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  • Residents Flee Violent Ciudad Juarez
    DUKAS_27278734_ZUM
    Residents Flee Violent Ciudad Juarez
    May 04, 2010 - Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico - With more than 2,600 violent deaths in 2009, and 655 as of April 12 of this year, Ciudad Juarez, Mexico continues to merit the label of the world's most violent city. As a result of the drug violence, gang extorsion schemes and official corruption, an exodus of considerable proportions is currently underway from the ravaged city. Those with the means to do so, move across the Rio Grande River to El Paso, Texas. But for the working class, poorer citizens of Juarez, their options are much more limited and are desperate. Recently, the state government has implemented a program of financial assistance to those who wish to return to their home towns in the state. The Campos Ordinola family is living in Juarez and has experienced the violence themselves, and decided to return to the small town of Tres Valles. PICTURED: The Campos Ordinola family is one example of lower class Veracruzanos living in Juarez who have experienced the violence themselves, have had enough of it and decided to return to the small town of Tres Valles. Guadalupe Ordinola Peralta, 25, cries and hugs a friend from El Paso, Texas before the family's departure to Veracruz..(Credit Image: © Keith Dannemiller/ZUMApress.com)
    DUKAS/ZUMA

     

  • Residents Flee Violent Ciudad Juarez
    DUKAS_27278724_ZUM
    Residents Flee Violent Ciudad Juarez
    May 04, 2010 - Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico - With more than 2,600 violent deaths in 2009, and 655 as of April 12 of this year, Ciudad Juarez, Mexico continues to merit the label of the world's most violent city. As a result of the drug violence, gang extorsion schemes and official corruption, an exodus of considerable proportions is currently underway from the ravaged city. Those with the means to do so, move across the Rio Grande River to El Paso, Texas. But for the working class, poorer citizens of Juarez, their options are much more limited and are desperate. Recently, the state government has implemented a program of financial assistance to those who wish to return to their home towns in the state. The Campos Ordinola family is living in Juarez and has experienced the violence themselves, and decided to return to the small town of Tres Valles. PICTURED: The Campos Ordinola family is one example of lower class Veracruzanos living in Juarez who have experienced the violence themselves, have had enough of it and decided to return to the small town of Tres Valles. Guadalupe Ordinola Peralta, 25, cries and hugs a friend from El Paso, Texas before the family's departure to Veracruz..(Credit Image: © Keith Dannemiller/ZUMApress.com)
    DUKAS/ZUMA

     

  • Residents Flee Violent Ciudad Juarez
    DUKAS_27278737_ZUM
    Residents Flee Violent Ciudad Juarez
    May 02, 2010 - Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico - With more than 2,600 violent deaths in 2009, and 655 as of April 12 of this year, Ciudad Juarez, Mexico continues to merit the label of the world's most violent city. As a result of the drug violence, gang extorsion schemes and official corruption, an exodus of considerable proportions is currently underway from the ravaged city. Those with the means to do so, move across the Rio Grande River to El Paso, Texas. But for the working class, poorer citizens of Juarez, their options are much more limited and are desperate. Recently, the state government has implemented a program of financial assistance to those who wish to return to their home towns in the state. The Campos Ordinola family is living in Juarez and has experienced the violence themselves, and decided to return to the small town of Tres Valles. PICTURED: Angel, age 2 camera left and Edwin, age 4, camera right, play with tou plastic guns in the patio of their house..(Credit Image: © Keith Dannemiller/ZUMApress.com)
    DUKAS/ZUMA

     

  • Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    DUKAS_23907051_WPN
    Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    Soy Harvest on the Jotabasso farm in Mato Grosso do Sul state, April 8, 2006. Brazil is the world's second biggest producer of soy, and its exports help drive the Brazilian economy. Environmentalists claim the massive monoculture is bad for the land and the expansion of the industry fuels rainforest destruction. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    DUKAS_23907043_WPN
    Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    Soy Harvest on the Jotabasso farm in Mato Grosso do Sul state, April 8, 2006. Brazil is the world's second biggest producer of soy, and its exports help drive the Brazilian economy. Environmentalists claim the massive monoculture is bad for the land and the expansion of the industry fuels rainforest destruction. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    DUKAS_23907015_WPN
    Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    Soy Harvest on the Jotabasso farm in Mato Grosso do Sul state, April 8, 2006. Brazil is the world's second biggest producer of soy, and its exports help drive the Brazilian economy. Environmentalists claim the massive monoculture is bad for the land and the expansion of the industry fuels rainforest destruction. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    DUKAS_23906969_WPN
    Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    Soy Harvest on the Jotabasso farm in Mato Grosso do Sul state, April 8, 2006. Brazil is the world's second biggest producer of soy, and its exports help drive the Brazilian economy. Environmentalists claim the massive monoculture is bad for the land and the expansion of the industry fuels rainforest destruction. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    DUKAS_23906939_WPN
    Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    Soy Harvest on the Jotabasso farm in Mato Grosso do Sul state, April 8, 2006. Brazil is the world's second biggest producer of soy, and its exports help drive the Brazilian economy. Environmentalists claim the massive monoculture is bad for the land and the expansion of the industry fuels rainforest destruction. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    DUKAS_23906930_WPN
    Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    Soy Harvest on the Jotabasso farm in Mato Grosso do Sul state, April 8, 2006. Brazil is the world's second biggest producer of soy, and its exports help drive the Brazilian economy. Environmentalists claim the massive monoculture is bad for the land and the expansion of the industry fuels rainforest destruction. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    DUKAS_23906920_WPN
    Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    Soy Harvest on the Jotabasso farm in Mato Grosso do Sul state, April 8, 2006. Brazil is the world's second biggest producer of soy, and its exports help drive the Brazilian economy. Environmentalists claim the massive monoculture is bad for the land and the expansion of the industry fuels rainforest destruction. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    DUKAS_23906916_WPN
    Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    Soy Harvest on the Jotabasso farm in Mato Grosso do Sul state, April 8, 2006. Brazil is the world's second biggest producer of soy, and its exports help drive the Brazilian economy. Environmentalists claim the massive monoculture is bad for the land and the expansion of the industry fuels rainforest destruction. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    DUKAS_23906905_WPN
    Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    Soy Harvest on the Jotabasso farm in Mato Grosso do Sul state, April 8, 2006. Brazil is the world's second biggest producer of soy, and its exports help drive the Brazilian economy. Environmentalists claim the massive monoculture is bad for the land and the expansion of the industry fuels rainforest destruction. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    DUKAS_23906892_WPN
    Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    Soy Harvest on the Jotabasso farm in Mato Grosso do Sul state, April 8, 2006. Brazil is the world's second biggest producer of soy, and its exports help drive the Brazilian economy. Environmentalists claim the massive monoculture is bad for the land and the expansion of the industry fuels rainforest destruction. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    DUKAS_23906871_WPN
    Brazil Environmentalists Criticize Soy Harvest
    Soy Harvest on the Jotabasso farm in Mato Grosso do Sul state, April 8, 2006. Brazil is the world's second biggest producer of soy, and its exports help drive the Brazilian economy. Environmentalists claim the massive monoculture is bad for the land and the expansion of the industry fuels rainforest destruction. (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)
    DUKAS/WPN

     

  • Germany G8 Summit Protests
    DUKAS_4189333_WPN
    Germany G8 Summit Protests
    Anti-G8 protesters shout about being chased away by police after the demonstration erupted into violence between mainly left-wing demonstrators and authorities, in Rostock, Germany, on Saturday, June 2, 2007.
    **GERMANY OUT** (FOTO: DUKAS/WORLDPICTURENEWS)

    DUKAS/WPN