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"Alain Prost"
541 professional editorial images found
#13074328
8 December 2025
Alain Prost ahead of the Formula 1 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix at Yas Marina Circuit in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates on December 7, 2025.
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#13074327
8 December 2025
Alain Prost ahead of the Formula 1 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix at Yas Marina Circuit in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates on December 7, 2025.
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#13050949
2 December 2025
A unionist walks by a poster reading 'Paper, Press, Work, Edition'. Called by some trade unions, hundreds of people take to the streets in Toulouse, France, on December 2, 2025, against Macron's economics and budget austerity, both national budget and social security budget. It launches at the beginning of the summer on social networks against the Macron government's push for downsizing the welfare state, cutting taxes for businesses, rising the Defense budget and Interior ministry, and his choice of conservative Sebastien Lecornu as the new Prime Minister. His pro-business stance angers French people.
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Highway A69: Rare Hearing At The Administrative Court Of Appeal Of Toulouse For The Recusal Of Three Judges
28 November 2025
#13035678
28 November 2025
A poster reads 'Lawyers Environment' inside the Administrative Court of Appeal of Toulouse. A rare hearing takes place in the Administrative Court of Appeal of Toulouse: plaintiffs against the A69 are joined by the SAF (Union of French Lawyers) to request the recusal of two judges of the panel who participated in a ruling reauthorizing the continuation of works on the planned A69 highway. Plaintiffs have already asked these judges to recuse themselves, and they refused. Plaintiffs go to the Administrative Court of Appeal, stating these judges must be recused to protect the confidence of French citizens in the administrative courts and the entire judicial system. Lawyers also plead for the impartiality of justice. More than a dozen lawyers are present, as this is a very rare case in the French justice system. According to custom, if a judge has already judged a case, he recuses himself if the same case goes to court again. The main association 'La Voie est Libre' (i.e., 'The Way is Free') wants the construction of the highway to be stopped until all judicial decisions on the content are given. Opponents of this project say that the reprofiling of the N126 will be sufficient for the 6,000 vehicles planned per day and would cost far less money. The A69 highway costs EUR512 million (in 2018 euros without inflation) for 54 kilometers. This takes place in Toulouse, France, on November 28, 2025.
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Highway A69: Rare Hearing At The Administrative Court Of Appeal Of Toulouse For The Recusal Of Three Judges
28 November 2025
#13035682
28 November 2025
A poster reads 'Lawyers Environment' inside the Administrative Court of Appeal. A rare hearing takes place in the Administrative Court of Appeal of Toulouse, France, on November 28, 2025. Plaintiffs against the A69 are joined by the SAF (Union of French Lawyers) to request the recusal of two judges of the panel who participated in a ruling reauthorizing the continuation of works on the planned A69 highway. Plaintiffs have already asked these judges to recuse themselves, and they refused. Plaintiffs go to the Administrative Court of Appeal, stating these judges must be recused to protect the confidence of French citizens in the administrative courts and the entire judicial system. Lawyers also plead for the impartiality of justice. More than a dozen lawyers are present as this is a very rare case in the French justice system. According to custom, if a judge has already judged a case, he recuses himself if the same case goes again in courts. The main association 'La Voie est Libre' (i.e., 'The Way is Free'), opponents want the building of the highway to stop until all judicial decisions on the content are given. Opponents of this project say that the reprofiling of the N126 is sufficient for the 6,000 vehicles planned per day and would cost far less money. The A69 highway costs EUR512 million (in 2018 euros without inflation) for 54 kilometers.
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#12850193
11 October 2025
Various feminist and pro-choice protest signs, including slogans such as ''Pro Choice,'' ''Autonomie fur alle! (Autonomy for all!),'' ''Smash the patriarchy,'' ''Abort the patriarchy,'' ''Girls just wanna have fun-damental human rights,'' and ''Make feminism a threat,'' are displayed during a feminist counter-protest against the Christian fundamentalist ''March of 1000 Crosses'' in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 11, 2025. The placards call for gender equality, reproductive rights, and resistance to patriarchal structures.
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#12850196
11 October 2025
A cardboard sign with the slogan ''Girls just wanna have fun-damental human rights'' is displayed during a feminist counter-protest against the Christian fundamentalist ''March of 1000 Crosses'' in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 11, 2025. The message calls for women's rights, equality, and reproductive freedom.
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#12850198
11 October 2025
A protester holds a cardboard sign reading ''Abort the Patriarchy'' during a feminist counter-protest against the Christian fundamentalist ''March of 1000 Crosses'' in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 11, 2025. The demonstration advocates for abortion rights, gender equality, and women's autonomy.
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#12850199
11 October 2025
A banner with the slogan ''Make feminism a threat'' lies on the ground during a feminist counter-protest against the Christian fundamentalist ''March of 1000 Crosses'' in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on October 11, 2025. The protest advocates for women's rights, gender equality, and reproductive freedom.
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#12848972
11 October 2025
Newcastle head coach Alan Dickens speaks to the press after Newcastle's defeat at Sale during the Gallagher Prem Rugby match between Sale Sharks and Newcastle Red Bulls at AJ Bell Stadium in Eccles, on October 10, 2025.
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#12848973
11 October 2025
Newcastle Head Coach Alan Dickens speaks to the press after the defeat at Sale during the Gallagher Premiership Rugby match between Sale Sharks and Newcastle Red Bulls at AJ Bell Stadium in Eccles, on October 10, 2025.
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#12562511
17 July 2025
A stop sign stands in front of a church tower in Zagreb, Croatia, on April 28, 2023.
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#12544067
10 July 2025
Alain Berset, Secretary General of the Council of Europe, and Giorgia Meloni, Italian Prime Minister, participate in the Ukraine Recovery Conference 2025 in Rome, Italy, on June 10, 2025, at the La Nuvola Convention Center.
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#12536580
7 July 2025
Deposed Nepali King Gyanendra Shah (center) addresses the media at his private residence in Kathmandu, Nepal, on July 7, 2025, on his birthday. The 79-year-old deposed monarch comes to power for the second time in 2001 following the royal massacre where the entire family of his brother, Birendra Bir Bikram Shah, is assassinated. In 2005, Gyanendra Shah stages a royal coup, taking over all power, dissolving the parliament and cabinet, and ordering political leaders to be kept under house arrest. A year later, following a mass uprising, Gyanendra, unable to face international pressure, steps down from the post, reinstating the parliament. The successful movement, which changes the political landscape of the Himalayan nation buffered between India and China, is called the ''People's Movement II.'' Gyanendra at the time tries to suppress the movement by deploying all levels of security forces, resulting in the death of 18 people over a span of 19 days and injuring more than 4,000, which mainly includes children, as per the record of Human Rights Watch in 2006. It is then that the insurgent CPN-Maoist comes to mainstream politics in Nepal, ending a decade-long insurgency by signing a comprehensive peace accord on November 21, 2006. Two years after abolishing the nearly two-and-a-half-century-old monarchy system, the Himalayan nation becomes a republic and a secular state on May 28, 2008. Within less than two decades into the new practice of governance, the Himalayan nation is now divided into two factions of pro and anti-monarchs. The monarch of the Himalayan nation follows the lineage of the Shah dynasty and is revered as an incarnation of the Hindu god Bishnu. With the abolishment of the monarchy, it becomes limited to a very small group, which now again is reemerging.
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#12536581
7 July 2025
Deposed Nepali King Gyanendra Shah (center) addresses the media at his private residence in Kathmandu, Nepal, on July 7, 2025, on his birthday. The 79-year-old deposed monarch comes to power for the second time in 2001 following the royal massacre where the entire family of his brother, Birendra Bir Bikram Shah, is assassinated. In 2005, Gyanendra Shah stages a royal coup, taking over all power, dissolving the parliament and cabinet, and ordering political leaders to be kept under house arrest. A year later, following a mass uprising, Gyanendra, unable to face international pressure, steps down from the post, reinstating the parliament. The successful movement, which changes the political landscape of the Himalayan nation buffered between India and China, is called the ''People's Movement II.'' Gyanendra at the time tries to suppress the movement by deploying all levels of security forces, resulting in the death of 18 people over a span of 19 days and injuring more than 4,000, which mainly includes children, as per the record of Human Rights Watch in 2006. It is then that the insurgent CPN-Maoist comes to mainstream politics in Nepal, ending a decade-long insurgency by signing a comprehensive peace accord on November 21, 2006. Two years after abolishing the nearly two-and-a-half-century-old monarchy system, the Himalayan nation becomes a republic and a secular state on May 28, 2008. Within less than two decades into the new practice of governance, the Himalayan nation is now divided into two factions of pro and anti-monarchs. The monarch of the Himalayan nation follows the lineage of the Shah dynasty and is revered as an incarnation of the Hindu god Bishnu. With the abolishment of the monarchy, it becomes limited to a very small group, which now again is reemerging.
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#12536582
7 July 2025
Deposed Nepali King Gyanendra Shah (left) addresses the media at his private residence in Kathmandu, Nepal, on July 7, 2025, on his birthday. The 79-year-old deposed monarch comes to power for the second time in 2001 following the royal massacre where the entire family of his brother, Birendra Bir Bikram Shah, is assassinated. In 2005, Gyanendra Shah stages a royal coup, taking over all power, dissolving the parliament and cabinet, and ordering political leaders to be kept under house arrest. A year later, following a mass uprising, Gyanendra, unable to face international pressure, steps down from the post, reinstating the parliament. The successful movement, which changes the political landscape of the Himalayan nation buffered between India and China, is called the ''People's Movement II.'' Gyanendra at the time tries to suppress the movement by deploying all levels of security forces, resulting in the death of 18 people over a span of 19 days and injuring more than 4,000, which mainly includes children, as per the record of Human Rights Watch in 2006. It is then that the insurgent CPN-Maoist comes to mainstream politics in Nepal, ending a decade-long insurgency by signing a comprehensive peace accord on November 21, 2006. Two years after abolishing the nearly two-and-a-half-century-old monarchy system, the Himalayan nation becomes a republic and a secular state on May 28, 2008. Within less than two decades into the new practice of governance, the Himalayan nation is now divided into two factions of pro and anti-monarchs. The monarch of the Himalayan nation follows the lineage of the Shah dynasty and is revered as an incarnation of the Hindu god Bishnu. With the abolishment of the monarchy, it becomes limited to a very small group, which now again is reemerging.
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