Asset erfolgreich hinzugefügt

People

Celebrities and Royals from around the world. Right on schedule.

News

Daily news and events, covered by our international photographers.

Features

Odd, funny and touchy images. Be amazed.

Styling

Fashion and design trends.

Portrait

Premium Portraiture.

Reportage

In-depth Coverage.

Creative

Selected stock imagery.

Dukas Bildagentur
request@dukas.ch
+41 44 298 50 00

Your search:

347 result(s) in 0.02 s

  • Tunisian Opposition Leads Mass Protest Against Injustice In Tunis
    DUKAS_191349268_NUR
    Tunisian Opposition Leads Mass Protest Against Injustice In Tunis
    Protesters mock the president's achievements by holding a sign reading in Arabic ''7 years = a swimming pool, 7 minutes = Judgment'' while shouting slogans during a mass rally organized under the slogan ''March Against Injustice'' in Tunis, Tunisia, on November 22, 2025. Organized by the support committee for imprisoned former judge and lawyer Ahmed Souab, the protest denounces President Kais Saied's policies. The demonstration brings together opposition political parties from across the spectrum along with Gen Z activists, human rights groups, and civil society members dressed in black. They denounce what participants describe as President Saied's authoritarian and repressive rule. The Tunisian opposition, joined by local and international human rights groups, demands the release of political prisoners and condemns what they view as an assault on democracy, citing the erosion of institutions through an escalating crackdown on dissent, judicial independence, press freedom, and human rights. They warn that Saied's rule drives a broader democratic backslide. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tunisian Opposition Leads Mass Protest Against Injustice In Tunis
    DUKAS_191349359_NUR
    Tunisian Opposition Leads Mass Protest Against Injustice In Tunis
    Protesters raise a yellow sign reading in Italian ''Alerta Antifascista'' while waving the Tunisian flag during a mass rally organized under the slogan ''March Against Injustice'' in Tunis, Tunisia, on November 22, 2025. Organized by the support committee for imprisoned former judge and lawyer Ahmed Souab, the protest denounces President Kais Saied's policies. The demonstration brings together opposition political parties from across the spectrum along with Gen Z activists, human rights groups, and civil society members dressed in black. It denounces what participants describe as President Saied's authoritarian and repressive rule. The Tunisian opposition, joined by local and international human rights groups, demands the release of political prisoners and condemns what they view as an assault on democracy, citing the erosion of institutions through an escalating crackdown on dissent, judicial independence, press freedom, and human rights. They warn that Saied's rule drives a broader democratic backslide. (Photo by Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto)

     

  • Rally For Female Empowerment At The Legacy Of Women Festival (L'Eredità Delle Donne) In Florence,
    DUKAS_191345316_NUR
    Rally For Female Empowerment At The Legacy Of Women Festival (L'Eredità Delle Donne) In Florence,
    A crowd of people, many wearing red attire, gathers during the L'Eredita delle Donne (The Legacy of Women) festival, a major event dedicated to female empowerment and skills, in Florence, Tuscany, Italy, on November 22, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Rally For Female Empowerment At The Legacy Of Women Festival (L'Eredità Delle Donne) In Florence,
    DUKAS_191345315_NUR
    Rally For Female Empowerment At The Legacy Of Women Festival (L'Eredità Delle Donne) In Florence,
    A crowd of people, many wearing red attire, gathers during the L'Eredita delle Donne (The Legacy of Women) festival, a major event dedicated to female empowerment and skills, in Florence, Tuscany, Italy, on November 22, 2025. Participants hold a banner that reads ''Donna Vita Liberta'' (Woman Life Freedom). Speakers address the attendees while others hold up signs protesting violence and injustice, demonstrating active participation in the festival's focus on women's rights and visibility. The event takes place in an outdoor urban setting with historic stone architecture visible in the background. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Rally For Female Empowerment At The Legacy Of Women Festival (L'Eredità Delle Donne) In Florence,
    DUKAS_191345313_NUR
    Rally For Female Empowerment At The Legacy Of Women Festival (L'Eredità Delle Donne) In Florence,
    A crowd of people, many wearing red attire, gathers during the L'Eredita delle Donne (The Legacy of Women) festival, a major event dedicated to female empowerment and skills, in Florence, Tuscany, Italy, on November 22, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Rally For Female Empowerment At The Legacy Of Women Festival (L'Eredità Delle Donne) In Florence,
    DUKAS_191345311_NUR
    Rally For Female Empowerment At The Legacy Of Women Festival (L'Eredità Delle Donne) In Florence,
    A woman holds a large yellow and red protest sign in Italian while participating in the L'Eredita delle Donne (The Legacy of Women) festival in Florence, Tuscany, Italy, on November 22, 2025. The sign reads ''Bambina Americana Strappata Da Padre Violento e Tribunale'' (American Child Snatched By Violent Father and Court), highlighting a focus on issues of violence and family justice, while a banner behind her reads ''Donna Vita Liberta'' (Woman Life Freedom). She stands near steps and potted plants, surrounded by other attendees at the female empowerment event. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Rainy Crowd On A Rally At The Legacy Of Women Festival In Florence
    DUKAS_191345259_NUR
    Rainy Crowd On A Rally At The Legacy Of Women Festival In Florence
    A large crowd of people, many wearing red attire or bright coats, stands beneath umbrellas to shield themselves from the rain during a rally at the L'Eredita delle Donne (The Legacy of Women) festival in Florence, Tuscany, Italy, on November 22, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Rainy Crowd On A Rally At The Legacy Of Women Festival In Florence
    DUKAS_191345257_NUR
    Rainy Crowd On A Rally At The Legacy Of Women Festival In Florence
    A large crowd of people, many wearing red attire or bright coats, stands beneath umbrellas to shield themselves from the rain during a rally at the L'Eredita delle Donne (The Legacy of Women) festival in Florence, Tuscany, Italy, on November 22, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Speakers At A Rally During The L'Eredità Delle Donne (The Legacy Of Women) Festival In Florence
    DUKAS_191345149_NUR
    Speakers At A Rally During The L'Eredità Delle Donne (The Legacy Of Women) Festival In Florence
    Female speakers, many wearing red, address a crowd with a microphone during the L'Eredita delle Donne (The Legacy of Women) festival, an event dedicated to female empowerment and skills, in Florence, Tuscany, Italy, on November 22, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Speakers At A Rally During The L'Eredità Delle Donne (The Legacy Of Women) Festival In Florence
    DUKAS_191345145_NUR
    Speakers At A Rally During The L'Eredità Delle Donne (The Legacy Of Women) Festival In Florence
    Female speakers, many wearing red, address a crowd with a microphone during the L'Eredita delle Donne (The Legacy of Women) festival, an event dedicated to female empowerment and skills, in Florence, Tuscany, Italy, on November 22, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Speakers At A Rally During The L'Eredità Delle Donne (The Legacy Of Women) Festival In Florence
    DUKAS_191345141_NUR
    Speakers At A Rally During The L'Eredità Delle Donne (The Legacy Of Women) Festival In Florence
    Female speakers, many wearing red, address a crowd with a microphone during the L'Eredita delle Donne (The Legacy of Women) festival, an event dedicated to female empowerment and skills, in Florence, Tuscany, Italy, on November 22, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Protestors Holds Sign Supporting Women's Rights And Visibility
    DUKAS_191344060_NUR
    Protestors Holds Sign Supporting Women's Rights And Visibility
    Protestors at the L'Eredita delle Donne (The Legacy of Women) festival, dedicated to female empowerment and skills, in Florence, Tuscany, Italy, on November 22, 2025, hold a banner that reads ''A passo di donna'' (In a woman's step/pace). (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Protestors Holds Sign Supporting Women's Rights And Visibility
    DUKAS_191344056_NUR
    Protestors Holds Sign Supporting Women's Rights And Visibility
    Protestors at the L'Eredita delle Donne (The Legacy of Women) festival, dedicated to female empowerment and skills, in Florence, Tuscany, Italy, on November 22, 2025, hold a banner that reads ''Donna Vita Liberta'' (Woman Freedom). (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277373_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    A crowd of journalists attends a demonstration organized by the National Union of Tunisian Journalists (SNJT) 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277372_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    A Tunisian woman journalist holds a placard that reads in Arabic ''Stop, No to the dismantling of the press'' 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277340_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    A journalist wearing a red armband attends 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277332_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    A Tunisian woman journalist shouts slogans through a megaphone while another journalist raises a placard reading ''free and independent press'' 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277331_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    Tunisian journalists raise a sign reading in Arabic ''doors are closed to the press'' while others hold up a placard reading ''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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277324_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    Tunisian journalists raise press cards 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277323_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    A Tunisian journalist shows his press card while holding a sign reading in Arabic, ''censoring information constitutes a violation of citizens' rights,'' 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277314_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    Tunisian journalists raise a sign reading in Arabic ''No to the Decree 54 of repression'' 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277313_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    A Tunisian woman journalist shows her press card while holding a sign reading in Arabic, ''censoring information constitutes a violation of citizens' rights,'' 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277306_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    The president of the National Union of Tunisian Journalists (SNJT), Zied Dabbar, addresses the crowd 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277305_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    Tunisian journalists raise a sign reading in Arabic ''doors are closed to the press'' while others hold up a placard reading ''free and independent press'' 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277304_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    A Tunisian woman journalist holds a sign reading in Arabic ''press is not a crime'' 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277296_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    Tunisian journalists raise a sign reading in Arabic ''No to the Decree 54 of repression'' while others hold up a placard reading ''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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277295_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    The president of the National Union of Tunisian Journalists (SNJT), Zied Dabbar, makes the victory sign as he addresses the crowd 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277294_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    A journalist wearing a red armband attends 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277286_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    The president of the National Union of Tunisian Journalists (SNJT), Zied Dabbar, wears a red armband and addresses the crowd 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277285_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    Journalists shout slogans while raising placards 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    DUKAS_191277277_NUR
    Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    A Tunisian journalist wears a red armband and carries his camera around his neck as he attends 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)

     

  • Tunisian Journalists Rally In Tunis Over Press Card Restrictions And Media Crackdown
    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)

     

  • Press Conference Calling For Trump Impeachment At U.S. Capitol
    DUKAS_191273640_NUR
    Press Conference Calling For Trump Impeachment At U.S. Capitol
    Seen beyond a demonstrator holding a modified U.S. flag, U.S. Representative Al Green (D-TX) speaks at a press conference outside of the U.S. Capitol building in Washington, D.C. on November 20, 2025. The press conference, calling for the impeachment of U.S. President Donald Trump, was preceded by an anti-Trump protest and march to the U.S. Capitol hosted by the For Liberation and Resistance Everywhere (FLARE) organization. (Photo by Bryan Dozier/NurPhoto)

     

  • Young Doctors On Nationwide Strike For Implementation Of Deal With Tunisian Government In Tunis
    DUKAS_191236485_NUR
    Young Doctors On Nationwide Strike For Implementation Of Deal With Tunisian Government In Tunis
    A leading member of the Tunisian Organisation of Young Doctors (OTJM) speaks to the press through a megaphone during a rally organized by the 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)

     

  • Daily Life In Warsaw
    DUKAS_190708510_NUR
    Daily Life In Warsaw
    A poster showing the amount of days Belarusian-Polish journlaist Andrzej Poczobut has been incarcerated in Warsaw, Poland on 02 November, 2025. Poczobut has been sentenced to 8 years in a labour camp on charges of extremism by the regime of Alexander Lukashenko. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto)

     

  • NY: United Nations Report On Human Rights Violations In Ukariane And Russia
    DUKAS_190501677_NUR
    NY: United Nations Report On Human Rights Violations In Ukariane And Russia
    Mariana Katzarova, Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Russian Federation speaks to the press at the United Nations Headquarters on October 27, 2025 in New York City. Reports have emerged that journalists and government critics, including the LGBTQ community have been deemed to be extremists and terrorists by the Russian government.Torture, rape and extensive jail sentences are examples of human rights violations that the aforementioned groups have suffered at the hands of thier captors. Katzarova stressed that human rights defenders have to hold the Russian government accountable for its actions without fear of recrimination and that people, mostly Ukrainians, have to be released from prison immediatley. (Photo by John Lamparski/NurPhoto)

     

  • NY: United Nations Report On Human Rights Violations In Ukariane And Russia
    DUKAS_190501675_NUR
    NY: United Nations Report On Human Rights Violations In Ukariane And Russia
    Mariana Katzarova, Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Russian Federation speaks to the press at the United Nations Headquarters on October 27, 2025 in New York City. Reports have emerged that journalists and government critics, including the LGBTQ community have been deemed to be extremists and terrorists by the Russian government.Torture, rape and extensive jail sentences are examples of human rights violations that the aforementioned groups have suffered at the hands of thier captors. Katzarova stressed that human rights defenders have to hold the Russian government accountable for its actions without fear of recrimination and that people, mostly Ukrainians, have to be released from prison immediatley. (Photo by John Lamparski/NurPhoto)

     

  • 333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    DUKAS_190464604_NUR
    333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    Protesters march from Republic Square to the Parliament one year after the parliamentary elections, calling for the government's resignation and the release of political prisoners, in Tbilisi, Georgia, on October 26. (Photo by Sebastien Canaud/NurPhoto)

     

  • 333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    DUKAS_190464591_NUR
    333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    Protesters march from Republic Square to the Parliament one year after the parliamentary elections, calling for the government's resignation and the release of political prisoners, in Tbilisi, Georgia, on October 26. (Photo by Sebastien Canaud/NurPhoto)

     

  • 333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    DUKAS_190464587_NUR
    333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    Protesters march from Republic Square to the Parliament one year after the parliamentary elections, calling for the government's resignation and the release of political prisoners, in Tbilisi, Georgia, on October 26. (Photo by Sebastien Canaud/NurPhoto)

     

  • 333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    DUKAS_190464585_NUR
    333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    Protesters march from Republic Square to the Parliament one year after the parliamentary elections, calling for the government's resignation and the release of political prisoners, in Tbilisi, Georgia, on October 26. (Photo by Sebastien Canaud/NurPhoto)

     

  • 333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    DUKAS_190464583_NUR
    333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    Protesters march from Republic Square to the Parliament one year after the parliamentary elections, calling for the government's resignation and the release of political prisoners, in Tbilisi, Georgia, on October 26. (Photo by Sebastien Canaud/NurPhoto)

     

  • 333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    DUKAS_190464582_NUR
    333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    Protesters march from Republic Square to the Parliament one year after the parliamentary elections, calling for the government's resignation and the release of political prisoners, in Tbilisi, Georgia, on October 26. (Photo by Sebastien Canaud/NurPhoto)

     

  • 333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    DUKAS_190464581_NUR
    333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    Protesters march from Republic Square to the Parliament one year after the parliamentary elections, calling for the government's resignation and the release of political prisoners, in Tbilisi, Georgia, on October 26. (Photo by Sebastien Canaud/NurPhoto)

     

  • 333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    DUKAS_190464580_NUR
    333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    Protesters march from Republic Square to the Parliament one year after the parliamentary elections, calling for the government's resignation and the release of political prisoners, in Tbilisi, Georgia, on October 26. (Photo by Sebastien Canaud/NurPhoto)

     

  • 333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    DUKAS_190464579_NUR
    333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    Protesters march from Republic Square to the Parliament one year after the parliamentary elections, calling for the government's resignation and the release of political prisoners, in Tbilisi, Georgia, on October 26. (Photo by Sebastien Canaud/NurPhoto)

     

  • 333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    DUKAS_190464577_NUR
    333th Day Of Continuous Protest In Tbilisi
    Protesters march from Republic Square to the Parliament one year after the parliamentary elections, calling for the government's resignation and the release of political prisoners, in Tbilisi, Georgia, on October 26. (Photo by Sebastien Canaud/NurPhoto)

     

  • Next page