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Daily Life In Bangkok, Thailand
A mother boards the public bus with her son in Bangkok, Thailand, on October 20, 2025. (Photo by Matt Hunt/NurPhoto) -
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Child Accident With Balance Bike
A child sits with his mother after falling from a small balance bike on a paved walkway in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on March 21, 2022. The pink bike lies on the ground nearby as the mother comforts her child following the minor accident. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
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Woman With Child And Balloons By The Lake
A woman holds a child while standing with two blue balloons by the lakeside in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on September 28, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
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(FILE) Millie Bobby Brown and Husband Jake Bongiovi Welcome First Baby Together
(FILE) Millie Bobby Brown and Husband Jake Bongiovi Welcome First Baby Together. The couple announced they welcomed their first baby via adoption on Instagram on Thursday, August 21, 2025. MANHATTAN, NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK, USA - OCTOBER 27: American actor Jake Bongiovi and girlfriend/British actress Millie Bobby Brown wearing Louis Vuitton arrive at the World Premiere Of Netflix's 'Enola Holmes 2' held at The Paris Theater on October 27, 2022 in Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States. (Photo by Jordan Hinton/Image Press Agency/NurPhoto) -
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Newly Sworn-In President Karol Nawrocki Signs Tax Initiative In Kolbuszowa
KOLBUSZOWA, POLAND – AUGUST 8:
Newly sworn-in President of Poland, Karol Nawrocki, signs a legislative initiative on the zero PIT (personal income tax) project for families with two or more children during a meeting with residents in Kolbuszowa, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, Poland, on August 8, 2025. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto) -
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Newly Sworn-In President Karol Nawrocki Signs Tax Initiative In Kolbuszowa
KOLBUSZOWA, POLAND – AUGUST 8:
Newly sworn-in President of Poland, Karol Nawrocki, signs a legislative initiative on the zero PIT (personal income tax) project for families with two or more children during a meeting with residents in Kolbuszowa, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, Poland, on August 8, 2025. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto) -
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Newly Sworn-In President Karol Nawrocki Signs Tax Initiative In Kolbuszowa
KOLBUSZOWA, POLAND – AUGUST 8:
Newly sworn-in President of Poland, Karol Nawrocki, signs a legislative initiative on the zero PIT (personal income tax) project for families with two or more children during a meeting with residents in Kolbuszowa, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, Poland, on August 8, 2025. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto) -
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Newly Sworn-In President Karol Nawrocki Signs Tax Initiative In Kolbuszowa
KOLBUSZOWA, POLAND – AUGUST 8:
Newly sworn-in President of Poland, Karol Nawrocki, signs a legislative initiative on the zero PIT (personal income tax) project for families with two or more children during a meeting with residents in Kolbuszowa, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, Poland, on August 8, 2025. (Photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto) -
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Experience: I carried a twin in each of my wombs. The medical staff had never seen anything like it. They told us the chances were one in 50 million
Experience - Kelly Fairhurst discovered that she has two wombs, when she was having her third child. She conceived twins one in each womb. This is medically very rare, with the chance being 50 million to one of it happening.
"The day I gave birth, there were 24 people in the room, most of them fascinated medical students. At 10.11am they watched as my daughter, Bonnie, came into the world, and five minutes later they saw Watson emerge, from my other womb. The twins were not our first children. Our eldest daughter, Agyness, was born two months early, in 2015, but doctors said early labour was Òone of those thingsÓ. When I became pregnant with Margot, born six weeks early, in 2017, scans revealed a bicornuate uterus, which means itÕs heart-shaped. But no one spotted the second one."
Pictured: Kelly Fairhurst with the twins, Bonnie and Watson.
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DUKAS_123602977_EYE
Experience: I carried a twin in each of my wombs. The medical staff had never seen anything like it. They told us the chances were one in 50 million
Experience - Kelly Fairhurst discovered that she has two wombs, when she was having her third child. She conceived twins one in each womb. This is medically very rare, with the chance being 50 million to one of it happening.
"The day I gave birth, there were 24 people in the room, most of them fascinated medical students. At 10.11am they watched as my daughter, Bonnie, came into the world, and five minutes later they saw Watson emerge, from my other womb. The twins were not our first children. Our eldest daughter, Agyness, was born two months early, in 2015, but doctors said early labour was Òone of those thingsÓ. When I became pregnant with Margot, born six weeks early, in 2017, scans revealed a bicornuate uterus, which means itÕs heart-shaped. But no one spotted the second one."
Pictured: Kelly Fairhurst with the twins, Bonnie and Watson.
© Amit Lennon / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_123602978_EYE
Experience: I carried a twin in each of my wombs. The medical staff had never seen anything like it. They told us the chances were one in 50 million
Experience - Kelly Fairhurst discovered that she has two wombs, when she was having her third child. She conceived twins one in each womb. This is medically very rare, with the chance being 50 million to one of it happening.
"The day I gave birth, there were 24 people in the room, most of them fascinated medical students. At 10.11am they watched as my daughter, Bonnie, came into the world, and five minutes later they saw Watson emerge, from my other womb. The twins were not our first children. Our eldest daughter, Agyness, was born two months early, in 2015, but doctors said early labour was Òone of those thingsÓ. When I became pregnant with Margot, born six weeks early, in 2017, scans revealed a bicornuate uterus, which means itÕs heart-shaped. But no one spotted the second one."
Pictured: Kelly Fairhurst with her partner Josh, their twins, Bonnie and Watson, and older daughters Agyness and Margot.
© Amit Lennon / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_123602975_EYE
Experience: I carried a twin in each of my wombs. The medical staff had never seen anything like it. They told us the chances were one in 50 million
Experience - Kelly Fairhurst discovered that she has two wombs, when she was having her third child. She conceived twins one in each womb. This is medically very rare, with the chance being 50 million to one of it happening.
"The day I gave birth, there were 24 people in the room, most of them fascinated medical students. At 10.11am they watched as my daughter, Bonnie, came into the world, and five minutes later they saw Watson emerge, from my other womb. The twins were not our first children. Our eldest daughter, Agyness, was born two months early, in 2015, but doctors said early labour was Òone of those thingsÓ. When I became pregnant with Margot, born six weeks early, in 2017, scans revealed a bicornuate uterus, which means itÕs heart-shaped. But no one spotted the second one."
Pictured: Kelly Fairhurst with her partner Josh, their twins, Bonnie and Watson, and older daughters Agyness (left) and Margot.
© Amit Lennon / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_123602976_EYE
Experience: I carried a twin in each of my wombs. The medical staff had never seen anything like it. They told us the chances were one in 50 million
Experience - Kelly Fairhurst discovered that she has two wombs, when she was having her third child. She conceived twins one in each womb. This is medically very rare, with the chance being 50 million to one of it happening.
"The day I gave birth, there were 24 people in the room, most of them fascinated medical students. At 10.11am they watched as my daughter, Bonnie, came into the world, and five minutes later they saw Watson emerge, from my other womb. The twins were not our first children. Our eldest daughter, Agyness, was born two months early, in 2015, but doctors said early labour was Òone of those thingsÓ. When I became pregnant with Margot, born six weeks early, in 2017, scans revealed a bicornuate uterus, which means itÕs heart-shaped. But no one spotted the second one."
Pictured: Kelly Fairhurst with her partner Josh, their twins, Bonnie and Watson, and older daughters Agyness and Margot.
© Amit Lennon / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
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Working from home Covid-19 pandemic
Father playing with one year old baby whilst simultaneously trying to work from home during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Posed by model.
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DUKAS_119709817_EYE
Working from home Covid-19 pandemic
Father playing with one year old baby whilst simultaneously trying to work from home during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Posed by model.
© Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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‘I wanted to meet a mate and have a baby without wasting time’: the rise of platonic co-parenting. They’re ready to start a family, but can’t wait for The One. As ‘mating’ sites boom under lockdown, we meet those hoping
‘I wanted to meet a mate and have a baby without wasting time’: the rise of platonic co-parenting. They’re ready to start a family, but can’t wait for The One. As ‘mating’ sites boom under lockdown, we meet those hoping for a better way to raise a child.
Jenica Anderson and Stephan DuVal, with their daughter
© Matthew Hamon / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_119658111_EYE
‘I wanted to meet a mate and have a baby without wasting time’: the rise of platonic co-parenting. They’re ready to start a family, but can’t wait for The One. As ‘mating’ sites boom under lockdown, we meet those hoping
‘I wanted to meet a mate and have a baby without wasting time’: the rise of platonic co-parenting. They’re ready to start a family, but can’t wait for The One. As ‘mating’ sites boom under lockdown, we meet those hoping for a better way to raise a child.
Jenica Anderson and Stephan DuVal, with their daughter
© Matthew Hamon / Guardian / eyevine
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‘I wanted to meet a mate and have a baby without wasting time’: the rise of platonic co-parenting. They’re ready to start a family, but can’t wait for The One. As ‘mating’ sites boom under lockdown, we meet those hoping
‘I wanted to meet a mate and have a baby without wasting time’: the rise of platonic co-parenting. They’re ready to start a family, but can’t wait for The One. As ‘mating’ sites boom under lockdown, we meet those hoping for a better way to raise a child.
Jenica Anderson and Stephan DuVal, with their daughter
© Matthew Hamon / Guardian / eyevine
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© Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119658113_EYE
‘I wanted to meet a mate and have a baby without wasting time’: the rise of platonic co-parenting. They’re ready to start a family, but can’t wait for The One. As ‘mating’ sites boom under lockdown, we meet those hoping
‘I wanted to meet a mate and have a baby without wasting time’: the rise of platonic co-parenting. They’re ready to start a family, but can’t wait for The One. As ‘mating’ sites boom under lockdown, we meet those hoping for a better way to raise a child.
Jenica Anderson and Stephan DuVal, with their daughter
© Matthew Hamon / Guardian / eyevine
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© Guardian / eyevine
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‘I lost my baby then I lost my job’ – one mother’s fight to change working rights. Amy McKeown explains why her traumatic experience has inspired her to campaign for better employment protection for women.
Amy Mckeown photographed at her home in London. Amy Mckeown is campaigning for the law to be changed regarding women who suffer miscarriages not being able to be made redundant. McKeown is photographed at her home in London.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
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‘I lost my baby then I lost my job’ – one mother’s fight to change working rights. Amy McKeown explains why her traumatic experience has inspired her to campaign for better employment protection for women.
Amy Mckeown photographed at her home in London. Amy Mckeown is campaigning for the law to be changed regarding women who suffer miscarriages not being able to be made redundant. McKeown is photographed at her home in London.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_106665099_EYE
‘I lost my baby then I lost my job’ – one mother’s fight to change working rights. Amy McKeown explains why her traumatic experience has inspired her to campaign for better employment protection for women.
Amy Mckeown photographed at her home in London. Amy Mckeown is campaigning for the law to be changed regarding women who suffer miscarriages not being able to be made redundant. McKeown is photographed at her home in London.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_106668704_EYE
‘I lost my baby then I lost my job’ – one mother’s fight to change working rights. Amy McKeown explains why her traumatic experience has inspired her to campaign for better employment protection for women.
Amy Mckeown photographed at her home in London. Amy Mckeown is campaigning for the law to be changed regarding women who suffer miscarriages not being able to be made redundant. McKeown is photographed at her home in London.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_106665105_EYE
‘I lost my baby then I lost my job’ – one mother’s fight to change working rights. Amy McKeown explains why her traumatic experience has inspired her to campaign for better employment protection for women.
Amy Mckeown photographed at her home in London. Amy Mckeown is campaigning for the law to be changed regarding women who suffer miscarriages not being able to be made redundant. McKeown is photographed at her home in London.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_106665104_EYE
‘I lost my baby then I lost my job’ – one mother’s fight to change working rights. Amy McKeown explains why her traumatic experience has inspired her to campaign for better employment protection for women.
Amy Mckeown photographed at her home in London. Amy Mckeown is campaigning for the law to be changed regarding women who suffer miscarriages not being able to be made redundant. McKeown is photographed at her home in London.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
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‘I lost my baby then I lost my job’ – one mother’s fight to change working rights. Amy McKeown explains why her traumatic experience has inspired her to campaign for better employment protection for women.
Amy Mckeown photographed at her home in London. Amy Mckeown is campaigning for the law to be changed regarding women who suffer miscarriages not being able to be made redundant. McKeown is photographed at her home in London.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_106665101_EYE
‘I lost my baby then I lost my job’ – one mother’s fight to change working rights. Amy McKeown explains why her traumatic experience has inspired her to campaign for better employment protection for women.
Amy Mckeown photographed at her home in London. Amy Mckeown is campaigning for the law to be changed regarding women who suffer miscarriages not being able to be made redundant. McKeown is photographed at her home in London.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_106665102_EYE
‘I lost my baby then I lost my job’ – one mother’s fight to change working rights. Amy McKeown explains why her traumatic experience has inspired her to campaign for better employment protection for women.
Amy Mckeown photographed at her home in London. Amy Mckeown is campaigning for the law to be changed regarding women who suffer miscarriages not being able to be made redundant. McKeown is photographed at her home in London.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_106668702_EYE
‘I lost my baby then I lost my job’ – one mother’s fight to change working rights. Amy McKeown explains why her traumatic experience has inspired her to campaign for better employment protection for women.
Amy Mckeown photographed at her home in London. Amy Mckeown is campaigning for the law to be changed regarding women who suffer miscarriages not being able to be made redundant. McKeown is photographed at her home in London.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_106668703_EYE
‘I lost my baby then I lost my job’ – one mother’s fight to change working rights. Amy McKeown explains why her traumatic experience has inspired her to campaign for better employment protection for women.
Amy Mckeown photographed at her home in London. Amy Mckeown is campaigning for the law to be changed regarding women who suffer miscarriages not being able to be made redundant. McKeown is photographed at her home in London.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_106665103_EYE
‘I lost my baby then I lost my job’ – one mother’s fight to change working rights. Amy McKeown explains why her traumatic experience has inspired her to campaign for better employment protection for women.
Amy Mckeown photographed at her home in London. Amy Mckeown is campaigning for the law to be changed regarding women who suffer miscarriages not being able to be made redundant. McKeown is photographed at her home in London.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_106665098_EYE
‘I lost my baby then I lost my job’ – one mother’s fight to change working rights. Amy McKeown explains why her traumatic experience has inspired her to campaign for better employment protection for women.
Amy Mckeown photographed at her home in London. Amy Mckeown is campaigning for the law to be changed regarding women who suffer miscarriages not being able to be made redundant. McKeown is photographed at her home in London.
© Antonio Olmos / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUK10054417_046
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar at school in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344539
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_042
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar with her boyfriend Rubén in her bedroom at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344541
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_040
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar with her boyfriend Rubén, during an ultra sound, at the Mexfam's clinic in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344547
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_038
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar at school in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344534
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_037
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar with her boyfriend Rubén in her bedroom at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344540
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_032
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xhunaxhi Rosalía Santiago López (R) portrayed with her mother Antonia López Guerra (L) at their home in Santa María Xadani, Oaxaca, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Xhunaxhi – her name means “virgin” in Zapotec – is 14 and lives with her 18-year-old partner and her mother, who had her own first child aged 17, in the town of Santa María Xadani in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Xhunaxhi, who speaks little Spanish, is painfully shy and childlike and punctuates her comments with giggles. She is five months pregnant, but seems not to really understand – she has to ask her mother when her baby is due. She left school at 10 to travel with her family to Tepic, in the western state of Nayarit, for six-month stints working cutting sugar cane. She met her boyfriend last year, keeping the relationship secret from her mother, and was “stolen”, according to the Zapotec tradition. She plans to marry legally at 18. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344536
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_031
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar portrayed in her bedroom at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344548
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_030
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar at school in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344533
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_028
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xhunaxhi Rosalía Santiago López (C) portrayed with her partner Rolando Luis López (L) and her mother Antonia López Guerra (R) at their home in Santa María Xadani, Oaxaca, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Xhunaxhi – her name means “virgin” in Zapotec – is 14 and lives with her 18-year-old partner and her mother, who had her own first child aged 17, in the town of Santa María Xadani in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Xhunaxhi, who speaks little Spanish, is painfully shy and childlike and punctuates her comments with giggles. She is five months pregnant, but seems not to really understand – she has to ask her mother when her baby is due. She left school at 10 to travel with her family to Tepic, in the western state of Nayarit, for six-month stints working cutting sugar cane. She met her boyfriend last year, keeping the relationship secret from her mother, and was “stolen”, according to the Zapotec tradition. She plans to marry legally at 18. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344530
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_027
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar at school in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344538
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_026
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar at school in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344537
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_020
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar portrayed in her bedroom at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344543
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_013
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xhunaxhi Rosalía Santiago López (C) portrayed with her partner Rolando Luis López (L) and her mother Antonia López Guerra (R) at their home in Santa María Xadani, Oaxaca, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Xhunaxhi – her name means “virgin” in Zapotec – is 14 and lives with her 18-year-old partner and her mother, who had her own first child aged 17, in the town of Santa María Xadani in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Xhunaxhi, who speaks little Spanish, is painfully shy and childlike and punctuates her comments with giggles. She is five months pregnant, but seems not to really understand – she has to ask her mother when her baby is due. She left school at 10 to travel with her family to Tepic, in the western state of Nayarit, for six-month stints working cutting sugar cane. She met her boyfriend last year, keeping the relationship secret from her mother, and was “stolen”, according to the Zapotec tradition. She plans to marry legally at 18. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344531
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_011
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar portrayed in her bedroom at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344546
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_009
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar with her boyfriend Rubén, during an ultra sound, at the Mexfam's clinic in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344545
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_007
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar with her boyfriend Rubén, during an ultra sound, at the Mexfam's clinic in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344549
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_003
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar with her boyfriend Rubén in her bedroom at her home in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344542
(c) Dukas -
DUK10054417_002
REPORTAGE - Schwangere Teenager in Mexiko
Xochiquetzal Sánchez Escobar at school in Juchitán, Mexico on February 18, 2016. Despite her teenage rebel style, Xochi, as she is known, dressed in the traditional Zapotec style for her engagement party. She is 17 and five months pregnant. The daughter of a single-mother former missionary and nun, Xochi says she had always talked about having a baby in her teens because she thought her mother was old when she had her at 28. She kept her pregnancy secret from her mother until February. After the baby - a boy, David Mateo - is born in June, she plans to move with her boyfriend to a house where they will live together and he will have his tattoo studio, and they plan to marry next June. She plans to finish her final year of secondary school in the town of El Espinal in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca next year, with her mother looking after the baby in the mornings while she is in class. Being a schoolgirl housewife does not worry her, she says, although she admits she cannot cook. Her grandmother, who lives with the family, is thrilled at the prospect of a great-grandchild. Xochi dreams of giving birth in water, but is not sure that will happen. While Mexico has outlawed marriage under the age of 18, many young girls become unofficial wives and mothers much earlier. In Juchitán, teenage pregnancy is expected, even prized. Mexico ranks first in teenage pregnancies among the member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (Photo by Bénédicte Desrus) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 19344535
(c) Dukas
