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DUKAS_191560997_NUR
Tourism In Kashmir, India
A visitor poses for a picture near the mud houses at Naranag, a tourist destination about 55 kilometers from Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, on November 30, 2025. This year, Kashmir witnesses a steep decline in tourist arrivals. The government initiative aims to boost tourism in the Himalayan region, which is badly hit following the deadly Pahalgam attack on April 22 that kills 26 tourists. (Photo by Firdous Nazir/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191468024_NUR
Commart Thailand 2025.
Visitors buy computer inventories displayed for sale at a computer show and sales event, Commart Thailand 2025, in Bangkok, Thailand, on November 27, 2025. Hundreds of exhibitors, Information Technology retail chains, computer makers, and dealers present their latest computer and IT products at the four-day computer exhibition to boost the country's computer industry. (Photo by Anusak Laowilas/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_191468022_NUR
Commart Thailand 2025.
Visitors buy computer inventories displayed for sale at a computer show and sales event, Commart Thailand 2025, in Bangkok, Thailand, on November 27, 2025. Hundreds of exhibitors, Information Technology retail chains, computer makers, and dealers present their latest computer and IT products at the four-day computer exhibition to boost the country's computer industry. (Photo by Anusak Laowilas/NurPhoto) -
DUK101495120_008
NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg: Ukrainerin an der Beerdigung ihres getöteten Mannes Eugene in Bucha
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI/Shutterstock (12934265h)
Father Andrii Gavalin, presides over the funeral of Eugene Bogdanov, 35, as he is being laid into the ground in Bucha, Ukraine, Tuesday, May 10, 2022. Bogdanov went missing two months ago and his wife Natalia Bogdanova search for him in morgues throughout the Kyiv and Bucha region when his body finally showed up at a morgue in Belaya Tserkov yesterday. The Biden administration announced Monday it is temporarily suspending 232 tariffs on Ukrainian steel for one year in a bid to boost the besieged nation's economic strength.
Natalia Bogdanova Attends Her Husband Eugene's Funeral in Bucha, Ukraine - 10 May 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK101495120_007
NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg: Ukrainerin an der Beerdigung ihres getöteten Mannes Eugene in Bucha
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI/Shutterstock (12934265f)
Father Andrii Gavalin, presides over the funeral of Eugene Bogdanov, 35, in Bucha, Ukraine, Tuesday, May 10, 2022. Bogdanov went missing two months ago, as his wife Natalia Bogdanova searched for him in morgues throughout the Kyiv and Buch regions when his body finally showed up at a morgue in Belaya Tserkov yesterday. The Biden administration announced Monday it is temporarily suspending 232 tariffs on Ukrainian steel for one year in a bid to boost the besieged nation's economic strength.
Natalia Bogdanova Attends Her Husband Eugene's Funeral in Bucha, Ukraine - 10 May 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK101495120_006
NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg: Ukrainerin an der Beerdigung ihres getöteten Mannes Eugene in Bucha
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI/Shutterstock (12934265e)
Natalia Bogdanova, right, touches the cross at the end of the funeral for her late husband Eugene Bogdanov, 35, in Bucha, Ukraine, Tuesday, May 10, 2022. Bogdanova's husband went missing two months ago and has been searching for him in morgues across the Bucha and Kyiv area since. The Biden administration announced Monday it is temporarily suspending 232 tariffs on Ukrainian steel for one year in a bid to boost the besieged nation's economic strength.
Natalia Bogdanova Attends Her Husband Eugene's Funeral in Bucha, Ukraine - 10 May 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK101495120_005
NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg: Ukrainerin an der Beerdigung ihres getöteten Mannes Eugene in Bucha
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI/Shutterstock (12934265g)
Father Andrii Gavalin, presides over the funeral of Eugene Bogdanov, 35, in Bucha, Ukraine, Tuesday, May 10, 2022. Bogdanov went missing two months ago, as his wife Natalia Bogdanova searched for him in morgues throughout the Kyiv and Buch regions when his body finally showed up at a morgue in Belaya Tserkov yesterday. The Biden administration announced Monday it is temporarily suspending 232 tariffs on Ukrainian steel for one year in a bid to boost the besieged nation's economic strength.
Natalia Bogdanova Attends Her Husband Eugene's Funeral in Bucha, Ukraine - 10 May 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK101495120_004
NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg: Ukrainerin an der Beerdigung ihres getöteten Mannes Eugene in Bucha
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI/Shutterstock (12934265b)
Oksana Antuhova, left, throws dirt onto her brother-in-law Eugene Bogdanov's casket, following the funeral in Bucha, Ukraine, Tuesday, May 10, 2022. Bogdanova's husband went missing two months ago and has been searching for him in morgues across the Bucha and Kyiv area since. The Biden administration announced Monday it is temporarily suspending 232 tariffs on Ukrainian steel for one year in a bid to boost the besieged nation's economic strength.
Natalia Bogdanova Attends Her Husband Eugene's Funeral in Bucha, Ukraine - 10 May 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK101495120_003
NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg: Ukrainerin an der Beerdigung ihres getöteten Mannes Eugene in Bucha
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI/Shutterstock (12934265d)
Natalia Bogdanova, walks away from the coffin of her late husband Eugene Bogdanov, 35, in Bucha, Ukraine, Tuesday, May 10, 2022. Bogdanova's husband went missing two months ago and has been searching for him in morgues across the Bucha and Kyiv regions since. His body finally showed up at a morgue in Belaya Tserkov yesterday. The Biden administration announced Monday it is temporarily suspending 232 tariffs on Ukrainian steel for one year in a bid to boost the besieged nation's economic strength.
Natalia Bogdanova Attends Her Husband Eugene's Funeral in Bucha, Ukraine - 10 May 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK101495120_002
NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg: Ukrainerin an der Beerdigung ihres getöteten Mannes Eugene in Bucha
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI/Shutterstock (12934265c)
Natalia Bogdanova, inspects the bodybag containing her decomposed husband Eugene Bogdanov, 35, at his funeral in Bucha, Ukraine, Tuesday, May 10, 2022. Bogdanova's husband went missing two months ago and has been searching for him in morgues across the Bucha area since. The Biden administration announced Monday it is temporarily suspending 232 tariffs on Ukrainian steel for one year in a bid to boost the besieged nation's economic strength.
Natalia Bogdanova Attends Her Husband Eugene's Funeral in Bucha, Ukraine - 10 May 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUK101495120_001
NEWS - Ukraine-Krieg: Ukrainerin an der Beerdigung ihres getöteten Mannes Eugene in Bucha
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ken Cedeno/UPI/Shutterstock (12934265a)
Father Andrii Gavalin, presides over the funeral of Eugene Bogdanov, 35, in Bucha, Ukraine, Tuesday, May 10, 2022. Bogdanov went missing two months ago, as his wife Natalia Bogdanova searched for him in morgues throughout the Kyiv and Buch regions when his body finally showed up at a morgue in Belaya Tserkov yesterday. The Biden administration announced Monday it is temporarily suspending 232 tariffs on Ukrainian steel for one year in a bid to boost the besieged nation's economic strength.
Natalia Bogdanova Attends Her Husband Eugene's Funeral in Bucha, Ukraine - 10 May 2022
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_132709853_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709852_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709850_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709849_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709848_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709847_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709845_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709844_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709843_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709842_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709839_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709838_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709837_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / 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)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709784_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / 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)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709783_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / 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)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709782_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / 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)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_132709780_EYE
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today.
Queues before dawn at St Thomas's Hospital for the booster today. After Boris Johnson announced booster jabs would be offered to everyone over 18 in England from this week, queues have been forming outside vaccination centres.
© Jeremy Selwyn / Evening Standard / 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)
© Evening Standard / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUK10138808_023
ROYALS - BILDER DES JAHRES: Auswahl von Rex/Shutterstock
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (10785297n)
Catherine Duchess of Cambridge spending the day learning about the importance of parent-powered initiatives, hearing from families and key organisations about the ways in which peer support can help boost parent wellbeing. Here, Her Royal Highness in Battersea Park listening directly to parents about their experiences of parent-to-parent support.
Catherine Duchess of Cambridge learning about parent-powered initiatives, Battersea Park, London, UK - 22 Sep 2020
Wearing Ralph Lauren, Top
(c) Dukas -
DUK10021773_006
PEOPLE - Kris Jenner trägt eine Bomberjacke
*EXCLUSIVE* Calabasas, CA - Kris Jenner was spotted grabbing some sushi for lunch near her home. The momager was just in Colorado with her children, sans Rob Kardashian, for a quick snowy getaway. The matriarch was dressed head to toe in black, perfect for a gloomy rainy day. She wore a Yeezus tour bomber, and a pair of Yeezy 750 Boosts. Kris' only son, Rob, got engaged to girlfriend Blac Chyna, and there is no word yet on what she or the rest of the Kardashians sisters think about it just yet.
AKM-GSI April 9, 2016
To License These Photos, Please Contact :
Steve Ginsburg
(310) 505-8447
(323) 423-9397
steve@akmgsi.com
sales@akmgsi.com
or
Maria Buda
(917) 242-1505
mbuda@akmgsi.com
ginsburgspalyinc@gmail.com (FOTO: DUKAS/GINSBURG-SPALY)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10021773_001
PEOPLE - Kris Jenner trägt eine Bomberjacke
*EXCLUSIVE* Calabasas, CA - Kris Jenner was spotted grabbing some sushi for lunch near her home. The momager was just in Colorado with her children, sans Rob Kardashian, for a quick snowy getaway. The matriarch was dressed head to toe in black, perfect for a gloomy rainy day. She wore a Yeezus tour bomber, and a pair of Yeezy 750 Boosts. Kris' only son, Rob, got engaged to girlfriend Blac Chyna, and there is no word yet on what she or the rest of the Kardashians sisters think about it just yet.
AKM-GSI April 9, 2016
To License These Photos, Please Contact :
Steve Ginsburg
(310) 505-8447
(323) 423-9397
steve@akmgsi.com
sales@akmgsi.com
or
Maria Buda
(917) 242-1505
mbuda@akmgsi.com
ginsburgspalyinc@gmail.com (FOTO: DUKAS/GINSBURG-SPALY)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10021773_004
PEOPLE - Kris Jenner trägt eine Bomberjacke
*EXCLUSIVE* Calabasas, CA - Kris Jenner was spotted grabbing some sushi for lunch near her home. The momager was just in Colorado with her children, sans Rob Kardashian, for a quick snowy getaway. The matriarch was dressed head to toe in black, perfect for a gloomy rainy day. She wore a Yeezus tour bomber, and a pair of Yeezy 750 Boosts. Kris' only son, Rob, got engaged to girlfriend Blac Chyna, and there is no word yet on what she or the rest of the Kardashians sisters think about it just yet.
AKM-GSI April 9, 2016
To License These Photos, Please Contact :
Steve Ginsburg
(310) 505-8447
(323) 423-9397
steve@akmgsi.com
sales@akmgsi.com
or
Maria Buda
(917) 242-1505
mbuda@akmgsi.com
ginsburgspalyinc@gmail.com (FOTO: DUKAS/GINSBURG-SPALY)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10021773_003
PEOPLE - Kris Jenner trägt eine Bomberjacke
*EXCLUSIVE* Calabasas, CA - Kris Jenner was spotted grabbing some sushi for lunch near her home. The momager was just in Colorado with her children, sans Rob Kardashian, for a quick snowy getaway. The matriarch was dressed head to toe in black, perfect for a gloomy rainy day. She wore a Yeezus tour bomber, and a pair of Yeezy 750 Boosts. Kris' only son, Rob, got engaged to girlfriend Blac Chyna, and there is no word yet on what she or the rest of the Kardashians sisters think about it just yet.
AKM-GSI April 9, 2016
To License These Photos, Please Contact :
Steve Ginsburg
(310) 505-8447
(323) 423-9397
steve@akmgsi.com
sales@akmgsi.com
or
Maria Buda
(917) 242-1505
mbuda@akmgsi.com
ginsburgspalyinc@gmail.com (FOTO: DUKAS/GINSBURG-SPALY)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10021773_002
PEOPLE - Kris Jenner trägt eine Bomberjacke
*EXCLUSIVE* Calabasas, CA - Kris Jenner was spotted grabbing some sushi for lunch near her home. The momager was just in Colorado with her children, sans Rob Kardashian, for a quick snowy getaway. The matriarch was dressed head to toe in black, perfect for a gloomy rainy day. She wore a Yeezus tour bomber, and a pair of Yeezy 750 Boosts. Kris' only son, Rob, got engaged to girlfriend Blac Chyna, and there is no word yet on what she or the rest of the Kardashians sisters think about it just yet.
AKM-GSI April 9, 2016
To License These Photos, Please Contact :
Steve Ginsburg
(310) 505-8447
(323) 423-9397
steve@akmgsi.com
sales@akmgsi.com
or
Maria Buda
(917) 242-1505
mbuda@akmgsi.com
ginsburgspalyinc@gmail.com (FOTO: DUKAS/GINSBURG-SPALY)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10021773_005
PEOPLE - Kris Jenner trägt eine Bomberjacke
*EXCLUSIVE* Calabasas, CA - Kris Jenner was spotted grabbing some sushi for lunch near her home. The momager was just in Colorado with her children, sans Rob Kardashian, for a quick snowy getaway. The matriarch was dressed head to toe in black, perfect for a gloomy rainy day. She wore a Yeezus tour bomber, and a pair of Yeezy 750 Boosts. Kris' only son, Rob, got engaged to girlfriend Blac Chyna, and there is no word yet on what she or the rest of the Kardashians sisters think about it just yet.
AKM-GSI April 9, 2016
To License These Photos, Please Contact :
Steve Ginsburg
(310) 505-8447
(323) 423-9397
steve@akmgsi.com
sales@akmgsi.com
or
Maria Buda
(917) 242-1505
mbuda@akmgsi.com
ginsburgspalyinc@gmail.com (FOTO: DUKAS/GINSBURG-SPALY)
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_52844827_EXC
Landmines afghanistan
Landmines afghanistan
Exclusive Text and photos: Ton Koene/Exclusivepix Media
Afghanistan is one big minefield. An estimated 10 million mines are spread over the country. Grazing lands, waterways, schools, paths, villages and cities are infested with mainly Anti-personal mines. Landmines were predominantly placed during the civil war in the nineties when Russia fought the Mujehadien freedom fighters. Mine clearance teams in Afghanistan report finding literally dozens of types of landmines, mainly from the ex-USSR, but also from Belgium, Italy, US and the UK. The most infamous mine used during the Soviet Union's occupation period was the so-called 'butterfly' mine. Helicopter crews dropped untold numbers (figures range into the millions) of the small mines from the air. They were designed to flutter to the ground without exploding, and to thousands of children they resembled butterflys or toys. Several demining organisations are working in various places inside Afghanistan but demining is a very slow process. It takes weeks to clear a small piece of land as deminers go inch by inch. Despite the international efforts to demine parts of Afghanistan, it will take another few hundred years to make Afghanistan mine free, at the speed it is going right now. Every day, dozens of civilians across Afghanistan, often children step on landmines and loose limbs or even die. In Afghanistan, accurate and exhaustive figures of the disabled population are not available. Those with mobility impairments could be around one million, of whom approximately 50,000 to 100,000 are limb amputees and their number is constantly increasing. ICRC is the main organization dealing with these victims. Not only providing emergency assistance to mine victims in hospitals, but also to support these victims during recovery in the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul. Here victims receive prostheses and extensive physical rehabilitation. After months of rehab, most of them are able to find
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_52844826_EXC
Landmines afghanistan
Landmines afghanistan
Exclusive Text and photos: Ton Koene/Exclusivepix Media
Afghanistan is one big minefield. An estimated 10 million mines are spread over the country. Grazing lands, waterways, schools, paths, villages and cities are infested with mainly Anti-personal mines. Landmines were predominantly placed during the civil war in the nineties when Russia fought the Mujehadien freedom fighters. Mine clearance teams in Afghanistan report finding literally dozens of types of landmines, mainly from the ex-USSR, but also from Belgium, Italy, US and the UK. The most infamous mine used during the Soviet Union's occupation period was the so-called 'butterfly' mine. Helicopter crews dropped untold numbers (figures range into the millions) of the small mines from the air. They were designed to flutter to the ground without exploding, and to thousands of children they resembled butterflys or toys. Several demining organisations are working in various places inside Afghanistan but demining is a very slow process. It takes weeks to clear a small piece of land as deminers go inch by inch. Despite the international efforts to demine parts of Afghanistan, it will take another few hundred years to make Afghanistan mine free, at the speed it is going right now. Every day, dozens of civilians across Afghanistan, often children step on landmines and loose limbs or even die. In Afghanistan, accurate and exhaustive figures of the disabled population are not available. Those with mobility impairments could be around one million, of whom approximately 50,000 to 100,000 are limb amputees and their number is constantly increasing. ICRC is the main organization dealing with these victims. Not only providing emergency assistance to mine victims in hospitals, but also to support these victims during recovery in the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul. Here victims receive prostheses and extensive physical rehabilitation. After months of rehab, most of them are able to find
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_52844825_EXC
Landmines afghanistan
Landmines afghanistan
Exclusive Text and photos: Ton Koene/Exclusivepix Media
Afghanistan is one big minefield. An estimated 10 million mines are spread over the country. Grazing lands, waterways, schools, paths, villages and cities are infested with mainly Anti-personal mines. Landmines were predominantly placed during the civil war in the nineties when Russia fought the Mujehadien freedom fighters. Mine clearance teams in Afghanistan report finding literally dozens of types of landmines, mainly from the ex-USSR, but also from Belgium, Italy, US and the UK. The most infamous mine used during the Soviet Union's occupation period was the so-called 'butterfly' mine. Helicopter crews dropped untold numbers (figures range into the millions) of the small mines from the air. They were designed to flutter to the ground without exploding, and to thousands of children they resembled butterflys or toys. Several demining organisations are working in various places inside Afghanistan but demining is a very slow process. It takes weeks to clear a small piece of land as deminers go inch by inch. Despite the international efforts to demine parts of Afghanistan, it will take another few hundred years to make Afghanistan mine free, at the speed it is going right now. Every day, dozens of civilians across Afghanistan, often children step on landmines and loose limbs or even die. In Afghanistan, accurate and exhaustive figures of the disabled population are not available. Those with mobility impairments could be around one million, of whom approximately 50,000 to 100,000 are limb amputees and their number is constantly increasing. ICRC is the main organization dealing with these victims. Not only providing emergency assistance to mine victims in hospitals, but also to support these victims during recovery in the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul. Here victims receive prostheses and extensive physical rehabilitation. After months of rehab, most of them are able to find
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_52844824_EXC
Landmines afghanistan
Landmines afghanistan
Exclusive Text and photos: Ton Koene/Exclusivepix Media
Afghanistan is one big minefield. An estimated 10 million mines are spread over the country. Grazing lands, waterways, schools, paths, villages and cities are infested with mainly Anti-personal mines. Landmines were predominantly placed during the civil war in the nineties when Russia fought the Mujehadien freedom fighters. Mine clearance teams in Afghanistan report finding literally dozens of types of landmines, mainly from the ex-USSR, but also from Belgium, Italy, US and the UK. The most infamous mine used during the Soviet Union's occupation period was the so-called 'butterfly' mine. Helicopter crews dropped untold numbers (figures range into the millions) of the small mines from the air. They were designed to flutter to the ground without exploding, and to thousands of children they resembled butterflys or toys. Several demining organisations are working in various places inside Afghanistan but demining is a very slow process. It takes weeks to clear a small piece of land as deminers go inch by inch. Despite the international efforts to demine parts of Afghanistan, it will take another few hundred years to make Afghanistan mine free, at the speed it is going right now. Every day, dozens of civilians across Afghanistan, often children step on landmines and loose limbs or even die. In Afghanistan, accurate and exhaustive figures of the disabled population are not available. Those with mobility impairments could be around one million, of whom approximately 50,000 to 100,000 are limb amputees and their number is constantly increasing. ICRC is the main organization dealing with these victims. Not only providing emergency assistance to mine victims in hospitals, but also to support these victims during recovery in the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul. Here victims receive prostheses and extensive physical rehabilitation. After months of rehab, most of them are able to find
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_52844823_EXC
Landmines afghanistan
Landmines afghanistan
Exclusive Text and photos: Ton Koene/Exclusivepix Media
Afghanistan is one big minefield. An estimated 10 million mines are spread over the country. Grazing lands, waterways, schools, paths, villages and cities are infested with mainly Anti-personal mines. Landmines were predominantly placed during the civil war in the nineties when Russia fought the Mujehadien freedom fighters. Mine clearance teams in Afghanistan report finding literally dozens of types of landmines, mainly from the ex-USSR, but also from Belgium, Italy, US and the UK. The most infamous mine used during the Soviet Union's occupation period was the so-called 'butterfly' mine. Helicopter crews dropped untold numbers (figures range into the millions) of the small mines from the air. They were designed to flutter to the ground without exploding, and to thousands of children they resembled butterflys or toys. Several demining organisations are working in various places inside Afghanistan but demining is a very slow process. It takes weeks to clear a small piece of land as deminers go inch by inch. Despite the international efforts to demine parts of Afghanistan, it will take another few hundred years to make Afghanistan mine free, at the speed it is going right now. Every day, dozens of civilians across Afghanistan, often children step on landmines and loose limbs or even die. In Afghanistan, accurate and exhaustive figures of the disabled population are not available. Those with mobility impairments could be around one million, of whom approximately 50,000 to 100,000 are limb amputees and their number is constantly increasing. ICRC is the main organization dealing with these victims. Not only providing emergency assistance to mine victims in hospitals, but also to support these victims during recovery in the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul. Here victims receive prostheses and extensive physical rehabilitation. After months of rehab, most of them are able to find
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_52844822_EXC
Landmines afghanistan
Landmines afghanistan
Exclusive Text and photos: Ton Koene/Exclusivepix Media
Afghanistan is one big minefield. An estimated 10 million mines are spread over the country. Grazing lands, waterways, schools, paths, villages and cities are infested with mainly Anti-personal mines. Landmines were predominantly placed during the civil war in the nineties when Russia fought the Mujehadien freedom fighters. Mine clearance teams in Afghanistan report finding literally dozens of types of landmines, mainly from the ex-USSR, but also from Belgium, Italy, US and the UK. The most infamous mine used during the Soviet Union's occupation period was the so-called 'butterfly' mine. Helicopter crews dropped untold numbers (figures range into the millions) of the small mines from the air. They were designed to flutter to the ground without exploding, and to thousands of children they resembled butterflys or toys. Several demining organisations are working in various places inside Afghanistan but demining is a very slow process. It takes weeks to clear a small piece of land as deminers go inch by inch. Despite the international efforts to demine parts of Afghanistan, it will take another few hundred years to make Afghanistan mine free, at the speed it is going right now. Every day, dozens of civilians across Afghanistan, often children step on landmines and loose limbs or even die. In Afghanistan, accurate and exhaustive figures of the disabled population are not available. Those with mobility impairments could be around one million, of whom approximately 50,000 to 100,000 are limb amputees and their number is constantly increasing. ICRC is the main organization dealing with these victims. Not only providing emergency assistance to mine victims in hospitals, but also to support these victims during recovery in the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul. Here victims receive prostheses and extensive physical rehabilitation. After months of rehab, most of them are able to find
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_52844821_EXC
Landmines afghanistan
Landmines afghanistan
Exclusive Text and photos: Ton Koene/Exclusivepix Media
Afghanistan is one big minefield. An estimated 10 million mines are spread over the country. Grazing lands, waterways, schools, paths, villages and cities are infested with mainly Anti-personal mines. Landmines were predominantly placed during the civil war in the nineties when Russia fought the Mujehadien freedom fighters. Mine clearance teams in Afghanistan report finding literally dozens of types of landmines, mainly from the ex-USSR, but also from Belgium, Italy, US and the UK. The most infamous mine used during the Soviet Union's occupation period was the so-called 'butterfly' mine. Helicopter crews dropped untold numbers (figures range into the millions) of the small mines from the air. They were designed to flutter to the ground without exploding, and to thousands of children they resembled butterflys or toys. Several demining organisations are working in various places inside Afghanistan but demining is a very slow process. It takes weeks to clear a small piece of land as deminers go inch by inch. Despite the international efforts to demine parts of Afghanistan, it will take another few hundred years to make Afghanistan mine free, at the speed it is going right now. Every day, dozens of civilians across Afghanistan, often children step on landmines and loose limbs or even die. In Afghanistan, accurate and exhaustive figures of the disabled population are not available. Those with mobility impairments could be around one million, of whom approximately 50,000 to 100,000 are limb amputees and their number is constantly increasing. ICRC is the main organization dealing with these victims. Not only providing emergency assistance to mine victims in hospitals, but also to support these victims during recovery in the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul. Here victims receive prostheses and extensive physical rehabilitation. After months of rehab, most of them are able to find
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_52844818_EXC
Landmines afghanistan
Landmines afghanistan
Exclusive Text and photos: Ton Koene/Exclusivepix Media
Afghanistan is one big minefield. An estimated 10 million mines are spread over the country. Grazing lands, waterways, schools, paths, villages and cities are infested with mainly Anti-personal mines. Landmines were predominantly placed during the civil war in the nineties when Russia fought the Mujehadien freedom fighters. Mine clearance teams in Afghanistan report finding literally dozens of types of landmines, mainly from the ex-USSR, but also from Belgium, Italy, US and the UK. The most infamous mine used during the Soviet Union's occupation period was the so-called 'butterfly' mine. Helicopter crews dropped untold numbers (figures range into the millions) of the small mines from the air. They were designed to flutter to the ground without exploding, and to thousands of children they resembled butterflys or toys. Several demining organisations are working in various places inside Afghanistan but demining is a very slow process. It takes weeks to clear a small piece of land as deminers go inch by inch. Despite the international efforts to demine parts of Afghanistan, it will take another few hundred years to make Afghanistan mine free, at the speed it is going right now. Every day, dozens of civilians across Afghanistan, often children step on landmines and loose limbs or even die. In Afghanistan, accurate and exhaustive figures of the disabled population are not available. Those with mobility impairments could be around one million, of whom approximately 50,000 to 100,000 are limb amputees and their number is constantly increasing. ICRC is the main organization dealing with these victims. Not only providing emergency assistance to mine victims in hospitals, but also to support these victims during recovery in the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul. Here victims receive prostheses and extensive physical rehabilitation. After months of rehab, most of them are able to find
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_52844816_EXC
Landmines afghanistan
Landmines afghanistan
Exclusive Text and photos: Ton Koene/Exclusivepix Media
Afghanistan is one big minefield. An estimated 10 million mines are spread over the country. Grazing lands, waterways, schools, paths, villages and cities are infested with mainly Anti-personal mines. Landmines were predominantly placed during the civil war in the nineties when Russia fought the Mujehadien freedom fighters. Mine clearance teams in Afghanistan report finding literally dozens of types of landmines, mainly from the ex-USSR, but also from Belgium, Italy, US and the UK. The most infamous mine used during the Soviet Union's occupation period was the so-called 'butterfly' mine. Helicopter crews dropped untold numbers (figures range into the millions) of the small mines from the air. They were designed to flutter to the ground without exploding, and to thousands of children they resembled butterflys or toys. Several demining organisations are working in various places inside Afghanistan but demining is a very slow process. It takes weeks to clear a small piece of land as deminers go inch by inch. Despite the international efforts to demine parts of Afghanistan, it will take another few hundred years to make Afghanistan mine free, at the speed it is going right now. Every day, dozens of civilians across Afghanistan, often children step on landmines and loose limbs or even die. In Afghanistan, accurate and exhaustive figures of the disabled population are not available. Those with mobility impairments could be around one million, of whom approximately 50,000 to 100,000 are limb amputees and their number is constantly increasing. ICRC is the main organization dealing with these victims. Not only providing emergency assistance to mine victims in hospitals, but also to support these victims during recovery in the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul. Here victims receive prostheses and extensive physical rehabilitation. After months of rehab, most of them are able to find
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_52844814_EXC
Landmines afghanistan
Landmines afghanistan
Exclusive Text and photos: Ton Koene/Exclusivepix Media
Afghanistan is one big minefield. An estimated 10 million mines are spread over the country. Grazing lands, waterways, schools, paths, villages and cities are infested with mainly Anti-personal mines. Landmines were predominantly placed during the civil war in the nineties when Russia fought the Mujehadien freedom fighters. Mine clearance teams in Afghanistan report finding literally dozens of types of landmines, mainly from the ex-USSR, but also from Belgium, Italy, US and the UK. The most infamous mine used during the Soviet Union's occupation period was the so-called 'butterfly' mine. Helicopter crews dropped untold numbers (figures range into the millions) of the small mines from the air. They were designed to flutter to the ground without exploding, and to thousands of children they resembled butterflys or toys. Several demining organisations are working in various places inside Afghanistan but demining is a very slow process. It takes weeks to clear a small piece of land as deminers go inch by inch. Despite the international efforts to demine parts of Afghanistan, it will take another few hundred years to make Afghanistan mine free, at the speed it is going right now. Every day, dozens of civilians across Afghanistan, often children step on landmines and loose limbs or even die. In Afghanistan, accurate and exhaustive figures of the disabled population are not available. Those with mobility impairments could be around one million, of whom approximately 50,000 to 100,000 are limb amputees and their number is constantly increasing. ICRC is the main organization dealing with these victims. Not only providing emergency assistance to mine victims in hospitals, but also to support these victims during recovery in the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul. Here victims receive prostheses and extensive physical rehabilitation. After months of rehab, most of them are able to find
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_52844812_EXC
Landmines afghanistan
Landmines afghanistan
Exclusive Text and photos: Ton Koene/Exclusivepix Media
Afghanistan is one big minefield. An estimated 10 million mines are spread over the country. Grazing lands, waterways, schools, paths, villages and cities are infested with mainly Anti-personal mines. Landmines were predominantly placed during the civil war in the nineties when Russia fought the Mujehadien freedom fighters. Mine clearance teams in Afghanistan report finding literally dozens of types of landmines, mainly from the ex-USSR, but also from Belgium, Italy, US and the UK. The most infamous mine used during the Soviet Union's occupation period was the so-called 'butterfly' mine. Helicopter crews dropped untold numbers (figures range into the millions) of the small mines from the air. They were designed to flutter to the ground without exploding, and to thousands of children they resembled butterflys or toys. Several demining organisations are working in various places inside Afghanistan but demining is a very slow process. It takes weeks to clear a small piece of land as deminers go inch by inch. Despite the international efforts to demine parts of Afghanistan, it will take another few hundred years to make Afghanistan mine free, at the speed it is going right now. Every day, dozens of civilians across Afghanistan, often children step on landmines and loose limbs or even die. In Afghanistan, accurate and exhaustive figures of the disabled population are not available. Those with mobility impairments could be around one million, of whom approximately 50,000 to 100,000 are limb amputees and their number is constantly increasing. ICRC is the main organization dealing with these victims. Not only providing emergency assistance to mine victims in hospitals, but also to support these victims during recovery in the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul. Here victims receive prostheses and extensive physical rehabilitation. After months of rehab, most of them are able to find
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_52844811_EXC
Landmines afghanistan
Landmines afghanistan
Exclusive Text and photos: Ton Koene/Exclusivepix Media
Afghanistan is one big minefield. An estimated 10 million mines are spread over the country. Grazing lands, waterways, schools, paths, villages and cities are infested with mainly Anti-personal mines. Landmines were predominantly placed during the civil war in the nineties when Russia fought the Mujehadien freedom fighters. Mine clearance teams in Afghanistan report finding literally dozens of types of landmines, mainly from the ex-USSR, but also from Belgium, Italy, US and the UK. The most infamous mine used during the Soviet Union's occupation period was the so-called 'butterfly' mine. Helicopter crews dropped untold numbers (figures range into the millions) of the small mines from the air. They were designed to flutter to the ground without exploding, and to thousands of children they resembled butterflys or toys. Several demining organisations are working in various places inside Afghanistan but demining is a very slow process. It takes weeks to clear a small piece of land as deminers go inch by inch. Despite the international efforts to demine parts of Afghanistan, it will take another few hundred years to make Afghanistan mine free, at the speed it is going right now. Every day, dozens of civilians across Afghanistan, often children step on landmines and loose limbs or even die. In Afghanistan, accurate and exhaustive figures of the disabled population are not available. Those with mobility impairments could be around one million, of whom approximately 50,000 to 100,000 are limb amputees and their number is constantly increasing. ICRC is the main organization dealing with these victims. Not only providing emergency assistance to mine victims in hospitals, but also to support these victims during recovery in the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul. Here victims receive prostheses and extensive physical rehabilitation. After months of rehab, most of them are able to find
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_52844809_EXC
Landmines afghanistan
Landmines afghanistan
Exclusive Text and photos: Ton Koene/Exclusivepix Media
Afghanistan is one big minefield. An estimated 10 million mines are spread over the country. Grazing lands, waterways, schools, paths, villages and cities are infested with mainly Anti-personal mines. Landmines were predominantly placed during the civil war in the nineties when Russia fought the Mujehadien freedom fighters. Mine clearance teams in Afghanistan report finding literally dozens of types of landmines, mainly from the ex-USSR, but also from Belgium, Italy, US and the UK. The most infamous mine used during the Soviet Union's occupation period was the so-called 'butterfly' mine. Helicopter crews dropped untold numbers (figures range into the millions) of the small mines from the air. They were designed to flutter to the ground without exploding, and to thousands of children they resembled butterflys or toys. Several demining organisations are working in various places inside Afghanistan but demining is a very slow process. It takes weeks to clear a small piece of land as deminers go inch by inch. Despite the international efforts to demine parts of Afghanistan, it will take another few hundred years to make Afghanistan mine free, at the speed it is going right now. Every day, dozens of civilians across Afghanistan, often children step on landmines and loose limbs or even die. In Afghanistan, accurate and exhaustive figures of the disabled population are not available. Those with mobility impairments could be around one million, of whom approximately 50,000 to 100,000 are limb amputees and their number is constantly increasing. ICRC is the main organization dealing with these victims. Not only providing emergency assistance to mine victims in hospitals, but also to support these victims during recovery in the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul. Here victims receive prostheses and extensive physical rehabilitation. After months of rehab, most of them are able to find
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_52844808_EXC
Landmines afghanistan
Landmines afghanistan
Exclusive Text and photos: Ton Koene/Exclusivepix Media
Afghanistan is one big minefield. An estimated 10 million mines are spread over the country. Grazing lands, waterways, schools, paths, villages and cities are infested with mainly Anti-personal mines. Landmines were predominantly placed during the civil war in the nineties when Russia fought the Mujehadien freedom fighters. Mine clearance teams in Afghanistan report finding literally dozens of types of landmines, mainly from the ex-USSR, but also from Belgium, Italy, US and the UK. The most infamous mine used during the Soviet Union's occupation period was the so-called 'butterfly' mine. Helicopter crews dropped untold numbers (figures range into the millions) of the small mines from the air. They were designed to flutter to the ground without exploding, and to thousands of children they resembled butterflys or toys. Several demining organisations are working in various places inside Afghanistan but demining is a very slow process. It takes weeks to clear a small piece of land as deminers go inch by inch. Despite the international efforts to demine parts of Afghanistan, it will take another few hundred years to make Afghanistan mine free, at the speed it is going right now. Every day, dozens of civilians across Afghanistan, often children step on landmines and loose limbs or even die. In Afghanistan, accurate and exhaustive figures of the disabled population are not available. Those with mobility impairments could be around one million, of whom approximately 50,000 to 100,000 are limb amputees and their number is constantly increasing. ICRC is the main organization dealing with these victims. Not only providing emergency assistance to mine victims in hospitals, but also to support these victims during recovery in the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul. Here victims receive prostheses and extensive physical rehabilitation. After months of rehab, most of them are able to find
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX -
DUKAS_52844806_EXC
Landmines afghanistan
Landmines afghanistan
Exclusive Text and photos: Ton Koene/Exclusivepix Media
Afghanistan is one big minefield. An estimated 10 million mines are spread over the country. Grazing lands, waterways, schools, paths, villages and cities are infested with mainly Anti-personal mines. Landmines were predominantly placed during the civil war in the nineties when Russia fought the Mujehadien freedom fighters. Mine clearance teams in Afghanistan report finding literally dozens of types of landmines, mainly from the ex-USSR, but also from Belgium, Italy, US and the UK. The most infamous mine used during the Soviet Union's occupation period was the so-called 'butterfly' mine. Helicopter crews dropped untold numbers (figures range into the millions) of the small mines from the air. They were designed to flutter to the ground without exploding, and to thousands of children they resembled butterflys or toys. Several demining organisations are working in various places inside Afghanistan but demining is a very slow process. It takes weeks to clear a small piece of land as deminers go inch by inch. Despite the international efforts to demine parts of Afghanistan, it will take another few hundred years to make Afghanistan mine free, at the speed it is going right now. Every day, dozens of civilians across Afghanistan, often children step on landmines and loose limbs or even die. In Afghanistan, accurate and exhaustive figures of the disabled population are not available. Those with mobility impairments could be around one million, of whom approximately 50,000 to 100,000 are limb amputees and their number is constantly increasing. ICRC is the main organization dealing with these victims. Not only providing emergency assistance to mine victims in hospitals, but also to support these victims during recovery in the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul. Here victims receive prostheses and extensive physical rehabilitation. After months of rehab, most of them are able to find
DUKAS/EXCLUSIVEPIX
