERMANY - SPAIN 0-0
on November 28, 2025 at Fritz-Walter-Stadion in Kaiserslautern, Germany.
Season 2025/2026
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
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DUKAS_191549886_DDP
Nations League Football Women GERMANY - SPAIN 0-0
Franziska Kett of Germany Rebecca Knaak of Germany Kathrin-Julia Hendrich of Germany Giulia Gwinn of Germany
after the Women s Nations League 2025 Final first leg match
GERMANY - SPAIN 0-0
on November 28, 2025 at Fritz-Walter-Stadion in Kaiserslautern, Germany.
Season 2025/2026
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
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DUKAS_191549882_DDP
Nations League Football Women GERMANY - SPAIN 0-0
Rebecca Knaak of Germany
in the Women s Nations League 2025 Final first leg match
GERMANY - SPAIN 0-0
on November 28, 2025 at Fritz-Walter-Stadion in Kaiserslautern, Germany.
Season 2025/2026
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
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DUKAS_191549865_DDP
Nations League Football Women GERMANY - SPAIN 0-0
Jule Brand of Germany
in the Women s Nations League 2025 Final first leg match
GERMANY - SPAIN 0-0
on November 28, 2025 at Fritz-Walter-Stadion in Kaiserslautern, Germany.
Season 2025/2026
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
ddp -
DUKAS_191549581_DDP
Nations League Football Women GERMANY - SPAIN 0-0
Christian Wueck head coach of Team Germany Bundestrainer, Chef- Trainer DFB Frauen,
in the Women s Nations League 2025 Final first leg match
GERMANY - SPAIN 0-0
on November 28, 2025 at Fritz-Walter-Stadion in Kaiserslautern, Germany.
Season 2025/2026
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
ddp -
DUKAS_191544764_NUR
Feminists March Against Civil Society Crackdown And Restrictions On Public Space In Tunis
A feminist activist raises a placard reading in Arabic, ''I will not be a free woman as long as there are imprisoned women,'' during a march organized by feminist groups, including the Tunisian Association of the Democratic Women (ATFD), in Tunis, Tunisia, on November 29, 2025. The demonstration brings together hundreds of human rights defenders, feminist activists, opposition parties, civil society members, and ordinary Tunisians. They denounce what protesters describe as a growing crackdown on freedoms, criminalization of civil society, and restrictions on public space imposed by Tunisian authorities. Participants also condemn the suspension of the activities of dozens of associations and organizations, as well as the rising gender-based violence. They show solidarity with opposition figures recently sentenced on appeal in the ''conspiracy against state security'' case. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191541033_DDP
Football 1.Bundesliga FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - FC ST. PAULI
Danel Sinani of St.Pauli sad
in the match
FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - FC ST. PAULI on November 29, 2025 at Allianz Arena Muenchen, Germany. Season 2026/2026, 1.Bundesliga, FCB, matchday 12,
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
- DFL REGULATIONS PROHIBIT ANY USE OF PHOTOGRAPHS as IMAGE SEQUENCES and/or QUASI-VIDEO -
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DUKAS_191540980_DDP
Football 1.Bundesliga FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - FC ST. PAULI 3-1
Joel Chima Fujita of St.Pauli Jackson Irvine of St.Pauli
disappointed after the match
FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - FC ST. PAULI 3-1 on November 29, 2025 at Allianz Arena Muenchen, Germany. Season 2026/2026, 1.Bundesliga, FCB, matchday 12,
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
- DFL REGULATIONS PROHIBIT ANY USE OF PHOTOGRAPHS as IMAGE SEQUENCES and/or QUASI-VIDEO -
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DUKAS_191540900_DDP
Football 1.Bundesliga FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - FC ST. PAULI 3-1
Lennart Karl of FC Bayern Muenchen
in the match
FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - FC ST. PAULI 3-1 on November 29, 2025 at Allianz Arena Muenchen, Germany. Season 2026/2026, 1.Bundesliga, FCB, matchday 12,
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
- DFL REGULATIONS PROHIBIT ANY USE OF PHOTOGRAPHS as IMAGE SEQUENCES and/or QUASI-VIDEO -
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DUKAS_191540890_DDP
Football 1.Bundesliga FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - FC ST. PAULI
headcoach Alexander Blessin of St.Pauli
in the match
FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - FC ST. PAULI on November 29, 2025 at Allianz Arena Muenchen, Germany. Season 2026/2026, 1.Bundesliga, FCB, matchday 12,
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
- DFL REGULATIONS PROHIBIT ANY USE OF PHOTOGRAPHS as IMAGE SEQUENCES and/or QUASI-VIDEO -
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DUKAS_191540798_DDP
Football 1.Bundesliga FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - FC ST. PAULI
Team of St.Pauli with Jackson Irvine of St.Pauli sad
in the match
FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - FC ST. PAULI on November 29, 2025 at Allianz Arena Muenchen, Germany. Season 2026/2026, 1.Bundesliga, FCB, matchday 12,
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
- DFL REGULATIONS PROHIBIT ANY USE OF PHOTOGRAPHS as IMAGE SEQUENCES and/or QUASI-VIDEO -
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DUKAS_191540786_DDP
Football 1.Bundesliga FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - FC ST. PAULI 3-1
Team of St.Pauli
disappointed after the match
FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - FC ST. PAULI 3-1 on November 29, 2025 at Allianz Arena Muenchen, Germany. Season 2026/2026, 1.Bundesliga, FCB, matchday 12,
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
- DFL REGULATIONS PROHIBIT ANY USE OF PHOTOGRAPHS as IMAGE SEQUENCES and/or QUASI-VIDEO -
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DUKAS_191541059_DDP
Football 1.Bundesliga FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - FC ST. PAULI
Abdoulie Ceesay of St.Pauli sad
in the match
FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - FC ST. PAULI on November 29, 2025 at Allianz Arena Muenchen, Germany. Season 2026/2026, 1.Bundesliga, FCB, matchday 12,
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
- DFL REGULATIONS PROHIBIT ANY USE OF PHOTOGRAPHS as IMAGE SEQUENCES and/or QUASI-VIDEO -
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DUKAS_191442028_NUR
Tunisian Graduates Rally Nationwide Over Unemployment
Demonstrators hold up a sign reading in Arabic, ''Where is the justice? My country has stolen my rights,'' as others hold a large Tunisian flag during a demonstration organized by unemployed holders of higher education degrees from the movement ''University Graduates Whose Unemployment Has Lasted Too Long'' in Tunis, Tunisia, on November 26, 2025. The rally is part of a nationwide protest calling for status regularization and integration into the public sector or public institutions, with participants demanding direct recruitment without an entrance exam. The 2026 draft finance law provides for the creation of around 23,000 new positions in the public sector. According to the latest estimates from the National Institute of Statistics (INS), Tunisia's unemployment rate stands at 15.3% in the second quarter of 2025. The unemployment among holders of higher education degrees reaches around 24% over the same period. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191442009_NUR
Tunisian Graduates Rally Nationwide Over Unemployment
Dozens of demonstrators raise Tunisian flags and placards during a demonstration organized by unemployed holders of higher education degrees from the movement ''University Graduates Whose Unemployment Has Lasted Too Long'' in Tunis, Tunisia, on November 26, 2025. The rally is part of a nationwide protest calling for status regularization and integration into the public sector or public institutions, with participants demanding direct recruitment without an entrance exam. The 2026 draft finance law provides for the creation of around 23,000 new positions in the public sector. According to the latest estimates from the National Institute of Statistics (INS), Tunisia's unemployment rate stands at 15.3% in the second quarter of 2025. The unemployment among holders of higher education degrees reaches around 24% over the same period. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191442003_NUR
Tunisian Graduates Rally Nationwide Over Unemployment
Demonstrators hold up a sign reading in Arabic, ''Our unemployment is a consequence of your policy,'' during a demonstration organized by unemployed holders of higher education degrees from the movement ''University Graduates Whose Unemployment Has Lasted Too Long'' in Tunis, Tunisia, on November 26, 2025. The rally is part of a nationwide protest calling for status regularization and integration into the public sector or public institutions, with participants demanding direct recruitment without an entrance exam. The 2026 draft finance law provides for the creation of around 23,000 new positions in the public sector. According to the latest estimates from the National Institute of Statistics (INS), Tunisia's unemployment rate stands at 15.3% in the second quarter of 2025. The unemployment among holders of higher education degrees reaches around 24% over the same period. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191350369_DDP
Football 1.Bundesliga FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - SC FREIBURG 6-2
Yuito Suzuki of Freiburg
in the match
FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - SC FREIBURG 6-2 on November 22, 2025 at Allianz Arena Muenchen, Germany. Season 2026/2026, 1.Bundesliga, FCB, matchday 11,
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
- DFL REGULATIONS PROHIBIT ANY USE OF PHOTOGRAPHS as IMAGE SEQUENCES and/or QUASI-VIDEO -
ddp -
DUKAS_191350226_DDP
Football 1.Bundesliga FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - SC FREIBURG 6-2
Lennart Karl of FC Bayern Muenchen
in the match
FC BAYERN MueNCHEN - SC FREIBURG 6-2 on November 22, 2025 at Allianz Arena Muenchen, Germany. Season 2026/2026, 1.Bundesliga, FCB, matchday 11,
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
- DFL REGULATIONS PROHIBIT ANY USE OF PHOTOGRAPHS as IMAGE SEQUENCES and/or QUASI-VIDEO -
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DUKAS_191277371_NUR
Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
A Tunisian woman journalist holds a placard reading in Arabic ''my press card is my identity'' while another wears a red armband during a demonstration organized by the National Union of Tunisian Journalists (SNJT) that brings together dozens of journalists outside the Prime Minister's Office at Government Square in the Casbah, Tunis, Tunisia, on November 20, 2025, to demand press freedoms and improved working conditions. The rally denounces what journalists describe as systematic restrictions on media and press independence, including the refusal to issue or renew press cards and accreditations for both local and foreign journalists. Tunisian journalists also decry the repressive use of Decree-Law 54, which they say targets critical reporting rather than combating misinformation. International press freedom organizations, including the IFJ, view these measures as part of a broader crackdown on independent journalism. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191277339_NUR
Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
A Tunisian woman journalist raises a placard reading in Arabic ''No restrictions on journalists'' during a demonstration organized by the National Union of Tunisian Journalists (SNJT) that brings together dozens of journalists outside the Prime Minister's Office at Government Square in the Casbah, Tunis, Tunisia, on November 20, 2025, to demand press freedoms and improved working conditions. The rally denounces what journalists describe as systematic restrictions on media and press independence, including the refusal to issue or renew press cards and accreditations for both local and foreign journalists. Tunisian journalists also decry the repressive use of Decree-Law 54, which they say targets critical reporting rather than combating misinformation. International press freedom organizations, including the IFJ, view these measures as part of a broader crackdown on independent journalism. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191277325_NUR
Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
A Tunisian woman journalist shows her press card during a demonstration organized by the National Union of Tunisian Journalists (SNJT) that brings together dozens of journalists outside the Prime Minister's Office at Government Square in the Casbah, Tunis, Tunisia, on November 20, 2025, to demand press freedoms and improved working conditions. The rally denounces what journalists describe as systematic restrictions on media and press independence, including the refusal to issue or renew press cards and accreditations for both local and foreign journalists. Tunisian journalists also decry the repressive use of Decree-Law 54, which they say targets critical reporting rather than combating misinformation. International press freedom organizations, including the IFJ, view these measures as part of a broader crackdown on independent journalism. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191277266_NUR
Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
A Tunisian journalist wears a red armband and shouts slogans through a megaphone during a demonstration organized by the National Union of Tunisian Journalists (SNJT) that brings together dozens of journalists outside the Prime Minister's Office at Government Square in the Casbah, Tunis, Tunisia, on November 20, 2025, to demand press freedoms and improved working conditions. The rally denounces what journalists describe as systematic restrictions on media and press independence, including the refusal to issue or renew press cards and accreditations for both local and foreign journalists. Tunisian journalists also decry the repressive use of Decree-Law 54, which they say targets critical reporting rather than combating misinformation. International press freedom organizations, including the IFJ, view these measures as part of a broader crackdown on independent journalism. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191236523_NUR
Young Doctors On Nationwide Strike For Implementation Of Deal With Tunisian Government In Tunis
Young doctors take part in a rally organized by the Tunisian Organisation of Young Doctors (OTJM) as part of a nationwide strike near Tunisia's Parliament building in Tunis, Tunisia, on November 19, 2025. Young doctors demand the implementation of the agreement signed with the Health Ministry last July. The rally coincides with a parliamentary session debating the Ministry of Health's budget as part of the 2026 Finance Law. In July, the Tunisian Organisation of Young Doctors reaches an agreement with the Ministry of Health to secure better working conditions for young doctors, especially residents, ensure payment of long-overdue on-call allowances and salaries, an increase in allowances, as well as improvement of public healthcare. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191236519_NUR
Young Doctors On Nationwide Strike For Implementation Of Deal With Tunisian Government In Tunis
A young female doctor raises a sign bearing a caricature with text in Arabic, ''Work and shut up,'' during a rally organized by the Tunisian Organisation of Young Doctors (OTJM) as part of a nationwide strike. This event brings together hundreds of young doctors near Tunisia's Parliament building in Tunis, Tunisia, on November 19, 2025. Young doctors demand the implementation of the agreement signed with the Health Ministry last July. The rally coincides with a parliamentary session debating the Ministry of Health's budget as part of the 2026 Finance Law. In July, the Tunisian Organisation of Young Doctors reaches an agreement with the Ministry of Health to secure better working conditions for young doctors, especially residents, ensure payment of long-overdue on-call allowances and salaries, an increase in allowances, as well as improvement of public healthcare. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191236518_NUR
Young Doctors On Nationwide Strike For Implementation Of Deal With Tunisian Government In Tunis
A young doctor holds a sign reading in French ''a wage of misery'' during a rally organized by the Tunisian Organisation of Young Doctors (OTJM) as part of a nationwide strike that brings together hundreds of young doctors near Tunisia's Parliament building in Tunis, Tunisia, on November 19, 2025. Young doctors demand the implementation of the agreement signed with the Health Ministry last July. The rally coincides with a parliamentary session debating the Ministry of Health's budget as part of the 2026 Finance Law. In July, the Tunisian Organisation of Young Doctors reaches an agreement with the Ministry of Health to secure better working conditions for young doctors, especially residents, ensure payment of long-overdue on-call allowances and salaries, an increase in allowances, as well as improvement of public healthcare. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191236515_NUR
Young Doctors On Nationwide Strike For Implementation Of Deal With Tunisian Government In Tunis
A young doctor holds a sign reading in French, ''the Ministry of Health urgently needs a brain scan,'' during a rally organized by the Tunisian Organisation of Young Doctors (OTJM) as part of a nationwide strike. This event brings together hundreds of young doctors near Tunisia's Parliament building in Tunis, Tunisia, on November 19, 2025. Young doctors demand the implementation of the agreement signed with the Health Ministry last July. The rally coincides with a parliamentary session debating the Ministry of Health's budget as part of the 2026 Finance Law. In July, the Tunisian Organisation of Young Doctors reaches an agreement with the Ministry of Health to secure better working conditions for young doctors, especially residents, ensure payment of long-overdue on-call allowances and salaries, an increase in allowances, as well as improvement of public healthcare. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191236497_NUR
Young Doctors On Nationwide Strike For Implementation Of Deal With Tunisian Government In Tunis
Young doctors raise a sign reading in French, ''We wanted to save lives, not bury our own,'' during a rally organized by the Tunisian Organisation of Young Doctors (OTJM) as part of a nationwide strike. This event brings together hundreds of young doctors near Tunisia's Parliament building in Tunis, Tunisia, on November 19, 2025. Young doctors demand the implementation of the agreement signed with the Health Ministry last July. The rally coincides with a parliamentary session debating the Ministry of Health's budget as part of the 2026 Finance Law. In July, the Tunisian Organisation of Young Doctors reaches an agreement with the Ministry of Health to secure better working conditions for young doctors, especially residents, ensure payment of long-overdue on-call allowances and salaries, an increase in allowances, as well as improvement of public healthcare. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191236474_NUR
Young Doctors On Nationwide Strike For Implementation Of Deal With Tunisian Government In Tunis
A young doctor raises a sign reading in Arabic: ''we work day and night and we are paid one dinar per hour'' during a rally organized by the Tunisian Organisation of Young Doctors (OTJM) as part of a nationwide strike that brings together hundreds of young doctors near Tunisia's Parliament building in Tunis, Tunisia, on November 19, 2025. Young doctors demand the implementation of the agreement signed with the Health Ministry last July. The rally coincides with a parliamentary session debating the Ministry of Health's budget as part of the 2026 Finance Law. In July, the Tunisian Organisation of Young Doctors reaches an agreement with the Ministry of Health to secure better working conditions for young doctors, especially residents, ensure payment of long-overdue on-call allowances and salaries, an increase in allowances, as well as improvement of public healthcare. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191234551_DDP
FIFA World Cup 2026 Qualifier Football GERMANY - SLOVAKIA 6-0
Joshua Kimmich of Germany
in the FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifier match
GERMANY - SLOVAKIA 6-0
in Season 2025/2026 at November 17, 2025 in Leipzig, Germany.
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
ddp -
DUKAS_191234518_DDP
FIFA World Cup 2026 Qualifier Football GERMANY - SLOVAKIA 6-0
Joshua Kimmich of Germany
in the FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifier match
GERMANY - SLOVAKIA 6-0
in Season 2025/2026 at November 17, 2025 in Leipzig, Germany.
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
ddp -
DUKAS_191233684_DDP
FIFA World Cup 2026 Qualifier Football GERMANY - SLOVAKIA 6-0
Leroy Sane of Germany Nick Woltemade of Germany Malick Thiaw of Germany
in the FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifier match
GERMANY - SLOVAKIA 6-0
in Season 2025/2026 at November 17, 2025 in Leipzig, Germany.
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
ddp -
DUKAS_191233594_DDP
FIFA World Cup 2026 Qualifier Football GERMANY - SLOVAKIA 6-0
Joshua Kimmich of Germany Nick Woltemade of Germany Felix Nmecha of Germany
in the FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifier match
GERMANY - SLOVAKIA 6-0
in Season 2025/2026 at November 17, 2025 in Leipzig, Germany.
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
ddp -
DUKAS_191233591_DDP
FIFA World Cup 2026 Qualifier Football GERMANY - SLOVAKIA 6-0
DFB headcoach Julian Nagelsmann , Bundestrainer, Nationaltrainer,
after the FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifier match
GERMANY - SLOVAKIA 6-0
in Season 2025/2026 at November 17, 2025 in Leipzig, Germany.
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
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DUKAS_191130881_DDP
FIFA World Cup 2026 Qualifier Football LUXEMBOURG - GERMANY 0-2
Aleksandar Pavlovic of Germany
after the FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifier match
LUXEMBOURG - GERMANY 0-2
in Season 2025/2026 at November 14, 2025 in Luxemburg.
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
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DUKAS_191130720_DDP
FIFA World Cup 2026 Qualifier Football LUXEMBOURG - GERMANY 0-2
DFB headcoach Julian Nagelsmann , Bundestrainer, Nationaltrainer, angry
in the FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifier match
LUXEMBOURG - GERMANY 0-2
in Season 2025/2026 at November 14, 2025 in Luxemburg.
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
ddp -
DUKAS_191129677_DDP
FIFA World Cup 2026 Qualifier Football LUXEMBOURG - GERMANY 0-2
Leon Goretzka of Germany Florian Wirtz of Germany
in the FIFA World Cup 2026 qualifier match
LUXEMBOURG - GERMANY 0-2
in Season 2025/2026 at November 14, 2025 in Luxemburg.
Photographer: ddp images / star-images
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DUKAS_190872302_NUR
Press Conference Warns Of Deteriorating Health Of Hunger-Striking Prisoner Jaouhar Ben Mbarek In Tunis
Jaouhar Ben Mbarek's father, Ezzedine Hazgui, attends a press conference organized by the Coordination of the Families of Political Prisoners in Tunis, Tunisia, on November 7, 2025, to warn about the deteriorating health of Jaouhar Ben Mbarek, a law professor, prominent opposition figure, and leader of the National Salvation Front, an opposition coalition. Jaouhar Ben Mbarek receives an initial sentence of 18 years in prison in what becomes widely known as the ''Conspiracy Against State Security'' case. On a hunger strike for a week from his prison cell, Jaouhar Ben Mbarek is in critical condition, according to his family members and lawyers. According to his lawyers, the hunger strike stems from what he perceives as the politicization of the judiciary and the ill-treatment he suffers in prison. He also protests the holding of his trial remotely, via videoconference. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_190872279_NUR
Press Conference Warns Of Deteriorating Health Of Hunger-Striking Prisoner Jaouhar Ben Mbarek In Tunis
Families and relatives of prominent political figures imprisoned in the case widely known as the ''Conspiracy Against State Security'' attend a press conference organized by the Coordination of the Families of Political Prisoners in Tunis, Tunisia, on November 7, 2025, to warn about the deteriorating health of Jaouhar Ben Mbarek, a law professor, prominent opposition figure, and leader of the National Salvation Front, an opposition coalition. Jaouhar Ben Mbarek receives an initial sentence of 18 years in prison in the ''Conspiracy Against State Security'' case. On a wild hunger strike for a week from his prison cell, Jaouhar Ben Mbarek is in critical condition, according to his family members and lawyers. According to his lawyers, the hunger strike stems from what he perceives as the politicization of the judiciary and the ill-treatment he suffers in prison. He also protests the holding of his trial remotely, via videoconference. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_190872260_NUR
Press Conference Warns Of Deteriorating Health Of Hunger-Striking Prisoner Jaouhar Ben Mbarek In Tunis
Families and relatives of prominent political figures imprisoned in the case widely known as the ''Conspiracy Against State Security'' attend a press conference organized by the Coordination of the Families of Political Prisoners in Tunis, Tunisia, on November 7, 2025, to warn about the deteriorating health of Jaouhar Ben Mbarek, a law professor, prominent opposition figure, and leader of the National Salvation Front, an opposition coalition. Jaouhar Ben Mbarek receives an initial sentence of 18 years in prison in the ''Conspiracy Against State Security'' case. On a wild hunger strike for a week from his prison cell, Jaouhar Ben Mbarek is in critical condition, according to his family members and lawyers. According to his lawyers, the hunger strike stems from what he perceives as the politicization of the judiciary and the ill-treatment he suffers in prison. He also protests the holding of his trial remotely, via videoconference. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_183124754_POL
Timeless world of Ethiopia's Omo valley tribes
March 4, 2020 - Omo River's Valley, Ethiopia: ? church made of reeds is so wind-swept that it has completely tilted while the wooden cross has turned down, as if to show the power of the still animistic faith that they have here, on the banks of the Omo River, and specifically in the Dessenech tribe. Although Christianity have reached some areas of southern Ethiopia and have exerted some influence, many of the tribes of the Omo River continue to uphold their animistic beliefs. They trust the clouds, the sun, the water, the earth and the seeds, and old men and women still have ancient wisdom to support themselves in agriculture and in daily life. (Maro Kouri / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_183124746_POL
Timeless world of Ethiopia's Omo valley tribes
February 28, 2023 - Omo River's Valley, Ethiopia: Younger mother with her newborn baby and a lollipop! A Delicate Balance... The sun rises in the Mago National Park, where I met the Mursi, known for their elaborate ear and/or lip plates. As there is no electricity here, everyone has already begun their daily tasks. Many women continue the tradition of placing a clay plate in their ears and /or their lower lip. The larger the plate, the more attractive they are considered. Nearby, there are activists from Scandinavian countries trying to explain to them that this is a violent and abusive practice toward themselves and their bodies. Although, still the women’s traditional body modification remains a symbol of beauty and status. In the elections, the Mursi do not even vote because they are a nomadic population. Outside the huts, which are made of straw and mud, women pound seeds and cook. Around the large tree, young mothers rock their babies to sleep, holding them close, their hearts beating in sync. How do they live only on breast milk, seeds, the fruits of nature, the sun and the moon, the art of family and relationships? I want to know! (Maro Kouri / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_181860368_POL
Violent protests in Athens on rail crash anniversary
Feb. 28, 2025 – Athens, Greece: A man from the police special forces (MAT) attends to an injured protester who has sustained a serious head injury. Protesters threw petrol bombs and set fire to trash cans as hundreds of thousands of Greeks went on strike and took to the streets in nationwide demonstrations, marking the second anniversary of the country's deadliest train crash. Fifty-seven people were killed when a passenger train carrying students collided with a freight train on February 28, 2023, in central Greece. The tragedy has come to symbolize the long-standing neglect of the country’s infrastructure, both in the decades leading up to the crash and in the two years that have followed. In one of the largest protests in Greece in years, public services and many private businesses came to a standstill as people flooded the streets of cities and towns, chanting "murderers" in protest against what they believe is the state's role in the disaster. The government, however, denies any wrongdoing. A sea of people gathered in Athens' Syntagma Square, in front of parliament, where protesters spray-painted the names of the deceased in red on the ground. The slogan "I have no oxygen" – the last words of a woman in a call to emergency services – echoed in chants across the country. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis' center-right government, which won re-election after the crash in 2023, has faced ongoing criticism from the victims' families for failing to launch a parliamentary inquiry into political responsibility. (Maro Kouri/Polaris Images) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_181858950_POL
Violent protests in Athens on rail crash anniversary
Feb. 28, 2025 – Sydagma, parliament square, Athens, Greece: Maria Karystianou, a mother who tragically lost her 20-year-old daughter in the Tempi railway disaster, which claimed the lives of 57 people, has become a tragic heroine, uniting the people of Greece under a simple cause: justice. Hundreds of thousands of Greeks went on strike and took to the streets in nationwide demonstrations, marking the second anniversary of the country's deadliest train crash. Fifty-seven people were killed when a passenger train carrying students collided with a freight train on February 28, 2023, in central Greece. The tragedy has come to symbolize the long-standing neglect of the country’s infrastructure, both in the decades leading up to the crash and in the two years that have followed. In one of the largest protests in Greece in years, public services and many private businesses came to a standstill as people flooded the streets of cities and towns, chanting "murderers" in protest against what they believe is the state's role in the disaster. Karystianou addressed 'the murderers of our children,' saying: 'You insulted and treated the dead with contempt. You committed the greatest sacrilege and you will receive what is due from the pulse of Nemesis. It is the souls of our children who guide us. The river of truth has no turning back. Justice will come. With it, it will bring infinite oxygen. Love conquers all. The government, however, denies any wrongdoing. A sea of people gathered in Athens' Syntagma Square, in front of parliament, where protesters spray-painted the names of the deceased in red on the ground. The slogan "I have no oxygen" – the last words of a woman in a call to emergency services – echoed in chants across the country. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis' center-right government, which won re-election after the crash in 2023, has faced ongoing criticism from the victims' families for failing to launch a parliamentary inquiry into political responsibility
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_181858945_POL
Violent protests in Athens on rail crash anniversary
Feb. 28, 2025 – Sygrou avenue, Athens, Greece: protesters threw petrol bombs and set fire to trash cans as hundreds of thousands of Greeks went on strike and took to the streets in nationwide demonstrations, marking the second anniversary of the country's deadliest train crash. Fifty-seven people were killed when a passenger train carrying students collided with a freight train on February 28, 2023, in central Greece. The tragedy has come to symbolize the long-standing neglect of the country’s infrastructure, both in the decades leading up to the crash and in the two years that have followed. In one of the largest protests in Greece in years, public services and many private businesses came to a standstill as people flooded the streets of cities and towns, chanting "murderers" in protest against what they believe is the state's role in the disaster. The government, however, denies any wrongdoing. A sea of people gathered in Athens' Syntagma Square, in front of parliament, where protesters spray-painted the names of the deceased in red on the ground. The slogan "I have no oxygen" – the last words of a woman in a call to emergency services – echoed in chants across the country. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis' center-right government, which won re-election after the crash in 2023, has faced ongoing criticism from the victims' families for failing to launch a parliamentary inquiry into political responsibility. (Maro Kouri/Polaris Images) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_181858940_POL
Violent protests in Athens on rail crash anniversary
Feb. 28, 2025 – Athens, Greece: protesters threw petrol bombs and set fire to trash cans as hundreds of thousands of Greeks went on strike and took to the streets in nationwide demonstrations, marking the second anniversary of the country's deadliest train crash. Fifty-seven people were killed when a passenger train carrying students collided with a freight train on February 28, 2023, in central Greece. The tragedy has come to symbolize the long-standing neglect of the country’s infrastructure, both in the decades leading up to the crash and in the two years that have followed. In one of the largest protests in Greece in years, public services and many private businesses came to a standstill as people flooded the streets of cities and towns, chanting "murderers" in protest against what they believe is the state's role in the disaster. The government, however, denies any wrongdoing. A sea of people gathered in Athens' Syntagma Square, in front of parliament, where protesters spray-painted the names of the deceased in red on the ground. The slogan "I have no oxygen" – the last words of a woman in a call to emergency services – echoed in chants across the country. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis' center-right government, which won re-election after the crash in 2023, has faced ongoing criticism from the victims' families for failing to launch a parliamentary inquiry into political responsibility. (Maro Kouri/Polaris Images) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_181858935_POL
Violent protests in Athens on rail crash anniversary
Feb. 28, 2025 – Athens, Greece: protesters threw petrol bombs and set fire to trash cans as hundreds of thousands of Greeks went on strike and took to the streets in nationwide demonstrations, marking the second anniversary of the country's deadliest train crash. Fifty-seven people were killed when a passenger train carrying students collided with a freight train on February 28, 2023, in central Greece. The tragedy has come to symbolize the long-standing neglect of the country’s infrastructure, both in the decades leading up to the crash and in the two years that have followed. In one of the largest protests in Greece in years, public services and many private businesses came to a standstill as people flooded the streets of cities and towns, chanting "murderers" in protest against what they believe is the state's role in the disaster. The government, however, denies any wrongdoing. A sea of people gathered in Athens' Syntagma Square, in front of parliament, where protesters spray-painted the names of the deceased in red on the ground. The slogan "I have no oxygen" – the last words of a woman in a call to emergency services – echoed in chants across the country. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis' center-right government, which won re-election after the crash in 2023, has faced ongoing criticism from the victims' families for failing to launch a parliamentary inquiry into political responsibility. (Maro Kouri/Polaris Images) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_181858930_POL
Violent protests in Athens on rail crash anniversary
Feb. 28, 2025 – Athens, Greece: protesters threw petrol bombs and set fire to trash cans as hundreds of thousands of Greeks went on strike and took to the streets in nationwide demonstrations, marking the second anniversary of the country's deadliest train crash. Fifty-seven people were killed when a passenger train carrying students collided with a freight train on February 28, 2023, in central Greece. The tragedy has come to symbolize the long-standing neglect of the country’s infrastructure, both in the decades leading up to the crash and in the two years that have followed. In one of the largest protests in Greece in years, public services and many private businesses came to a standstill as people flooded the streets of cities and towns, chanting "murderers" in protest against what they believe is the state's role in the disaster. The government, however, denies any wrongdoing. A sea of people gathered in Athens' Syntagma Square, in front of parliament, where protesters spray-painted the names of the deceased in red on the ground. The slogan "I have no oxygen" – the last words of a woman in a call to emergency services – echoed in chants across the country. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis' center-right government, which won re-election after the crash in 2023, has faced ongoing criticism from the victims' families for failing to launch a parliamentary inquiry into political responsibility. (Maro Kouri/Polaris Images) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_181858925_POL
Violent protests in Athens on rail crash anniversary
Feb. 28, 2025 – Sydagma, parliament square, Athens, Greece: protesters threw petrol bombs and set fire to trash cans as hundreds of thousands of Greeks went on strike and took to the streets in nationwide demonstrations, marking the second anniversary of the country's deadliest train crash. Fifty-seven people were killed when a passenger train carrying students collided with a freight train on February 28, 2023, in central Greece. The tragedy has come to symbolize the long-standing neglect of the country’s infrastructure, both in the decades leading up to the crash and in the two years that have followed. In one of the largest protests in Greece in years, public services and many private businesses came to a standstill as people flooded the streets of cities and towns, chanting "murderers" in protest against what they believe is the state's role in the disaster. The government, however, denies any wrongdoing. A sea of people gathered in Athens' Syntagma Square, in front of parliament, where protesters spray-painted the names of the deceased in red on the ground. The slogan "I have no oxygen" – the last words of a woman in a call to emergency services – echoed in chants across the country. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis' center-right government, which won re-election after the crash in 2023, has faced ongoing criticism from the victims' families for failing to launch a parliamentary inquiry into political responsibility. (Maro Kouri/Polaris Images) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI -
DUKAS_181858920_POL
Violent protests in Athens on rail crash anniversary
Feb. 28, 2025 – Sydagma, parliament square, Athens, Greece: protesters threw petrol bombs and set fire to trash cans as hundreds of thousands of Greeks went on strike and took to the streets in nationwide demonstrations, marking the second anniversary of the country's deadliest train crash. Fifty-seven people were killed when a passenger train carrying students collided with a freight train on February 28, 2023, in central Greece. The tragedy has come to symbolize the long-standing neglect of the country’s infrastructure, both in the decades leading up to the crash and in the two years that have followed. In one of the largest protests in Greece in years, public services and many private businesses came to a standstill as people flooded the streets of cities and towns, chanting "murderers" in protest against what they believe is the state's role in the disaster. The government, however, denies any wrongdoing. A sea of people gathered in Athens' Syntagma Square, in front of parliament, where protesters spray-painted the names of the deceased in red on the ground. The slogan "I have no oxygen" – the last words of a woman in a call to emergency services – echoed in chants across the country. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis' center-right government, which won re-election after the crash in 2023, has faced ongoing criticism from the victims' families for failing to launch a parliamentary inquiry into political responsibility. (Maro Kouri/Polaris Images) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
MARO KOURI
