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  • An internationally renowned marine breaking scrap yard just outside Bhavnagar, Gujarati. Lots of children work at the yard and the Shaishav Trust is trying to provide education and support for children in child labour.
    09-shaishav-9768.jpg
  • A group of men and teenage boys break up an armature to reclaim the copper. The armature is an electrical engine component from a ship.  They work in an internationally renowned marine breaking scrap yard just outside Bhavnagar, Gujarati. Lots of children work at the yard and the Shaishav Trust is trying to provide education and support for children in child labour.
    09-shaishav-9811.jpg
  • The Brent Bravo Delta oil platform topsides in Able Seaton Port, Hartlepool, North East England, UK.   This was the heaviest single cargo ever to be lifted in the history of the oil and gas industry was brought to Seaton to be scrapped. The aim is to recycle 98% of the structure.  (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Brent-Delta-Oil-Rig-1616.jpg
  • The Brent Bravo Delta oil platform topsides in Able Seaton Port, Hartlepool, North East England, UK.   This was the heaviest single cargo ever to be lifted in the history of the oil and gas industry was brought to Seaton to be scrapped. The aim is to recycle 98% of the structure.  (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Brent-Delta-Oil-Rig-1613.jpg
  • A woman washes her clothes on her balcony in Dandora, meters away from mountains of rubbish. Dandora slum only a couple of kilometres from the centre of Nairobi, Dandora holds the biggest rubbish dump in Sub-Saharan Africa with 1,500 tons of rubbish dumped daily. Amongst the rubbish, thousands of slum dwellers search for scraps of food and re-useable rubbish.
    08-HopeWW_9366.jpg
  • A woman washes her clothes on her balcony in Dandora, meters away from mountains of rubbish. Dandora slum only a couple of kilometres from the centre of Nairobi, Dandora holds the biggest rubbish dump in Sub-Saharan Africa with 1,500 tons of rubbish dumped daily. Amongst the rubbish, thousands of slum dwellers search for scraps of food and re-useable rubbish.
    08-slum_9366.jpg
  • CD recycling workshop. Each prisoner makes 97 pence per 600 CD's recycled. HMP & YOI Littlehey. Littlehey is a purpose build category C prison.
    10-Littlehey-9340.jpg
  • Sorting rubbish in the recylcing centre at HMP & YOI Littlehey. Littlehey is a purpose build category C prison.
    10-LittleHey9229.jpg
  • Recylcing CD paper inserts in the recylcing centre at HMP & YOI Littlehey. Littlehey is a purpose build category C prison.
    10-LittleHey9239.jpg
  • Sorting rubbish in the recylcing centre at HMP & YOI Littlehey. Littlehey is a purpose build category C prison.
    10-LittleHey9220.jpg
  • Recylcing CD paper inserts in the recylcing centre at HMP & YOI Littlehey. Littlehey is a purpose build category C prison.
    10-LittleHey9240.jpg
  • Recylcing plastic CD cases in the recylcing centre at HMP & YOI Littlehey. Littlehey is a purpose build category C prison.
    10-Littlehey-9360.jpg
  • A book of local tourist attractions, including sex workers, is on display in a hotel lobby, Bangkok, Thailand
    AA-03-4927.jpg
  • Sorting rubbish in the recylcing centre at HMP & YOI Littlehey. Littlehey is a purpose build category C prison.
    10-LittleHey9213.jpg
  • CD recycling workshop. Each prisoner makes 97 pence per 600 CD's recycled. HMP & YOI Littlehey. Littlehey is a purpose build category C prison.
    10-Littlehey-9315.jpg
  • A book of local tourist attractions, including sex workers, is on display in a hotel lobby, Bangkok, Thailand
    AA-03-4926.jpg
  • Two boys pay money they have earned collecting scrap into the children's' bank at the Joyoti Street Project. The Joyoti Street Project is open 24 hours a day offering a place of shelter and education to more than 350 boys.  The project is run by the Child Welfare Scheme Nepal (CWSN).
    09-cwsn-5961.jpg
  • Celebrities and survivors of war came together on a boat on the river Thames today calling on MPs to ‘vote to protect not punish refugees’ as the controversial Nationality and Borders Bill returns for votes in the House of Commons on the 20th of April 2022, Westminster, London United Kingdom. Together With Refugees is a coalition of more than 400 organisations from across the country spearheading the event to call on MPs to vote to accept amendments to the Bill, including scrapping the proposal to punish refugees seeking protection, who have been forced to make desperate journeys to get to the UK, such as on a boat across the Channel or in the back of a lorry. If the Bill was already law, Ukrainian refugees forced to make their own way to the UK due to the delays and visa restrictions in the UK’s current scheme could be denied their fundamental rights under the UN refugee convention, returned to where they had travelled from, or even imprisoned. (Picture by Andy Aitchison / Together With Refugees)
    UK-Parliament-Demo-9195.jpg
  • Celebrities and survivors of war came together on a boat on the river Thames today calling on MPs to ‘vote to protect not punish refugees’ as the controversial Nationality and Borders Bill returns for votes in the House of Commons on the 20th of April 2022, Westminster, London United Kingdom. Together With Refugees is a coalition of more than 400 organisations from across the country spearheading the event to call on MPs to vote to accept amendments to the Bill, including scrapping the proposal to punish refugees seeking protection, who have been forced to make desperate journeys to get to the UK, such as on a boat across the Channel or in the back of a lorry. If the Bill was already law, Ukrainian refugees forced to make their own way to the UK due to the delays and visa restrictions in the UK’s current scheme could be denied their fundamental rights under the UN refugee convention, returned to where they had travelled from, or even imprisoned. (Picture by Andy Aitchison / Together With Refugees)
    UK-Parliament-Demo-9139.jpg
  • Celebrities and survivors of war came together on a boat on the river Thames today calling on MPs to ‘vote to protect not punish refugees’ as the controversial Nationality and Borders Bill returns for votes in the House of Commons on the 20th of April 2022, Westminster, London United Kingdom. Together With Refugees is a coalition of more than 400 organisations from across the country spearheading the event to call on MPs to vote to accept amendments to the Bill, including scrapping the proposal to punish refugees seeking protection, who have been forced to make desperate journeys to get to the UK, such as on a boat across the Channel or in the back of a lorry. If the Bill was already law, Ukrainian refugees forced to make their own way to the UK due to the delays and visa restrictions in the UK’s current scheme could be denied their fundamental rights under the UN refugee convention, returned to where they had travelled from, or even imprisoned. (Picture by Andy Aitchison / Together With Refugees)
    UK-Parliament-Demo-9179.jpg
  • Celebrities and survivors of war came together on a boat on the river Thames today calling on MPs to ‘vote to protect not punish refugees’ as the controversial Nationality and Borders Bill returns for votes in the House of Commons on the 20th of April 2022, Westminster, London United Kingdom. Together With Refugees is a coalition of more than 400 organisations from across the country spearheading the event to call on MPs to vote to accept amendments to the Bill, including scrapping the proposal to punish refugees seeking protection, who have been forced to make desperate journeys to get to the UK, such as on a boat across the Channel or in the back of a lorry. If the Bill was already law, Ukrainian refugees forced to make their own way to the UK due to the delays and visa restrictions in the UK’s current scheme could be denied their fundamental rights under the UN refugee convention, returned to where they had travelled from, or even imprisoned. (Picture by Andy Aitchison / Together With Refugees)
    UK-Parliament-Demo-9120.jpg
  • Celebrities and survivors of war came together on a boat on the river Thames today calling on MPs to ‘vote to protect not punish refugees’ as the controversial Nationality and Borders Bill returns for votes in the House of Commons on the 20th of April 2022, Westminster, London United Kingdom. Together With Refugees is a coalition of more than 400 organisations from across the country spearheading the event to call on MPs to vote to accept amendments to the Bill, including scrapping the proposal to punish refugees seeking protection, who have been forced to make desperate journeys to get to the UK, such as on a boat across the Channel or in the back of a lorry. If the Bill was already law, Ukrainian refugees forced to make their own way to the UK due to the delays and visa restrictions in the UK’s current scheme could be denied their fundamental rights under the UN refugee convention, returned to where they had travelled from, or even imprisoned. (Picture by Andy Aitchison / Together With Refugees)
    UK-Parliament-Demo-9081.jpg
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