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  • SOS NHS  patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 
25th February 2026
    DUKAS_194302467_EYE
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 25th February 2026
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain
    25th February 2026

    SOS NHS is the largest coalition yet formed in defence of the NHS comprised of campaign groups, trade unions, health and care staff, social movements and civil society organisations. The coalition believe there is an urgent need to reopen almost 5,000 NHS beds that have not been used since the pandemic began. To stop the continued worsening of the crisis in the NHS, the coalition aims to persuade the Government to take immediate, concrete steps to relieve the crisis in hospitals by reinstating beds that have been lost and investing in the staff to operate them, as well as funding and addressing the crisis in social care.

    NHS staff and health campaigners along with affected patients and their relatives assemble along with hospital equipment/props visually reminiscent of a corridor care situation in order to draw attention to the ongoing and dangerous situation of corridor care which is now a routine situation in hospitals across the UK.

    Hospitals across the UK are increasingly relying on so-called “corridor care”, with patients left waiting for hours or even days on trolleys in corridors, ambulances, and other unsuitable spaces due to critical shortages of beds, staff and social care capacity. This unsafe and undignified practice is costing lives: the Royal College of Emergency Medicine estimates that more than 16,000 avoidable deaths occur each year in the emergency care pathway as a result of delays [2]. Campaigners warn that the crisis is driven by years of underinvestment, with almost 5,000 NHS beds still closed since the pandemic, leaving emergency departments overwhelmed and unable to deliver timely, life-saving care. Without urgent government action to restore bed capacity and properly fund staffing and social care, patients will continue to suffer and die needlessly.



    Photograph by Elliott Franks / eyevi

    2026 © Elliott Franks

     

  • SOS NHS  patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 
25th February 2026
    DUKAS_194302466_EYE
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 25th February 2026
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain
    25th February 2026

    SOS NHS is the largest coalition yet formed in defence of the NHS comprised of campaign groups, trade unions, health and care staff, social movements and civil society organisations. The coalition believe there is an urgent need to reopen almost 5,000 NHS beds that have not been used since the pandemic began. To stop the continued worsening of the crisis in the NHS, the coalition aims to persuade the Government to take immediate, concrete steps to relieve the crisis in hospitals by reinstating beds that have been lost and investing in the staff to operate them, as well as funding and addressing the crisis in social care.

    NHS staff and health campaigners along with affected patients and their relatives assemble along with hospital equipment/props visually reminiscent of a corridor care situation in order to draw attention to the ongoing and dangerous situation of corridor care which is now a routine situation in hospitals across the UK.

    Hospitals across the UK are increasingly relying on so-called “corridor care”, with patients left waiting for hours or even days on trolleys in corridors, ambulances, and other unsuitable spaces due to critical shortages of beds, staff and social care capacity. This unsafe and undignified practice is costing lives: the Royal College of Emergency Medicine estimates that more than 16,000 avoidable deaths occur each year in the emergency care pathway as a result of delays [2]. Campaigners warn that the crisis is driven by years of underinvestment, with almost 5,000 NHS beds still closed since the pandemic, leaving emergency departments overwhelmed and unable to deliver timely, life-saving care. Without urgent government action to restore bed capacity and properly fund staffing and social care, patients will continue to suffer and die needlessly.



    Photograph by Elliott Franks / eyevi

    2026 © Elliott Franks

     

  • SOS NHS  patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 
25th February 2026
    DUKAS_194302465_EYE
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 25th February 2026
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain
    25th February 2026

    SOS NHS is the largest coalition yet formed in defence of the NHS comprised of campaign groups, trade unions, health and care staff, social movements and civil society organisations. The coalition believe there is an urgent need to reopen almost 5,000 NHS beds that have not been used since the pandemic began. To stop the continued worsening of the crisis in the NHS, the coalition aims to persuade the Government to take immediate, concrete steps to relieve the crisis in hospitals by reinstating beds that have been lost and investing in the staff to operate them, as well as funding and addressing the crisis in social care.

    NHS staff and health campaigners along with affected patients and their relatives assemble along with hospital equipment/props visually reminiscent of a corridor care situation in order to draw attention to the ongoing and dangerous situation of corridor care which is now a routine situation in hospitals across the UK.

    Hospitals across the UK are increasingly relying on so-called “corridor care”, with patients left waiting for hours or even days on trolleys in corridors, ambulances, and other unsuitable spaces due to critical shortages of beds, staff and social care capacity. This unsafe and undignified practice is costing lives: the Royal College of Emergency Medicine estimates that more than 16,000 avoidable deaths occur each year in the emergency care pathway as a result of delays [2]. Campaigners warn that the crisis is driven by years of underinvestment, with almost 5,000 NHS beds still closed since the pandemic, leaving emergency departments overwhelmed and unable to deliver timely, life-saving care. Without urgent government action to restore bed capacity and properly fund staffing and social care, patients will continue to suffer and die needlessly.



    Photograph by Elliott Franks / eyevi

    2026 © Elliott Franks

     

  • SOS NHS  patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 
25th February 2026
    DUKAS_194302464_EYE
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 25th February 2026
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain
    25th February 2026

    SOS NHS is the largest coalition yet formed in defence of the NHS comprised of campaign groups, trade unions, health and care staff, social movements and civil society organisations. The coalition believe there is an urgent need to reopen almost 5,000 NHS beds that have not been used since the pandemic began. To stop the continued worsening of the crisis in the NHS, the coalition aims to persuade the Government to take immediate, concrete steps to relieve the crisis in hospitals by reinstating beds that have been lost and investing in the staff to operate them, as well as funding and addressing the crisis in social care.

    NHS staff and health campaigners along with affected patients and their relatives assemble along with hospital equipment/props visually reminiscent of a corridor care situation in order to draw attention to the ongoing and dangerous situation of corridor care which is now a routine situation in hospitals across the UK.

    Hospitals across the UK are increasingly relying on so-called “corridor care”, with patients left waiting for hours or even days on trolleys in corridors, ambulances, and other unsuitable spaces due to critical shortages of beds, staff and social care capacity. This unsafe and undignified practice is costing lives: the Royal College of Emergency Medicine estimates that more than 16,000 avoidable deaths occur each year in the emergency care pathway as a result of delays [2]. Campaigners warn that the crisis is driven by years of underinvestment, with almost 5,000 NHS beds still closed since the pandemic, leaving emergency departments overwhelmed and unable to deliver timely, life-saving care. Without urgent government action to restore bed capacity and properly fund staffing and social care, patients will continue to suffer and die needlessly.



    Photograph by Elliott Franks / eyevi

    2026 © Elliott Franks

     

  • SOS NHS  patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 
25th February 2026
    DUKAS_194302456_EYE
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 25th February 2026
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain
    25th February 2026

    Richard Burgon MP for Leeds East

    SOS NHS is the largest coalition yet formed in defence of the NHS comprised of campaign groups, trade unions, health and care staff, social movements and civil society organisations. The coalition believe there is an urgent need to reopen almost 5,000 NHS beds that have not been used since the pandemic began. To stop the continued worsening of the crisis in the NHS, the coalition aims to persuade the Government to take immediate, concrete steps to relieve the crisis in hospitals by reinstating beds that have been lost and investing in the staff to operate them, as well as funding and addressing the crisis in social care.

    NHS staff and health campaigners along with affected patients and their relatives assemble along with hospital equipment/props visually reminiscent of a corridor care situation in order to draw attention to the ongoing and dangerous situation of corridor care which is now a routine situation in hospitals across the UK.

    Hospitals across the UK are increasingly relying on so-called “corridor care”, with patients left waiting for hours or even days on trolleys in corridors, ambulances, and other unsuitable spaces due to critical shortages of beds, staff and social care capacity. This unsafe and undignified practice is costing lives: the Royal College of Emergency Medicine estimates that more than 16,000 avoidable deaths occur each year in the emergency care pathway as a result of delays [2]. Campaigners warn that the crisis is driven by years of underinvestment, with almost 5,000 NHS beds still closed since the pandemic, leaving emergency departments overwhelmed and unable to deliver timely, life-saving care. Without urgent government action to restore bed capacity and properly fund staffing and social care, patients will continue to suffer and die needlessly.




    2026 © Elliott Franks

     

  • SOS NHS  patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 
25th February 2026
    DUKAS_194302454_EYE
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 25th February 2026
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain
    25th February 2026

    John McDonnell MP

    SOS NHS is the largest coalition yet formed in defence of the NHS comprised of campaign groups, trade unions, health and care staff, social movements and civil society organisations. The coalition believe there is an urgent need to reopen almost 5,000 NHS beds that have not been used since the pandemic began. To stop the continued worsening of the crisis in the NHS, the coalition aims to persuade the Government to take immediate, concrete steps to relieve the crisis in hospitals by reinstating beds that have been lost and investing in the staff to operate them, as well as funding and addressing the crisis in social care.

    NHS staff and health campaigners along with affected patients and their relatives assemble along with hospital equipment/props visually reminiscent of a corridor care situation in order to draw attention to the ongoing and dangerous situation of corridor care which is now a routine situation in hospitals across the UK.

    Hospitals across the UK are increasingly relying on so-called “corridor care”, with patients left waiting for hours or even days on trolleys in corridors, ambulances, and other unsuitable spaces due to critical shortages of beds, staff and social care capacity. This unsafe and undignified practice is costing lives: the Royal College of Emergency Medicine estimates that more than 16,000 avoidable deaths occur each year in the emergency care pathway as a result of delays [2]. Campaigners warn that the crisis is driven by years of underinvestment, with almost 5,000 NHS beds still closed since the pandemic, leaving emergency departments overwhelmed and unable to deliver timely, life-saving care. Without urgent government action to restore bed capacity and properly fund staffing and social care, patients will continue to suffer and die needlessly.



    Photograph by

    2026 © Elliott Franks

     

  • SOS NHS  patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 
25th February 2026
    DUKAS_194302452_EYE
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 25th February 2026
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain
    25th February 2026

    John McDonnell MP

    SOS NHS is the largest coalition yet formed in defence of the NHS comprised of campaign groups, trade unions, health and care staff, social movements and civil society organisations. The coalition believe there is an urgent need to reopen almost 5,000 NHS beds that have not been used since the pandemic began. To stop the continued worsening of the crisis in the NHS, the coalition aims to persuade the Government to take immediate, concrete steps to relieve the crisis in hospitals by reinstating beds that have been lost and investing in the staff to operate them, as well as funding and addressing the crisis in social care.

    NHS staff and health campaigners along with affected patients and their relatives assemble along with hospital equipment/props visually reminiscent of a corridor care situation in order to draw attention to the ongoing and dangerous situation of corridor care which is now a routine situation in hospitals across the UK.

    Hospitals across the UK are increasingly relying on so-called “corridor care”, with patients left waiting for hours or even days on trolleys in corridors, ambulances, and other unsuitable spaces due to critical shortages of beds, staff and social care capacity. This unsafe and undignified practice is costing lives: the Royal College of Emergency Medicine estimates that more than 16,000 avoidable deaths occur each year in the emergency care pathway as a result of delays [2]. Campaigners warn that the crisis is driven by years of underinvestment, with almost 5,000 NHS beds still closed since the pandemic, leaving emergency departments overwhelmed and unable to deliver timely, life-saving care. Without urgent government action to restore bed capacity and properly fund staffing and social care, patients will continue to suffer and die needlessly.



    Photograph by

    2026 © Elliott Franks

     

  • SOS NHS  patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 
25th February 2026
    DUKAS_194302450_EYE
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 25th February 2026
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain
    25th February 2026

    Kim Johnson MP for Liverpool Riverside

    SOS NHS is the largest coalition yet formed in defence of the NHS comprised of campaign groups, trade unions, health and care staff, social movements and civil society organisations. The coalition believe there is an urgent need to reopen almost 5,000 NHS beds that have not been used since the pandemic began. To stop the continued worsening of the crisis in the NHS, the coalition aims to persuade the Government to take immediate, concrete steps to relieve the crisis in hospitals by reinstating beds that have been lost and investing in the staff to operate them, as well as funding and addressing the crisis in social care.

    NHS staff and health campaigners along with affected patients and their relatives assemble along with hospital equipment/props visually reminiscent of a corridor care situation in order to draw attention to the ongoing and dangerous situation of corridor care which is now a routine situation in hospitals across the UK.

    Hospitals across the UK are increasingly relying on so-called “corridor care”, with patients left waiting for hours or even days on trolleys in corridors, ambulances, and other unsuitable spaces due to critical shortages of beds, staff and social care capacity. This unsafe and undignified practice is costing lives: the Royal College of Emergency Medicine estimates that more than 16,000 avoidable deaths occur each year in the emergency care pathway as a result of delays [2]. Campaigners warn that the crisis is driven by years of underinvestment, with almost 5,000 NHS beds still closed since the pandemic, leaving emergency departments overwhelmed and unable to deliver timely, life-saving care. Without urgent government action to restore bed capacity and properly fund staffing and social care, patients will continue to suffer and die needlessly.

    2026 © Elliott Franks

     

  • SOS NHS  patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 
25th February 2026
    DUKAS_194302447_EYE
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 25th February 2026
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain
    25th February 2026

    SOS NHS is the largest coalition yet formed in defence of the NHS comprised of campaign groups, trade unions, health and care staff, social movements and civil society organisations. The coalition believe there is an urgent need to reopen almost 5,000 NHS beds that have not been used since the pandemic began. To stop the continued worsening of the crisis in the NHS, the coalition aims to persuade the Government to take immediate, concrete steps to relieve the crisis in hospitals by reinstating beds that have been lost and investing in the staff to operate them, as well as funding and addressing the crisis in social care.

    NHS staff and health campaigners along with affected patients and their relatives assemble along with hospital equipment/props visually reminiscent of a corridor care situation in order to draw attention to the ongoing and dangerous situation of corridor care which is now a routine situation in hospitals across the UK.

    Hospitals across the UK are increasingly relying on so-called “corridor care”, with patients left waiting for hours or even days on trolleys in corridors, ambulances, and other unsuitable spaces due to critical shortages of beds, staff and social care capacity. This unsafe and undignified practice is costing lives: the Royal College of Emergency Medicine estimates that more than 16,000 avoidable deaths occur each year in the emergency care pathway as a result of delays [2]. Campaigners warn that the crisis is driven by years of underinvestment, with almost 5,000 NHS beds still closed since the pandemic, leaving emergency departments overwhelmed and unable to deliver timely, life-saving care. Without urgent government action to restore bed capacity and properly fund staffing and social care, patients will continue to suffer and die needlessly.



    Photograph by Elliott Franks / eyevi

    2026 © Elliott Franks

     

  • SOS NHS  patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 
25th February 2026
    DUKAS_194302445_EYE
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 25th February 2026
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain
    25th February 2026

    MP’s supporting the protest

    SOS NHS is the largest coalition yet formed in defence of the NHS comprised of campaign groups, trade unions, health and care staff, social movements and civil society organisations. The coalition believe there is an urgent need to reopen almost 5,000 NHS beds that have not been used since the pandemic began. To stop the continued worsening of the crisis in the NHS, the coalition aims to persuade the Government to take immediate, concrete steps to relieve the crisis in hospitals by reinstating beds that have been lost and investing in the staff to operate them, as well as funding and addressing the crisis in social care.

    NHS staff and health campaigners along with affected patients and their relatives assemble along with hospital equipment/props visually reminiscent of a corridor care situation in order to draw attention to the ongoing and dangerous situation of corridor care which is now a routine situation in hospitals across the UK.

    Hospitals across the UK are increasingly relying on so-called “corridor care”, with patients left waiting for hours or even days on trolleys in corridors, ambulances, and other unsuitable spaces due to critical shortages of beds, staff and social care capacity. This unsafe and undignified practice is costing lives: the Royal College of Emergency Medicine estimates that more than 16,000 avoidable deaths occur each year in the emergency care pathway as a result of delays [2]. Campaigners warn that the crisis is driven by years of underinvestment, with almost 5,000 NHS beds still closed since the pandemic, leaving emergency departments overwhelmed and unable to deliver timely, life-saving care. Without urgent government action to restore bed capacity and properly fund staffing and social care, patients will continue to suffer and die needlessly.



    Phot

    2026 © Elliott Franks

     

  • SOS NHS  patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 
25th February 2026
    DUKAS_194302442_EYE
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 25th February 2026
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain
    25th February 2026

    SOS NHS is the largest coalition yet formed in defence of the NHS comprised of campaign groups, trade unions, health and care staff, social movements and civil society organisations. The coalition believe there is an urgent need to reopen almost 5,000 NHS beds that have not been used since the pandemic began. To stop the continued worsening of the crisis in the NHS, the coalition aims to persuade the Government to take immediate, concrete steps to relieve the crisis in hospitals by reinstating beds that have been lost and investing in the staff to operate them, as well as funding and addressing the crisis in social care.

    NHS staff and health campaigners along with affected patients and their relatives assemble along with hospital equipment/props visually reminiscent of a corridor care situation in order to draw attention to the ongoing and dangerous situation of corridor care which is now a routine situation in hospitals across the UK.

    Hospitals across the UK are increasingly relying on so-called “corridor care”, with patients left waiting for hours or even days on trolleys in corridors, ambulances, and other unsuitable spaces due to critical shortages of beds, staff and social care capacity. This unsafe and undignified practice is costing lives: the Royal College of Emergency Medicine estimates that more than 16,000 avoidable deaths occur each year in the emergency care pathway as a result of delays [2]. Campaigners warn that the crisis is driven by years of underinvestment, with almost 5,000 NHS beds still closed since the pandemic, leaving emergency departments overwhelmed and unable to deliver timely, life-saving care. Without urgent government action to restore bed capacity and properly fund staffing and social care, patients will continue to suffer and die needlessly.



    Photograph by Elliott Franks / eyevi

    2026 © Elliott Franks

     

  • SOS NHS  patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 
25th February 2026
    DUKAS_194302439_EYE
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 25th February 2026
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain
    25th February 2026

    SOS NHS is the largest coalition yet formed in defence of the NHS comprised of campaign groups, trade unions, health and care staff, social movements and civil society organisations. The coalition believe there is an urgent need to reopen almost 5,000 NHS beds that have not been used since the pandemic began. To stop the continued worsening of the crisis in the NHS, the coalition aims to persuade the Government to take immediate, concrete steps to relieve the crisis in hospitals by reinstating beds that have been lost and investing in the staff to operate them, as well as funding and addressing the crisis in social care.

    NHS staff and health campaigners along with affected patients and their relatives assemble along with hospital equipment/props visually reminiscent of a corridor care situation in order to draw attention to the ongoing and dangerous situation of corridor care which is now a routine situation in hospitals across the UK.

    Hospitals across the UK are increasingly relying on so-called “corridor care”, with patients left waiting for hours or even days on trolleys in corridors, ambulances, and other unsuitable spaces due to critical shortages of beds, staff and social care capacity. This unsafe and undignified practice is costing lives: the Royal College of Emergency Medicine estimates that more than 16,000 avoidable deaths occur each year in the emergency care pathway as a result of delays [2]. Campaigners warn that the crisis is driven by years of underinvestment, with almost 5,000 NHS beds still closed since the pandemic, leaving emergency departments overwhelmed and unable to deliver timely, life-saving care. Without urgent government action to restore bed capacity and properly fund staffing and social care, patients will continue to suffer and die needlessly.



    Photograph by Elliott Franks / eyevi

    2026 © Elliott Franks

     

  • SOS NHS  patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 
25th February 2026
    DUKAS_194302437_EYE
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 25th February 2026
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain
    25th February 2026

    SOS NHS is the largest coalition yet formed in defence of the NHS comprised of campaign groups, trade unions, health and care staff, social movements and civil society organisations. The coalition believe there is an urgent need to reopen almost 5,000 NHS beds that have not been used since the pandemic began. To stop the continued worsening of the crisis in the NHS, the coalition aims to persuade the Government to take immediate, concrete steps to relieve the crisis in hospitals by reinstating beds that have been lost and investing in the staff to operate them, as well as funding and addressing the crisis in social care.

    NHS staff and health campaigners along with affected patients and their relatives assemble along with hospital equipment/props visually reminiscent of a corridor care situation in order to draw attention to the ongoing and dangerous situation of corridor care which is now a routine situation in hospitals across the UK.

    Hospitals across the UK are increasingly relying on so-called “corridor care”, with patients left waiting for hours or even days on trolleys in corridors, ambulances, and other unsuitable spaces due to critical shortages of beds, staff and social care capacity. This unsafe and undignified practice is costing lives: the Royal College of Emergency Medicine estimates that more than 16,000 avoidable deaths occur each year in the emergency care pathway as a result of delays [2]. Campaigners warn that the crisis is driven by years of underinvestment, with almost 5,000 NHS beds still closed since the pandemic, leaving emergency departments overwhelmed and unable to deliver timely, life-saving care. Without urgent government action to restore bed capacity and properly fund staffing and social care, patients will continue to suffer and die needlessly.



    Photograph by Elliott Franks / eyevi

    2026 © Elliott Franks

     

  • SOS NHS  patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 
25th February 2026
    DUKAS_194302435_EYE
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 25th February 2026
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain
    25th February 2026

    John McDonnell MP

    SOS NHS is the largest coalition yet formed in defence of the NHS comprised of campaign groups, trade unions, health and care staff, social movements and civil society organisations. The coalition believe there is an urgent need to reopen almost 5,000 NHS beds that have not been used since the pandemic began. To stop the continued worsening of the crisis in the NHS, the coalition aims to persuade the Government to take immediate, concrete steps to relieve the crisis in hospitals by reinstating beds that have been lost and investing in the staff to operate them, as well as funding and addressing the crisis in social care.

    NHS staff and health campaigners along with affected patients and their relatives assemble along with hospital equipment/props visually reminiscent of a corridor care situation in order to draw attention to the ongoing and dangerous situation of corridor care which is now a routine situation in hospitals across the UK.

    Hospitals across the UK are increasingly relying on so-called “corridor care”, with patients left waiting for hours or even days on trolleys in corridors, ambulances, and other unsuitable spaces due to critical shortages of beds, staff and social care capacity. This unsafe and undignified practice is costing lives: the Royal College of Emergency Medicine estimates that more than 16,000 avoidable deaths occur each year in the emergency care pathway as a result of delays [2]. Campaigners warn that the crisis is driven by years of underinvestment, with almost 5,000 NHS beds still closed since the pandemic, leaving emergency departments overwhelmed and unable to deliver timely, life-saving care. Without urgent government action to restore bed capacity and properly fund staffing and social care, patients will continue to suffer and die needlessly.



    Photograph by

    2026 © Elliott Franks

     

  • SOS NHS  patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 
25th February 2026
    DUKAS_194302433_EYE
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain 25th February 2026
    SOS NHS patients, NHS staff & campaigners protest Corridor Care outside Parliament, Westminster, London, Great Britain
    25th February 2026

    SOS NHS is the largest coalition yet formed in defence of the NHS comprised of campaign groups, trade unions, health and care staff, social movements and civil society organisations. The coalition believe there is an urgent need to reopen almost 5,000 NHS beds that have not been used since the pandemic began. To stop the continued worsening of the crisis in the NHS, the coalition aims to persuade the Government to take immediate, concrete steps to relieve the crisis in hospitals by reinstating beds that have been lost and investing in the staff to operate them, as well as funding and addressing the crisis in social care.

    NHS staff and health campaigners along with affected patients and their relatives assemble along with hospital equipment/props visually reminiscent of a corridor care situation in order to draw attention to the ongoing and dangerous situation of corridor care which is now a routine situation in hospitals across the UK.

    Hospitals across the UK are increasingly relying on so-called “corridor care”, with patients left waiting for hours or even days on trolleys in corridors, ambulances, and other unsuitable spaces due to critical shortages of beds, staff and social care capacity. This unsafe and undignified practice is costing lives: the Royal College of Emergency Medicine estimates that more than 16,000 avoidable deaths occur each year in the emergency care pathway as a result of delays [2]. Campaigners warn that the crisis is driven by years of underinvestment, with almost 5,000 NHS beds still closed since the pandemic, leaving emergency departments overwhelmed and unable to deliver timely, life-saving care. Without urgent government action to restore bed capacity and properly fund staffing and social care, patients will continue to suffer and die needlessly.



    Photograph by Elliott Franks / eyevi

    2026 © Elliott Franks

     

  • Poison in the water: the town with the world's worst case of forever chemicals contamination.
    DUKAS_186309181_EYE
    Poison in the water: the town with the world's worst case of forever chemicals contamination.
    Poison in the water: the town with the world's worst case of forever chemicals contamination.

    When a small Swedish town discovered their drinking water contained extremely high levels of Pfas, they had no idea what it would mean for their health and their children's future.

    Portrait of Herman Afzelius, one of the key campaigners, photographed at his home in Kallinge.
    2025-06-11 Ronneby, Sweden.

    Josefine Stenersen / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Poison in the water: the town with the world's worst case of forever chemicals contamination.
    DUKAS_186309172_EYE
    Poison in the water: the town with the world's worst case of forever chemicals contamination.
    Poison in the water: the town with the world's worst case of forever chemicals contamination.

    When a small Swedish town discovered their drinking water contained extremely high levels of Pfas, they had no idea what it would mean for their health and their children's future.

    Portrait of Herman Afzelius, one of the key campaigners, photographed at his home in Kallinge.
    2025-06-11 Ronneby, Sweden.

    Josefine Stenersen / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Poison in the water: the town with the world's worst case of forever chemicals contamination.
    DUKAS_186309169_EYE
    Poison in the water: the town with the world's worst case of forever chemicals contamination.
    Poison in the water: the town with the world's worst case of forever chemicals contamination.

    When a small Swedish town discovered their drinking water contained extremely high levels of Pfas, they had no idea what it would mean for their health and their children's future.

    Portrait of Herman Afzelius, one of the key campaigners, photographed at his home in Kallinge.
    2025-06-11 Ronneby, Sweden.

    Josefine Stenersen / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Poison in the water: the town with the world's worst case of forever chemicals contamination.
    DUKAS_186309178_EYE
    Poison in the water: the town with the world's worst case of forever chemicals contamination.
    Poison in the water: the town with the world's worst case of forever chemicals contamination.

    When a small Swedish town discovered their drinking water contained extremely high levels of Pfas, they had no idea what it would mean for their health and their children's future.

    Portrait of Herman Afzelius, one of the key campaigners, photographed at his home in Kallinge.
    2025-06-11 Ronneby, Sweden.

    Josefine Stenersen / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Josefine Stenersen

     

  • Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    DUKAS_185014492_EYE
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    20/05/2025. London, United Kingdom.
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street.

    Infected blood campaigners hand in a letter in Downing Street. Haemophilia charities hand in a letter for the Prime Minister expressing concern over the infected blood compensation scheme.

    Picture by Martyn Wheatley / i-Images / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Martyn Wheatley / i-Images

     

  • Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    DUKAS_185014436_EYE
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    20/05/2025. London, United Kingdom.
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street.

    Infected blood campaigners hand in a letter in Downing Street. Haemophilia charities hand in a letter for the Prime Minister expressing concern over the infected blood compensation scheme.

    Picture by Martyn Wheatley / i-Images / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Martyn Wheatley / i-Images

     

  • Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    DUKAS_185014437_EYE
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    20/05/2025. London, United Kingdom.
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street.

    Infected blood campaigners hand in a letter in Downing Street. Haemophilia charities hand in a letter for the Prime Minister expressing concern over the infected blood compensation scheme.

    Picture by Martyn Wheatley / i-Images / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Martyn Wheatley / i-Images

     

  • Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    DUKAS_185014441_EYE
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    20/05/2025. London, United Kingdom.
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street.

    Infected blood campaigners hand in a letter in Downing Street. Haemophilia charities hand in a letter for the Prime Minister expressing concern over the infected blood compensation scheme.

    Picture by Martyn Wheatley / i-Images / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Martyn Wheatley / i-Images

     

  • Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    DUKAS_185014450_EYE
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    20/05/2025. London, United Kingdom.
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street.

    Infected blood campaigners hand in a letter in Downing Street. Haemophilia charities hand in a letter for the Prime Minister expressing concern over the infected blood compensation scheme.

    Picture by Martyn Wheatley / i-Images / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Martyn Wheatley / i-Images

     

  • Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    DUKAS_185014487_EYE
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    20/05/2025. London, United Kingdom.
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street.

    Infected blood campaigners hand in a letter in Downing Street. Haemophilia charities hand in a letter for the Prime Minister expressing concern over the infected blood compensation scheme.

    Picture by Martyn Wheatley / i-Images / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Martyn Wheatley / i-Images

     

  • Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    DUKAS_185014476_EYE
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    20/05/2025. London, United Kingdom.
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street.

    Infected blood campaigners hand in a letter in Downing Street. Haemophilia charities hand in a letter for the Prime Minister expressing concern over the infected blood compensation scheme.

    Picture by Martyn Wheatley / i-Images / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Martyn Wheatley / i-Images

     

  • Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    DUKAS_185014488_EYE
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    20/05/2025. London, United Kingdom.
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street.

    Infected blood campaigners hand in a letter in Downing Street. Haemophilia charities hand in a letter for the Prime Minister expressing concern over the infected blood compensation scheme.

    Picture by Martyn Wheatley / i-Images / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Martyn Wheatley / i-Images

     

  • Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    DUKAS_185014485_EYE
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    20/05/2025. London, United Kingdom.
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street.

    Infected blood campaigners hand in a letter in Downing Street. Haemophilia charities hand in a letter for the Prime Minister expressing concern over the infected blood compensation scheme.

    Picture by Martyn Wheatley / i-Images / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Martyn Wheatley / i-Images

     

  • Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    DUKAS_185014489_EYE
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    20/05/2025. London, United Kingdom.
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street.

    Infected blood campaigners hand in a letter in Downing Street. Haemophilia charities hand in a letter for the Prime Minister expressing concern over the infected blood compensation scheme.

    Picture by Martyn Wheatley / i-Images / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Martyn Wheatley / i-Images

     

  • Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    DUKAS_185014475_EYE
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    20/05/2025. London, United Kingdom.
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street.

    Infected blood campaigners hand in a letter in Downing Street. Haemophilia charities hand in a letter for the Prime Minister expressing concern over the infected blood compensation scheme.

    Picture by Martyn Wheatley / i-Images / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Martyn Wheatley / i-Images

     

  • Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    DUKAS_185014435_EYE
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    20/05/2025. London, United Kingdom.
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street.

    Infected blood campaigners hand in a letter in Downing Street. Haemophilia charities hand in a letter for the Prime Minister expressing concern over the infected blood compensation scheme.

    Picture by Martyn Wheatley / i-Images / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Martyn Wheatley / i-Images

     

  • Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    DUKAS_185014440_EYE
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    20/05/2025. London, United Kingdom.
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street.

    Infected blood campaigners hand in a letter in Downing Street. Haemophilia charities hand in a letter for the Prime Minister expressing concern over the infected blood compensation scheme.

    Picture by Martyn Wheatley / i-Images / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Martyn Wheatley / i-Images

     

  • Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    DUKAS_185014473_EYE
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street in London, UK.
    20/05/2025. London, United Kingdom.
    Infected Blood Letter Downing Street.

    Infected blood campaigners hand in a letter in Downing Street. Haemophilia charities hand in a letter for the Prime Minister expressing concern over the infected blood compensation scheme.

    Picture by Martyn Wheatley / i-Images / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    ©2025 Martyn Wheatley / i-Images

     

  • 'I've been getting 100 messages a day': Alexander Barnes-Ross. Church of Scientology accused of intimidating UK critics.
    DUKAS_183306043_EYE
    'I've been getting 100 messages a day': Alexander Barnes-Ross. Church of Scientology accused of intimidating UK critics.
    'I've been getting 100 messages a day': Alexander Barnes-Ross. Church of Scientology accused of intimidating UK critics.

    Campaigners face online attacks, claims of criminality and complaints to employers. The Church says it's the victim.

    Alexander Barnes-Ross in front of the London HQ of the church of Scientology. 15/1/25.

    Andy Hall / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Andy Hall for the Observer

     

  • Thousands of LGBTQ+ Australians got a long-awaited apology - but many weren't alive to receive it. Robert French.
    DUKAS_170822916_EYE
    Thousands of LGBTQ+ Australians got a long-awaited apology - but many weren't alive to receive it. Robert French.
    Coming 40 years after NSW decriminalised homosexuality, it is a 'bittersweet' moment that has arrived too late for many.

    Robert French, who attended the apology on Thursday, says many of the people who were convicted under the laws have since died.

    Alongside leading gay rights activist Lex Watson, who died in 2014, and many others, French was part of a 1983 community campaign to get the laws criminalising homosexuality changed.

    Robert French OA who was one of the main gay rights campaigners who pushed for laws that criminalised homosexuality to be overturned since the 1980s.

    Blake Sharp-Wiggins / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Blake Sharp-Wiggins

     

  • Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    DUKAS_144683786_EYE
    Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    Participants view Milky Way and Andromeda galaxy as campaigners bemoan restrictions on right to roam.

    "Welcome to the night," beamed a right to roam campaigner welcoming a coach load of city dwellers to the pitch dark stillness of remote Northumberland countryside on a chilly September evening.

    The passengers had been attracted by a secretive offer spread on Instagram and by old-school posters pinned up in Newcastle.

    About 70 signed up. On Thursday, they arrived at about 8.15pm on land owned by the Duke of Northumberland near Rothbury. Off the bus, they were guided up to Lordenshaws iron age hill fort, where, if it had been light, they would have properly seen some of the UK's most abundant and wonderful neolithic rock art.

    Participants in the Right to Roam Dark Skies Trespass on Lordenshaw Hillfort, Northumberland.

    © Gary Calton / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    DUKAS_144683791_EYE
    Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    Participants view Milky Way and Andromeda galaxy as campaigners bemoan restrictions on right to roam.

    "Welcome to the night," beamed a right to roam campaigner welcoming a coach load of city dwellers to the pitch dark stillness of remote Northumberland countryside on a chilly September evening.

    The passengers had been attracted by a secretive offer spread on Instagram and by old-school posters pinned up in Newcastle.

    About 70 signed up. On Thursday, they arrived at about 8.15pm on land owned by the Duke of Northumberland near Rothbury. Off the bus, they were guided up to Lordenshaws iron age hill fort, where, if it had been light, they would have properly seen some of the UK's most abundant and wonderful neolithic rock art.

    Participants in the Right to Roam Dark Skies Trespass on Lordenshaw Hillfort, Northumberland.

    © Gary Calton / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    DUKAS_144683820_EYE
    Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    Participants view Milky Way and Andromeda galaxy as campaigners bemoan restrictions on right to roam.

    "Welcome to the night," beamed a right to roam campaigner welcoming a coach load of city dwellers to the pitch dark stillness of remote Northumberland countryside on a chilly September evening.

    The passengers had been attracted by a secretive offer spread on Instagram and by old-school posters pinned up in Newcastle.

    About 70 signed up. On Thursday, they arrived at about 8.15pm on land owned by the Duke of Northumberland near Rothbury. Off the bus, they were guided up to Lordenshaws iron age hill fort, where, if it had been light, they would have properly seen some of the UK's most abundant and wonderful neolithic rock art.

    Participants in the Right to Roam Dark Skies Trespass on Lordenshaw Hillfort, Northumberland.

    © Gary Calton / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    DUKAS_144683790_EYE
    Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    Participants view Milky Way and Andromeda galaxy as campaigners bemoan restrictions on right to roam.

    "Welcome to the night," beamed a right to roam campaigner welcoming a coach load of city dwellers to the pitch dark stillness of remote Northumberland countryside on a chilly September evening.

    The passengers had been attracted by a secretive offer spread on Instagram and by old-school posters pinned up in Newcastle.

    About 70 signed up. On Thursday, they arrived at about 8.15pm on land owned by the Duke of Northumberland near Rothbury. Off the bus, they were guided up to Lordenshaws iron age hill fort, where, if it had been light, they would have properly seen some of the UK's most abundant and wonderful neolithic rock art.

    Participants in the Right to Roam Dark Skies Trespass on Lordenshaw Hillfort, Northumberland.

    © Gary Calton / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    DUKAS_144683787_EYE
    Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    Participants view Milky Way and Andromeda galaxy as campaigners bemoan restrictions on right to roam.

    "Welcome to the night," beamed a right to roam campaigner welcoming a coach load of city dwellers to the pitch dark stillness of remote Northumberland countryside on a chilly September evening.

    The passengers had been attracted by a secretive offer spread on Instagram and by old-school posters pinned up in Newcastle.

    About 70 signed up. On Thursday, they arrived at about 8.15pm on land owned by the Duke of Northumberland near Rothbury. Off the bus, they were guided up to Lordenshaws iron age hill fort, where, if it had been light, they would have properly seen some of the UK's most abundant and wonderful neolithic rock art.

    Participants in the Right to Roam Dark Skies Trespass on Lordenshaw Hillfort, Northumberland.

    © Gary Calton / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    DUKAS_144683792_EYE
    Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    Participants view Milky Way and Andromeda galaxy as campaigners bemoan restrictions on right to roam.

    "Welcome to the night," beamed a right to roam campaigner welcoming a coach load of city dwellers to the pitch dark stillness of remote Northumberland countryside on a chilly September evening.

    The passengers had been attracted by a secretive offer spread on Instagram and by old-school posters pinned up in Newcastle.

    About 70 signed up. On Thursday, they arrived at about 8.15pm on land owned by the Duke of Northumberland near Rothbury. Off the bus, they were guided up to Lordenshaws iron age hill fort, where, if it had been light, they would have properly seen some of the UK's most abundant and wonderful neolithic rock art.

    Participants in the Right to Roam Dark Skies Trespass on Lordenshaw Hillfort, Northumberland.

    © Gary Calton / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    DUKAS_144683788_EYE
    Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    Participants view Milky Way and Andromeda galaxy as campaigners bemoan restrictions on right to roam.

    "Welcome to the night," beamed a right to roam campaigner welcoming a coach load of city dwellers to the pitch dark stillness of remote Northumberland countryside on a chilly September evening.

    The passengers had been attracted by a secretive offer spread on Instagram and by old-school posters pinned up in Newcastle.

    About 70 signed up. On Thursday, they arrived at about 8.15pm on land owned by the Duke of Northumberland near Rothbury. Off the bus, they were guided up to Lordenshaws iron age hill fort, where, if it had been light, they would have properly seen some of the UK's most abundant and wonderful neolithic rock art.

    Participants arrive from Newcaste to take part in the Right to Roam Dark Skies Trespass on Lordenshaw Hillfort, Northumberland.

    © Gary Calton / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    DUKAS_144683793_EYE
    Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    Participants view Milky Way and Andromeda galaxy as campaigners bemoan restrictions on right to roam.

    "Welcome to the night," beamed a right to roam campaigner welcoming a coach load of city dwellers to the pitch dark stillness of remote Northumberland countryside on a chilly September evening.

    The passengers had been attracted by a secretive offer spread on Instagram and by old-school posters pinned up in Newcastle.

    About 70 signed up. On Thursday, they arrived at about 8.15pm on land owned by the Duke of Northumberland near Rothbury. Off the bus, they were guided up to Lordenshaws iron age hill fort, where, if it had been light, they would have properly seen some of the UK's most abundant and wonderful neolithic rock art.

    Participants arrive from Newcaste to take part in the Right to Roam Dark Skies Trespass on Lordenshaw Hillfort, Northumberland.

    © Gary Calton / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    DUKAS_144683789_EYE
    Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    Participants view Milky Way and Andromeda galaxy as campaigners bemoan restrictions on right to roam.

    "Welcome to the night," beamed a right to roam campaigner welcoming a coach load of city dwellers to the pitch dark stillness of remote Northumberland countryside on a chilly September evening.

    The passengers had been attracted by a secretive offer spread on Instagram and by old-school posters pinned up in Newcastle.

    About 70 signed up. On Thursday, they arrived at about 8.15pm on land owned by the Duke of Northumberland near Rothbury. Off the bus, they were guided up to Lordenshaws iron age hill fort, where, if it had been light, they would have properly seen some of the UK's most abundant and wonderful neolithic rock art.

    Organisers of the Right to Roam Dark Skies Trespass in Northumberland.
    Participants in the Right to Roam Dark Skies Trespass on Lordenshaw Hillfort, Northumberland.

    © Gary Calton / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    DUKAS_144683783_EYE
    Dozens starstruck at Northumberland dark skies mass trespass.
    Participants view Milky Way and Andromeda galaxy as campaigners bemoan restrictions on right to roam.

    "Welcome to the night," beamed a right to roam campaigner welcoming a coach load of city dwellers to the pitch dark stillness of remote Northumberland countryside on a chilly September evening.

    The passengers had been attracted by a secretive offer spread on Instagram and by old-school posters pinned up in Newcastle.

    About 70 signed up. On Thursday, they arrived at about 8.15pm on land owned by the Duke of Northumberland near Rothbury. Off the bus, they were guided up to Lordenshaws iron age hill fort, where, if it had been light, they would have properly seen some of the UK's most abundant and wonderful neolithic rock art.

    Organisers of the Right to Roam Dark Skies Trespass in Northumberland.
    Participants in the Right to Roam Dark Skies Trespass on Lordenshaw Hillfort, Northumberland.

    © Gary Calton / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘What else can we do?’: trespassers demand right to roam minister’s 12,000-acre estate.
    DUKAS_142208549_EYE
    ‘What else can we do?’: trespassers demand right to roam minister’s 12,000-acre estate.
    Protestors congregate at a large oak tree on Englefield Estate in a mass tresspass organised by the Right to Roam campaign. Englefield, Berkshire, UK. 7th August 2022.
    © Peter Flude / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘What else can we do?’: trespassers demand right to roam minister’s 12,000-acre estate.
    DUKAS_142208548_EYE
    ‘What else can we do?’: trespassers demand right to roam minister’s 12,000-acre estate.
    Nature conservationist Nadia Shaikh who helped organise the Right to Roam mass tresspass on the Englefield Estate, stands with protestors under a large oak tree. Englefield, Berkshire, UK. 7th August 2022.
    © Peter Flude / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    © Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved.

     

  • ‘What else can we do?’: trespassers demand right to roam minister’s 12,000-acre estate.
    DUKAS_142208583_EYE
    ‘What else can we do?’: trespassers demand right to roam minister’s 12,000-acre estate.
    Nature conservationist Nadia Shaikh who helped organise the Right to Roam mass tresspass on the Englefield Estate, stands with protestors under a large oak tree. Englefield, Berkshire, UK. 7th August 2022.
    © Peter Flude / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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  • ‘What else can we do?’: trespassers demand right to roam minister’s 12,000-acre estate.
    DUKAS_142208578_EYE
    ‘What else can we do?’: trespassers demand right to roam minister’s 12,000-acre estate.
    Nick Hayes, organiser of the Right to Roam mass tresspass protest on Englefield Estate, gives a speech to the group. Englefield, Berkshire, UK. 7th August 2022.
    © Peter Flude / Guardian / eyevine

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  • ‘What else can we do?’: trespassers demand right to roam minister’s 12,000-acre estate.
    DUKAS_142208551_EYE
    ‘What else can we do?’: trespassers demand right to roam minister’s 12,000-acre estate.
    A bee lands on an apple held by a protestor at the mass tresspass on Englefield Estate, organised by the Right to Roam campaign. Englefield, Berkshire, UK. 7th August 2022.
    © Peter Flude / Guardian / eyevine

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