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"Visual simulation"
314 professional editorial images found
#4017296
19 March 2019
People seen going to their workplace as construction workers working on a road in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Tuesday 19 march 2019. Dhaka was named the second most polluted capital city in the world in 2018, according to a study by IQ air visual, a swiss-based group that gather air quality data globally. The situation is very serious as the experts says. The five of top 10 causes of death in Bangladesh are related to air pollution.
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#4017298
19 March 2019
People seen going to their workplace as construction workers working on a road in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Tuesday 19 march 2019. Dhaka was named the second most polluted capital city in the world in 2018, according to a study by IQ air visual, a swiss-based group that gather air quality data globally. The situation is very serious as the experts says. The five of top 10 causes of death in Bangladesh are related to air pollution.
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#3957526
10 March 2019
People are going to their workplace in a morning in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Sunday, 07 March 2019. Dhaka was named the second most polluted capital city in the world in 2018, according to a study by IQ Air Visual, a Swiss-based group that gather air quality data globally. The situation is very serious as the experts says. The five of the top 10 causes of death in Bangladesh are related to air pollution.
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#3957530
10 March 2019
Schoolgirls seen holding their nose as they cross a smokey road in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Sunday, 07 March 2019. Dhaka was named the second most polluted capital city in the world in 2018, according to a study by IQ Air Visual, a Swiss-based group that gather air quality data globally. The situation is very serious as the experts says. The five of the top 10 causes of death in Bangladesh are related to air pollution.
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#3957532
10 March 2019
People are going to their workplace in a morning in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Sunday, 07 March 2019. Dhaka was named the second most polluted capital city in the world in 2018, according to a study by IQ Air Visual, a Swiss-based group that gather air quality data globally. The situation is very serious as the experts says. The five of the top 10 causes of death in Bangladesh are related to air pollution.
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#3957536
10 March 2019
People are going to their workplace in a morning in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Sunday, 07 March 2019. Dhaka was named the second most polluted capital city in the world in 2018, according to a study by IQ Air Visual, a Swiss-based group that gather air quality data globally. The situation is very serious as the experts says. The five of the top 10 causes of death in Bangladesh are related to air pollution.
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#3957538
10 March 2019
People are going to their workplace in a morning in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Sunday, 07 March 2019. Dhaka was named the second most polluted capital city in the world in 2018, according to a study by IQ Air Visual, a Swiss-based group that gather air quality data globally. The situation is very serious as the experts says. The five of the top 10 causes of death in Bangladesh are related to air pollution.
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#3957540
10 March 2019
People are going to their workplace in a morning in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Sunday, 07 March 2019. Dhaka was named the second most polluted capital city in the world in 2018, according to a study by IQ Air Visual, a Swiss-based group that gather air quality data globally. The situation is very serious as the experts says. The five of the top 10 causes of death in Bangladesh are related to air pollution.
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#3957542
10 March 2019
People are going to their workplace in a morning in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Sunday, 07 March 2019. Dhaka was named the second most polluted capital city in the world in 2018, according to a study by IQ Air Visual, a Swiss-based group that gather air quality data globally. The situation is very serious as the experts says. The five of the top 10 causes of death in Bangladesh are related to air pollution.
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#3957544
10 March 2019
People are going to their workplace in a morning in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Sunday, 07 March 2019. Dhaka was named the second most polluted capital city in the world in 2018, according to a study by IQ Air Visual, a Swiss-based group that gather air quality data globally. The situation is very serious as the experts says. The five of the top 10 causes of death in Bangladesh are related to air pollution.
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#3957534
10 March 2019
A elderly man (centre) react to the camera as he walks on a Smokey road in Dhaka, Bangladesh on Sunday, 07 March 2019. Dhaka was named the second most polluted capital city in the world in 2018, according to a study by IQ Air Visual, a Swiss-based group that gather air quality data globally. The situation is very serious as the experts says. The five of the top 10 causes of death in Bangladesh are related to air pollution.
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#644550
18 June 2015
Interrupted childhood is a visual journey through the daily life of refugee children, divided and living in six field camps in Bulgaria on June 17, 2015. Attracted by the idea of a less hostile life and hoping to get the documentation that would allow them to travel to other countries in Western Europe, thousands of families, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, endanger their physical integrity in the lush and rough forest that separates Turkey and Bulgaria. However, the reality they discover is different from what they had in mind. They find that Bulgaria, as well as becoming a particular kind of purgatory, is a poor and unequal country, in which many of the common people survive on pensions of 120 euros and monthly salaries of EUR350, and where minorities and disadvantaged groups live in permanent exclusion, sometimes condemned to oblivion and ostracism. As in any conflict or situation of marginality, the first to suffer are the thousands of children, who see their childhood interrupted and deprived of education, which is supposedly guaranteed as a fundamental right, regardless of their legal status, under the UN Convention on Children's Rights, the UN Convention on Refugees of 1951 and the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU.
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#644551
18 June 2015
Interrupted childhood is a visual journey through the daily life of refugee children, divided and living in six field camps in Bulgaria on June 17, 2015. Attracted by the idea of a less hostile life and hoping to get the documentation that would allow them to travel to other countries in Western Europe, thousands of families, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, endanger their physical integrity in the lush and rough forest that separates Turkey and Bulgaria. However, the reality they discover is different from what they had in mind. They find that Bulgaria, as well as becoming a particular kind of purgatory, is a poor and unequal country, in which many of the common people survive on pensions of 120 euros and monthly salaries of EUR350, and where minorities and disadvantaged groups live in permanent exclusion, sometimes condemned to oblivion and ostracism. As in any conflict or situation of marginality, the first to suffer are the thousands of children, who see their childhood interrupted and deprived of education, which is supposedly guaranteed as a fundamental right, regardless of their legal status, under the UN Convention on Children's Rights, the UN Convention on Refugees of 1951 and the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU.
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#644552
18 June 2015
Interrupted childhood is a visual journey through the daily life of refugee children, divided and living in six field camps in Bulgaria on June 17, 2015. Attracted by the idea of a less hostile life and hoping to get the documentation that would allow them to travel to other countries in Western Europe, thousands of families, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, endanger their physical integrity in the lush and rough forest that separates Turkey and Bulgaria. However, the reality they discover is different from what they had in mind. They find that Bulgaria, as well as becoming a particular kind of purgatory, is a poor and unequal country, in which many of the common people survive on pensions of 120 euros and monthly salaries of EUR350, and where minorities and disadvantaged groups live in permanent exclusion, sometimes condemned to oblivion and ostracism. As in any conflict or situation of marginality, the first to suffer are the thousands of children, who see their childhood interrupted and deprived of education, which is supposedly guaranteed as a fundamental right, regardless of their legal status, under the UN Convention on Children's Rights, the UN Convention on Refugees of 1951 and the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU.
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#644553
18 June 2015
Interrupted childhood is a visual journey through the daily life of refugee children, divided and living in six field camps in Bulgaria on June 17, 2015. Attracted by the idea of a less hostile life and hoping to get the documentation that would allow them to travel to other countries in Western Europe, thousands of families, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, endanger their physical integrity in the lush and rough forest that separates Turkey and Bulgaria. However, the reality they discover is different from what they had in mind. They find that Bulgaria, as well as becoming a particular kind of purgatory, is a poor and unequal country, in which many of the common people survive on pensions of 120 euros and monthly salaries of EUR350, and where minorities and disadvantaged groups live in permanent exclusion, sometimes condemned to oblivion and ostracism. As in any conflict or situation of marginality, the first to suffer are the thousands of children, who see their childhood interrupted and deprived of education, which is supposedly guaranteed as a fundamental right, regardless of their legal status, under the UN Convention on Children's Rights, the UN Convention on Refugees of 1951 and the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU.
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#644554
18 June 2015
Interrupted childhood is a visual journey through the daily life of refugee children, divided and living in six field camps in Bulgaria on June 17, 2015. Attracted by the idea of a less hostile life and hoping to get the documentation that would allow them to travel to other countries in Western Europe, thousands of families, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, endanger their physical integrity in the lush and rough forest that separates Turkey and Bulgaria. However, the reality they discover is different from what they had in mind. They find that Bulgaria, as well as becoming a particular kind of purgatory, is a poor and unequal country, in which many of the common people survive on pensions of 120 euros and monthly salaries of EUR350, and where minorities and disadvantaged groups live in permanent exclusion, sometimes condemned to oblivion and ostracism. As in any conflict or situation of marginality, the first to suffer are the thousands of children, who see their childhood interrupted and deprived of education, which is supposedly guaranteed as a fundamental right, regardless of their legal status, under the UN Convention on Children's Rights, the UN Convention on Refugees of 1951 and the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU.
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