SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM OF FENI PAURASHAVA, BANGLADESH.pdf
OCTOBER 2018 - Pictures of the day - Oct. 29 - Oct .31, 2018
1. OCTOBER 2018
Pictures of the day
Oct.29 – Oct.31, 2018
vinhbinh2010
OCTOBER 2018
Pictures of the day
Oct.29 – Oct.31, 2018
Sources : reuters.com , AP images , nbcnews.com , …
PPS by https://ppsnet.wordpress.com
260
slides
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 1
3. The campers, some clad in combat
fatigues, carefully aim their assault
rifles. Their instructor offers advice:
Don’t think of your target as a
human being.
GALLLERY PHOTOS
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4. So when these boys and girls
shoot, they will shoot to kill.
Most are in their teens, but some
are as young as 8 years old. They
are at a summer camp created by
one of the country’s radical
nationalist groups, hidden in a
forest in western Ukraine, that
was visited by The Associated
Press. The camp has two
purposes: to train children to
defend their country from
Russians and their sympathizers
_ and to spread nationalist
ideology.
Young participants of the "Temper of will"
summer camp, organized by the nationalist
Svoboda party, walk to a campsite on July
27, 2018, in a village near Ternopil, Ukraine.
(AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
July27, 2018
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5. Among those challenges: LGBT rights, which lecturers denounce as a sign of
Western decadence.
“You need to be aware of all that,” said instructor Ruslan Andreiko. “All
those gender things, all those perversions of modern Bolsheviks who have
come to power in Europe and now try to make all those LGBT things like gay
pride parades part of the education system.”
While some youths dozed off during lectures, others paid attention. Clearly,
some were receptive.
During a break in training, a teenager played a nationalist march on his
guitar. It was decorated with a sticker showing white bombs hitting a
mosque, under the motto, “White Europe is Our Goal.”
Aside from the lectures _ and songs around the campfire _ life for the
several dozen youths at the Svoboda camp was hard.
Young participants of the "Temper of
will" summer camp, organized by
Svoboda party, carry a tree trunk on July
27, 2018, in a village near Ternopil,
Ukraine. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
July27, 2018
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6. A member of Sokil (Falcon), the
youth wing of the nationalist
Svoboda party, stands in a forest
as he guides participants to the
"Temper of will" summer camp
on July 27, 2018, in a village
near Ternopil, Ukraine. (AP
Photo/Felipe Dana)
July27, 2018
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7. Young participants of the "Temper of
will" summer camp, organized by the
nationalist Svoboda party, gather in-
between exercises on July 27, 2018, in
a village near Ternopil, Ukraine. (AP
Photo/Felipe Dana)
July27, 2018
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8. Vasily Tarashuk, left, gives instructions to
young participants of the "Temper of will"
summer camp, organized by the nationalist
Svoboda party, during an exercise on July 27,
2018, in a village near Ternopil, Ukraine. (AP
Photo/Felipe Dana)
July27, 2018
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9. A young participant of the "Temper
of will" summer camp, organized
by the nationalist Svoboda party,
buttons up a camouflage shirt as
he prepares for an exercise on July
27, 2018, in a village near Ternopil,
Ukraine. Campers as young as 8
years old practice using assault
rifles. They are taught to shoot to
kill Russians and their
sympathizers. (AP Photo/Felipe
Dana)
July27, 2018
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10. A young participant of the "Temper of will" summer camp,
organized by the nationalist Svoboda party, grabs his AK-47
during a tactical exercise on July 28, 2018, in a village near
Ternopil, Ukraine. “We never aim guns at people,” instructor
Yuri “Chornota” Cherkashin tells campers. “But we don’t count
separatists, little green men, occupiers from Moscow as
people, so we can and should aim at them.” (AP Photo/Felipe
Dana)
July28, 2018
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11. Young participants of the "Temper of
will" summer camp, organized by
Svoboda party, lay on the ground with
their AK-47 riffles during a tactical
exercise on July 28, 2018, in a village
near Ternopil, Ukraine. (AP
Photo/Felipe Dana)
July28, 2018
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12. Participants of the "Temper of will"
summer camp, organized by the
nationalist Svoboda party, hold
their AK-47 riffles as they receive
instructions during a tactical
exercise on July 28, 2018, in a
village near Ternopil, Ukraine.
Campers as young as 8 years old
practice using assault rifles. They
are taught to shoot to kill Russians
and their sympathizers. (AP
Photo/Felipe Dana)
July28, 2018
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13. Young participants of the "Temper of
will" summer camp, organized by the
nationalist Svoboda party, receive
instructions on July 28, 2018, in a
village near Ternopil, Ukraine. (AP
Photo/Felipe Dana)
July28, 2018
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14. Young participants and instructors of the
"Temper of will" summer camp, organized
by the nationalist Svoboda party, stand in
formation as they sing the national
anthemn on July 28, 2018, in a village near
Ternopil, Ukraine. Earlier this year, the
Ministry of Youth and Sports earmarked 4
million hryvnias (about $150,000) to fund
some of the youth camps among the
dozens built by the nationalists. (AP
Photo/Felipe Dana)
July28, 2018
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15. Young participants of the "Temper of
will" summer camp, organized by
the nationalist Svoboda party, hold a
plank position before having dinner
on July 28, 2018, in a village near
Ternopil, Ukraine. (AP Photo/Felipe
Dana)
July28, 2018
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16. A young participant of the "Temper of will"
summer camp, organized by the nationalist
Svoboda party, plays a guitar decorated with
a sticker depicting bombs hitting a mosque,
as others sing around a bonfire on July 28,
2018, in a village near Ternopil, Ukraine. (AP
Photo/Felipe Dana)
July28, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 16
17. “We never aim guns at people,” instructor
Yuri “Chornota” Cherkashin tells them. “But
we don’t count separatists, little green men,
occupiers from Moscow as human beings, so
we can and should aim at them.”
The nationalists have been accused of
violence and racism, but they have played a
central, volunteer role in Ukraine’s conflict
with Russia _ and they have maintained links
with the government. Earlier this year, the
Ministry of Youth and Sports earmarked 4
million hryvnias (about $150,000) to fund
some of the youth camps among the dozens
built by the nationalists. The purpose,
according to the ministry, was “national
patriotic education.”
Ministry spokeswoman Natalia Vernigora said
the money is distributed by a panel which
looks “for signs of xenophobia and
discrimination, it doesn’t analyze activities of
specific groups.”
Cherkashin is a veteran of the fight against
pro-Russia separatists in eastern Ukraine; he
was wounded in combat and later came to
lead Sokil, or Falcon, the youth wing of the
Svoboda party. It is important, he says, to
inculcate the nation’s youth with nationalist
thought, so they can battle Vladimir Putin’s
Russia as well as “challenges that could
completely destroy” European civilization.
Yuri Chornota Cherkashin, head of
Sokil, left, and instructor Georgiy
Barylenko, center, point flashlights
on a young participant of the
"Temper of will" summer camp,
organized by Svoboda party during
a night drill on July 29, 2018, in a
village near Ternopil, Ukraine. (AP
Photo/Felipe Dana)
July29, 2018
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18. Campers were awakened in the
middle of the night with a blast from
a stun grenade. Stumbling out of their
tents, soldiers in training struggled to
hold AK-47s that were, in some cases,
almost as tall as they were. They were
required to carry the heavy rifles all
day, and one of the girls broke down
in tears from exhaustion.
At 18, Mykhailo was the oldest of the
campers. The training, he said, was
necessary.
"Every moment things can go wrong
in our country. And one has to be
ready for it,” he said. “That's why I
came to this camp. To study how to
protect myself and my loved ones"
Mykhailo adjusts his AK-47 riffle
after bathing in a river during the
"Temper of will" summer camp,
organized by the nationalist
Svoboda party on July 29, 2018, in a
village near Ternopil, Ukraine. At
18, he is the oldest of the campers.
"Every moment things can go wrong
in our country. And one has to be
ready for it,” he said. “That's why I
came to this camp. To study how to
protect myself and my loved ones."
(AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
July29, 2018
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19. Yuri "Chornota" Cherkashin, head
of Sokil (Falcon), the youth wing of
the nationalist Svoboda party, sits
with his AK-47 rifle at the "Temper
of will" summer camp on July 29,
2018, in a village near Ternopil,
Ukraine. “We never aim guns at
people,” he tells his campers. “But
we don’t count separatists, little
green men, occupiers from
Moscow as people, so we can and
should aim at them.” (AP
Photo/Felipe Dana)
July29, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 19
20. Yuri Chornota Cherkashin, right,
head of Sokil, gives tactical
instructions to young
participants of the "Temper of
will" summer camp, organized
by Svoboda party on July 29,
2018, in a village near Ternopil,
Ukraine. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
July29, 2018
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21. Instructor Georgiy
Barylenko, holds a flare as
he instructs young
participants of the
"Temper of will" summer
camp, organized by the
nationalist Svoboda party,
during a night drill on July
29, 2018, in a village near
Ternopil, Ukraine. (AP
Photo/Felipe Dana)
July29, 2018
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22. Instructor Georgiy Barylenko, left,
holds a flashlight as he walks with a
young participant of the "Temper of
will" summer camp, organized by the
nationalist Svoboda party, during a
night drill on July 29, 2018, in a
village near Ternopil, Ukraine. (AP
Photo/Felipe Dana)
July29, 2018
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23. A young participant of the "Temper of will"
summer camp, organized by the nationalist
Svoboda party, takes position with her
unloaded AK-47 riffle during a night exercise
on July 29, 2018, in a village near Ternopil,
Ukraine. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
TEXT FROM THE AP NEWS STORY,
TRAINING KIDS TO KILL AT
UKRAINIAN NATIONALIST CAMP,
BY YURAS KARMANAU.
PHOTOS BY FELIPE DANA
July29, 2018
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25. Former Honduran policeman
Ivan says he moved homes
so many times to escape the
street gangs that terrorize
his Central American
country that he lost count.
Fearful his sons would have
to join the gangs or be
killed, he eventually joined
thousands of Hondurans
fleeing to the United States.
Sept 28,
2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 25
26. In 2017 there were 42 murders per
100,000 residents in Honduras,
compared to 57 per 100,000 in the prior
year, according to statistics from the
government and the World Bank.
Still, the murder rate in Honduras
remains one of the highest in the world
and catastrophic. Some international
aid organizations such as the Norwegian
Refugee Council operate in the country
with the same precautions as in war
zones, and say inhabitants face the
same dangers.
At the U.S. border barbed wire laid by
soldiers deployed by Trump awaits the
caravan to dissuade the migrants from
crossing illegally. New rules curtailing
asylum claims also increase the chances
they will be deported.
13 JUL 2018. SAN PEDRO SULA, HONDURAS. REUTERS/GORAN TOMASEVIC
A woman cries at a crime scene after
two men were killed in gang violence
July 13,
2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 26
27. A return home terrifies many,
including Ivan. Removed from
his job of 27 years in a police
purge two years ago, he says he
fears death in Honduras.
The purge removed more than
4,000 officers, or close to a third
of what is currently a 14,000
strong force, according to
Commissioner Jair Meza,
spokesperson for the Honduran
Security Ministry.
Ivan says the purge removed
good police as well as bad,
while leaving the former officers
exposed to revenge attacks from
gangs they once pursued.
"They know us and so they hunt
us down," he said.
Meza said police who were
removed were subject to
polygraph tests and background
checks before being selected.
Age and performance were
other considerations.
Police investigate as they stand near the
bodies of two men who were killed by gangs.
24 JUL 2018. SAN PEDRO SULA, HONDURAS. REUTERS/GORAN TOMASEVIC
July 24,
2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 27
28. In Honduras, violence can strike at
any time.
On the cocaine transit corridor to the
nearby port of Puerto Cortes, San
Pedro Sula was for years one of the
world's most dangerous cities. Its
morgue was so full of corpses that
locals said their smell permeated the
streets.
On a night in late July, a family sat
on the side of a highway in San
Pedro Sula, a few feet from a crime
scene.
Fransisca Sislavas sits next to her daughter Brittany
and her son Rony near the vehicle after an
unidentified gunman killed her husband in a taxi.
They were in the car at the time of the killing.
26 JUL 2018. SAN PERDO SULA, HONDURAS. REUTERS/GORAN TOMASEVIC
July 26,
2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 28
32. Nine years later, now 28, he has a young
son, and dreams of leaving the gang. His
home, visited by Reuters, was a rented room
barely wider than his mattress, up a rickety
ladder in the middle of a pigsty. He had
moved up the MS-13 ranks, but remains
mired in poverty.
Fifteen people interviewed by Reuters, either
active in the gangs or in stages of reforming,
described only two ways out: join an
Evangelical church or death.
All of them said they joined the gangs as
boys from broken homes in broken
neighborhoods.
31 JUL 2018. PUERTO CORTES, HONDURAS. REUTERS/GORAN TOMASEVIC
Ramon Bladimir Funes poses for a
photograph in Puerto Cortes jail.
July 31,
2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 32
33. Fransisca Sislavas waited stone-faced
between her son, Rony, 2, and her
daughter, Brittany, 4. The girl's ankle
was splattered with her father's
blood.
Minutes earlier, Sislavas had been
sitting beside her partner and their
children in a taxi. She struggled to
explain his death.
"I don't know. Why? How? I just don't
know," she said.
Sept 20,
2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 33
36. However, their motives echo
others in the caravan and are a
reminder of the influence the
gangs called 'maras' wield across
El Salvador, Honduras and
Guatemala despite almost 20
years of efforts to crush them.
Homicide rates have fallen in
Honduras since 2016, as a
consequence of initiatives that
include prison reform, the creation
of a specialized anti-gang security
force, and increased resources for
law enforcement.
The body of a man killed in gang
violence lies in a pick-up truck.
22 JUL 2018. SAN PEDRO SULA, HONDURAS. REUTERS/GORAN TOMASEVIC
Sept 22,
2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 36
40. For some Hondurans who fail in their pursuit
of the American Dream, deportation can
mean an entrance into gang life.
Henry Fernando, (not pictured), an active
member of MS-13, also known as Mara
Salvatrucha, said he walked more than 3,000
miles and almost died in the desert crossing
from Mexico to find his mother, who had left
him for Virginia.
Quickly deported, MS-13 was the only home
he found, he said, recalling the girlfriends, or
"jainas", that leaders offered, serving as
payment for the marijuana and crack
cocaine he sold. Reuters was not able to
independently verify his story.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
said it was unable to trace Fernando's
deportation based on the information
Reuters was able to provide.
27 SEP 2018. SAN PEDRO SULA, HONDURAS. REUTERS/GORAN TOMASEVIC
Blood is seen on a wall next to Barrio-18 graffiti in a so-called Crazy House.
Sept 27,
2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 40
41. Ramon Bladimir Funes, 35, a member of
Barrio-18 has served nearly three years in
Puerto Cortes jail for robbery in jail. The
overcrowded, lurid-green facility lies near
the northern Honduran port.
Among the jail's older inmates, Funes had
joined Barrio-18 at 9 years old, after his
mother abandoned him for the United
States, he said. He only met his father at 17.
Signs of his gang years were tattooed on his
arms and across his chest. Down the bridge
of his nose were three tears, gang code for
lost loved ones. Three of Funes' sons were
killed by Barrio 18's arch-rival MS-13.
"You aspire to higher ideas and a higher
mindset, but you're stuck in the problems of
the street," said Funes, who regrets joining
Barrio 18. "And weapons, all types, are so
easy to find."
27 SEP 2018. SAN PEDRO SULA, HONDURAS. REUTERS/GORAN TOMASEVIC
The remains of a man lie on the ground on the
outskirts of San Pedro Sula. A member of Barrio-18
said that the man was killed by the gang.
Sept 27,
2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 41
42. 28 SEP 2018. SAN PERDO SULA, HONDURAS. REUTERS/GORAN TOMASEVIC
A young member of Barrio-18 gang gestures as he holds a gun.
Ivan, fearful to tell his story, is watchful for
gang tattoos or slang that might suggest
fellow migrants were associated with his
persecutors back home.
The former policemen said the final straw
in Honduras came when gang members
put a gun to his 15-year-old son Yostin's
head.
They wanted Yostin and younger brother
Julio, 13, to join them, threatening death if
they refused, Ivan said during a break in
the caravan's northward journey at
temporary camp in a Mexico City stadium.
So when a caravan set off on Oct. 13 from
the crime-racked Honduran city of San
Pedro Sula, where the family was hiding
with friends, they never hesitated. Reuters
was not able to independently verify their
story.
Sept 28,
2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 42
44. The 45-year-old, who asked to be
identified only by his first name, is
journeying through Mexico in a
caravan of several thousand mostly
Honduran migrants who are fleeing
violence and poverty for a better
life in the United States.
U.S. President Donald Trump has
declared the caravans an
"invasion," and has sent some
5,800 troops to "harden" the
border, including with barbed wire.
A member of MS-13 street gang looks out from a
house as police patrol outside. The man was
injured during a shoot-out between rival gangs MS-
13 and Barrio 18 and died later of his injuries at a
local hospital, according to a police report.
29 SEP 2018. SAN PERDO SULA, HONDURAS. REUTERS/GORAN TOMASEVIC
Sept 29,
2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 44
51. Across the Oromiya region, many
of those young men claiming
victory now want Abiy to deliver -
and fast. The "Qeerroo", an Oromo
term meaning "bachelor" adopted
by politically active young men,
are demanding answers.
Will there be justice for friends
who died during strikes and
protests over the past three years?
Will their rights as Oromos be
respected? When will Abiy's
pledges of change help their
impoverished communities?
A gravestone for three young people from the
Oromo ethnic group who were allegedly killed by
Ethiopian security forces during protests last year.
16 OCT 2018. AMBO, ETHIOPIA. REUTERS/TIKSA NEGERI
Oct.16, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 51
53. Abiy announced reforms several months
ago but these have stalled in part due to
a spike in ethnic violence.
More than one million people have been
forced to flee their homes since Abiy
took office. In the most serious violence,
Oromo communities have clashed with
other groups.
Acknowledging a breakdown of the rule
of law, the EPRDF said last month:
"Anarchy is witnessed in the country." In
a speech to parliament, Abiy said:
"Lawlessness is the norm these days. It is
something that is testing the
government." He has reshuffled his
cabinet and formed a "Ministry of
Peace".
Gelana Emana (right), 36, the leader of a group of
politically active youth from the Oromo ethnic
group, sits in a cafe with fellow activists Alemu
Kumarra (center), 26, and Dinaol Dandaa, 27.
16 OCT 2018. AMBO, ETHIOPIA. REUTERS/TIKSA NEGERI
Oct16, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 53
54. Proud to be wearing his hair in
an Afro, he spoke bitterly of
how the government had not
allowed Oromos to practice
their culture. Men his age, he
explained, like to wear their
hair in the shape of the "Odaa",
the Oromo word for the
sycamore tree that is significant
as the site of rituals and
meetings to resolve disputes.
Instead, he said: "We were
forced to cut our hair."
Jawar Mohammed (centre) eats
breakfast with his colleagues at his
house.
19 OCT 2018. ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA. REUTERS/TIKSA NEGERI
Oct.19, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 54
55. They were tortured for their political
beliefs. They saw friends shot dead by
security forces. They were forced to cut
their hair and give up other cultural
traditions. This year, they say, they
caused a revolution.
Young men from Ethiopia's Oromo, the
country's largest ethnic group, proudly
declare "we won" when describing their
role in the rise of 42-year-old reformer
Abiy Ahmed, also an Oromo, to become
prime minister.
Youths attend an Oromo Liberation Front rally.
21 OCT 2018. WOLISO, ETHIOPIA. REUTERS/TIKSA NEGERI
Oct.21, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 55
56. Whether Abiy can answer those
demands without favouring his
home region over the rest of the
country will dictate whether the
young men remain an asset to him
or become a dangerous liability.
Before he came to power, the
Oromo youths had already
demonstrated they could shut
down parts of the country with
protests and strikes, and that
pressure on the ruling EPRDF
culminated in the resignation of
Abiy's predecessor in February.
Youths dance during an Oromo Liberation Front rally.
21 OCT 2018. WOLISO, ETHIOPIA. REUTERS/TIKSA NEGER
Oct.21, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 56
57. Even as they celebrate Abiy, the Oromo
youth are still frustrated with life under
the EPRDF, a one-time Marxist-Leninist
movement which has controlled nearly
every aspect of Ethiopians' lives since
seizing power 27 years ago.
Frustration has spilled into violence. In
September, Oromo youths were reported
by Amnesty International to have carried
out deadly mob attacks on other ethnic
groups near Addis Ababa. Police said 28
died.
Youths gather ahead of an Oromo Liberation Front rally.
21 OCT 2018. WOLISO, ETHIOPIA. REUTERS/TIKSA NEGERI
Oct.21, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 57
60. Elsewhere in Oromiya, young men are starting to
challenge the state. They want local officials
sacked and have booed them out of rallies.
"I appreciate Abiy for the reform he brought,
and blame him for not removing those corrupt
and evil killers from their positions and bringing
them to court," said unemployed accountant
Dambal Dejene, 26, at a rally in the town of
Woliso.
Abiy became prime minister in April after the
EPRDF decided reforms were essential for its
survival.
His appointment was a small step towards
breaking the power of the Tigrayan elite who
have controlled the state since they took power
in 1991 and founded the EPRDF as a coalition
with other ethnic political parties.
Youths wearing traditional Oromo costumes
attend an Oromo Liberation Front rally.
21 OCT 2018. WOLISO, ETHIOPIA. REUTERS/TIKSA NEGERI
Oct.21, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 60
61. Asked what they want from the
government, more than a
dozen young Oromo men told
Reuters:
"Freedom."
"No more torture."
"Justice."
"Economic opportunity. Jobs."
"End to corruption and unfair
land deals."
"Respect for our culture.
Dignity."
"Democracy."
"Free and fair elections."
A man wearing traditional Oromo costume rides a
horse during an Oromo Liberation Front rally.
21 OCT 2018. WOLISO, ETHIOPIA. REUTERS/TIKSA NEGERI
Oct.21, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 61
62. But like many young Oromos,
Magarsa Kanaa, a 28-year-old
teacher, said he is still very upset
at the crimes committed by
security forces against his friends.
He named one who was shot dead
at a protest last year, and said he
and other young men "are starting
a committee to seek justice for him
and other guys".
Magarsa Kanaa stands on a hill.
21 OCT 2018. WOLISO, ETHIOPIA. REUTERS/TIKSA NEGERI
Oct.21, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 62
64. "If (Abiy) doesn't move quickly to take full
control of state power, so that he can use it
to answer some of the demands of the youth
... these people will turn against him.
"They think this is their government ... So it's
just a ticking time bomb. We've gotta move
fast," he said, referencing elections that are
due in 2020. He said Abiy "has good
intentions, but he has no plan, no deadline."
Older Oromo politicians agree.
"The youth moved the struggle we have
been undertaking for the last 50 years one
step forward," said Merera Gudina, 62,
leader of the Oromo Federalist Congress.
"The PM makes a lot of promises. If he
cannot walk his talk, then he'll face the
youth, definitely."
Oct.22, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 64
70. Some young Oromos seem emboldened to settle
old ethnic scores, said Felix Horne, Ethiopia
researcher at Human Rights Watch.
"Since Abiy came to power, things have
changed," he said. "The ethno-nationalist
narrative is much more dominant than it used to
be ... a lot of the young Oromos are not willing
to take 'second place'," Horne said.
"The youth have already shown that they can be
very influential. How they choose to be
influential is an important question," said a
senior western diplomat in Addis Ababa. "Their
support, or non-support, for the reform agenda
will directly impact how quickly and how well
the reform agenda succeeds."
Abiy's chief of staff, Fitsum Arega, did not
respond to requests for comment.
A spokesman for Abiy's political party said
changes were needed at the grassroots.
"Anyone who was slapping you, shouting at you,
seeing that face may dissatisfy the people. We
feel it," said Taye Dendea, public affairs head for
the Oromo Democratic Party.
He requested patience from the youths while the
ruling coalition implements change.
Magarsa Kanaa teaches in his classroom.
22 OCT 2018. WOLISO, ETHIOPIA. REUTERS/TIKSA NEGERI
Oct.22, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 70
71. Activist Jawar Mohammed promotes an
"Oromo first" ideology.
The 32-year-old with 1.4 million Facebook
followers returned to Ethiopia in August
from the United States. He told Reuters that
although he used social media to coordinate
Oromo youths in strikes and protests, he also
"built a solid ground network" in every town
in the region. Jawar is the movement's hero.
"Jawar Mohammed is my pride," said
Dambal, the accountant. "He took the
Oromo struggle to the next level. We were
lacking someone to lead the youth ... he
made us line up all together all over
Oromiya and win."
Interviewed in a villa in Addis Ababa
surrounded by bodyguards provided by the
government, Jawar justified Oromo
nationalism: "When the state particularly
represses an ethnic identity, you are forced
to defend it."
But his "Qeerroo" are disciplined, he said,
and will stick to non-violent resistance.
Jwar Mohammed greets his
supporters during his rally.
23 OCT 2018. KEMISE, ETHIOPIA. REUTERS/TIKSA NEGERI
Oct.23, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 71
72. At a rally in the town of Kemise, north of the capital,
Jawar told thousands of young men chanting
"Qeerroo's Father is here!": "Obey Abiy. Don't be
emotional in order to help the reforms." But on social
media, his language is often less restrained.
Speaking to Reuters, he argued that Ethiopia is
experiencing a "promising and terrifying" moment
where the "power of the people" is rising and the
state's legitimacy has collapsed.
"People power" - particularly from the Oromo - is a
strength for Abiy, but rebuilding and controlling the
state is an urgent problem, Jawar said.
Supporters of Jawar Mohammed cheer during his rally.
23 OCT 2018. KEMISE, ETHIOPIA. REUTERS/TIKSA NEGERI
Oct.23, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 72
73. November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 73
74. November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 74
75. November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 75
76. November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 76
77. Men carry a coffin during a funeral, turned into a
protest, for four people who, according to the
mourners, died during clashes on October 17, in the
streets of Port-au-Prince, Haiti. REUTERS/Andres
Martinez Casares
Oct.17, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 77
78. Inside NATO's largest exercises since the Cold War
Reuters / Thursday, October 25,
2018
U.S. Marines with the 24th
Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU)
conduct cold weather training
during NATO's Exercise Trident
Juncture in Iceland. Some 40,000
soldiers from more than 30
countries will take part in the
exercise. Capt. Kylee Ashton/U.S.
Air Force/via REUTERS
Oct.25, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 78
79. Water shoots upward from
blasts during NATO's
Exercise Trident Juncture,
off the Trondheim coast,
Norway. NTB
Scanpix/Gorm Kallestad
via REUTERS
Oct.25, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 79
80. U.S. Marines with the 24th Marine Expeditionary
Unit, deployed during Exercise Trident Juncture,
hike to a cold-weather training site in Iceland.
U.S. Marine Corps/Lance Cpl. Menelik Collins/via
REUTERS
Oct.25, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 80
81. Reuters / Thursday, October
25, 2018
Royal Norwegian Navy Skjold-
class Corvettes HNOMS
Storm and HNMOS Skudd
ride alongside the U.S. Navy
aircraft carrier USS Harry S.
Truman during flight
operations supporting
Exercise Trident off the coast
of Vestfjordern, Norway. U.S.
Navy/Mass Communication
Specialist 2nd Class Thomas
Gooley/via REUTERS
Oct.25, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 81
82. Reuters / Thursday, October 25, 2018
German soldiers from 2 Company Multinational
Engineer Battalion of NATO's Very High
Readiness Joint Task Force, man an M3
Amphibious Rig while conducting river crossing
training during Exercise Trident Juncture at
Camp Roedsmoen in Rena, Norway. Sgt Marc-
Andre Gaudreault/NATO JFC Brunssum
Imagery/via REUTERS
Oct.25, 2018
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83. An F/A-18E Super Hornet launches
from the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier
USS Harry S. Truman in support of
Exercise Trident Juncture in the
Norwegian Sea. U.S. Navy/Mass
Communication Specialist 3rd Class
Adelola Tinubu/via REUTERS
Oct.25, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 83
84. British Army troops of the of the 4th Infantry
Brigade, The Black Rats, take part in Exercise
Trident Juncture near Rena, Norway.
Bundeswehr/via REUTERS
Oct.25, 2018
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85. A V-22 Osprey tiltrotor aircraft makes a
pass during NATO's Exercise Trident
Juncture, seen from Trondheim,
Norway. NTB Scanpix/Gorm Kallestad
via REUTERS
Oct.25, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 85
86. The U.S. Navy assault ship USS Iwo Jima docks
with the U.S. Marines from the 24th Marine
Expeditionary Unit as part of Exercise Trident
Juncture in Faxa Bay, Reykjavik, Iceland. U.S.
Marine Corps/Sgt. Averi Coppa/via REUTERS
Oct.25, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 86
87. Landing craft and a helicopter are
seen during NATO's Exercise
Trident Juncture, off the Trondheim
coast, Norway. NTB Scanpix/Gorm
Kallestad via REUTERS
Oct.25, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 87
88. A Yemeni child suffering from
severe malnutrition is weighed
at a treatment center in a
hospital in Yemen's
northwestern Hajjah province,
on Oct. 25.
The U.N. humanitarian chief
warned on Oct. 23 that 14
million people in Yemen face "a
clear and present danger of an
imminent and great big famine."
— Essa Ahmed / AFP - Getty
Images
Oct.25, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 88
89. Larches are pictured in front of the Mont
Gond on a warm autumn day near a lake
in Derborence, Switzerland, October 25,
2018. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
Oct.25, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 89
90. Migrants, who are part of a caravan from Central
America, rest in Arriaga, Mexico on Oct. 26, 2018.
Many migrants said they felt safer traveling and
sleeping with several thousand strangers in
unknown towns than hiring a smuggler or trying to
make the trip alone.
— Rodrigo Abd / AP
Oct.26, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 90
91. Mexican immigrant Vicky Uriostegui, who
has lived in the U.S. for 27 years, hauls out
water hoses at dawn on a farm on Oct. 27
near Turlock, California.
— Mario Tama / Getty Images
Oct.27, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 91
92. Migrant kiss
Hondurans Israel and Estelle, part of a caravan of
thousands of migrants from Central America en
route to the United States, kiss while bathing in Rio
Novillero in San Pedro Tapanatepec, Mexico, Oct. 27.
— Adrees Latif / Reuters
Oct.27, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 92
93. A child is carried by a member
of Spain's Maritime Rescue
Service as they arrive at the
port of San Roque, southern
Spain, after being rescued in
the Strait of Gibraltar on
Saturday, Oct. 27, 2018. The
organization saved 520 people
trying to cross from Africa to
Spain's shores on Saturday.
Also, one boat with 70
migrants arrived to the Canary
Islands. Over 1,960 people
have died trying to cross the
Mediterranean to Europe this
year, according to the United
Nations. (AP Photo/Marcos
Moreno)
Oct.27, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 93
95. Billboards across Cairo advertise
luxury homes with
“breathtaking” views in
compounds with names like “La
Verde” or “Vinci” in Egypt’s new
capital, under construction in the
desert miles from the Nile-side
city that has been the seat of
power for more than 1,000 years.
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 95
96. This Wednesday, Oct. 18, 2017 photo, shows the
central park in the New Administrative Capital, 45
kilometers (28 miles) east of Cairo, Egypt. (AP
Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)
Oct.18, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
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97. In this Oct. 18, 2017 photo, laborers build the
ministers cabinets and parliament at a construction
site in the New Administrative Capital, 45 kilometers
(28 miles) east of Cairo, Egypt. (AP Photo/Nariman El-
Mofty)
Oct.18, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 97
98. Often, what lies behind the
billboards are Cairo’s most
overcrowded neighborhoods, with
shoddily built homes and dirt roads
frequently inundated with sewage
water.
In this Oct. 23, 2018 photo, billboards promoting
a new residential housing compound overlook a
crowded run-down neighborhood, on the ring
road, in Cairo, Egypt. (AP Photo/Nariman El-
Mofty)
Oct.23, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 98
99. This Oct. 23, 2018 photo shows a
residential billboard advertisement,
in Cairo, Egypt. (AP Photo/Nariman
El-Mofty)Oct.23, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 99
100. In this Oct. 23, 2018 photo, a man walks on
the ring road on a foggy morning, in Cairo,
Egypt. (AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)
Oct.23, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
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101. In this Oct. 23, 2018 photo, people wait for a bus
on the ring road early morning, in Cairo, Egypt.
(AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)
Oct.23, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 101
102. In this Oct. 23, 2018 photo, a man rides his
motorbike as others wait for a bus under a
residential housing compound billboard, in
Cairo, Egypt. (AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)Oct.23, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 102
103. Madbouly denied the new city will only
attract the well-off, saying it is “for all
Egyptians.”
Prices tell a different story. The smallest
apartment there _ 120 square meters _ is
expected to cost 1.3 million Egyptian pounds
($73,000), out of reach for a mid-level
bureaucrat, who may make the equivalent of
about $4,800 a year.
“Those targeted to live in the new capital
constitute a very, very limited segment of
society,” said Nafaa.
Ironically, the new capital could one day be
overwhelmed by the old, as illegal
construction expands. That has often been
the way Cairo has evolved, with the rich
moving out, only to move again as the city
swells, adding layer after layer.
This Oct. 23, 2018 photo shows residential
buildings in Cairo, Egypt. (AP Photo/Nariman
El-Mofty)
Oct.23, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
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104. In this Oct. 23, 2018 photo, people wait
for the train to pass in Shubra, Cairo,
Egypt. (AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)
Oct.23, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
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105. This Oct. 27, 2018 photo, shows a general
view inside a residential gated compound in
New Cairo, Egypt. (AP Photo/Nariman El-
Mofty)
Oct.27, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
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106. In this Oct. 28, 2018 photo, a man sits under
a wall that separates the ring road from slum
area Ezbet Khairallah, in Cairo, Egypt. (AP
Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)Oct.28 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 106
107. This Oct. 28, 2018 photo, shows
billboard advertisements from slum
area Ezbet Khairallah, in Cairo,
Egypt. (AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)
Oct.28, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 107
108. A city of some 20 million people
combining charm and squalor, Cairo may
soon witness an exodus by well-heeled
residents, state employees and foreign
embassies to the New Administrative
Capital, as the vast project in the desert
is provisionally known. It will be the
latest phase in the flight of the rich,
many of whom have already moved to
gated communities in new suburbs,
leaving the old Cairo in neglect and
decay.
The new capital _ a proper name has yet
to be found _ is the $45 billion brainchild
of general-turned-president Abdel-Fattah
el-Sissi, the biggest of the mega-projects
he launched since taking office in 2014.
He contends the projects, ranging from
new roads and housing complexes to a
Suez Canal expansion, attract investors
and create jobs.
Senior officials boastfully compare what
has been built under el-Sissi to
monuments like the Giza Pyramids.
In this Oct. 28, 2018 photo, a man stands on the roof
top of his home looking at the skyline littered with
billboards promoting new residential suburban housing
compounds, on the ring road, in Cairo, Egypt. (AP
Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)
Oct.28, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
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109. “History will do justice to this generation
of Egyptians and our grandsons will
remember its achievement, a wave of
construction unprecedented in modern-
day Egypt,” Prime Minister Mustafa
Madbouly, also the housing minister,
proclaimed.
Critics call the new capital a vanity
project, arguing its cost could have been
better put to rebuilding the wrecked
economy and refurbishing Cairo.
They also see it as evidence of el-Sissi’s
authoritarianism, launching a multibillion-
dollar plan with little debate. El-Sissi often
lashes out at those who question him,
telling Egyptians to listen only to him and
saying he’s answerable to God alone. He
often says Egypt’s resources are limited _
leading some Egyptians, struggling amid
skyrocketing prices, to wonder why so
much is spent on questionable projects.
In this Oct. 28, 2018 photo, children play on a make
shift see-saw made out of a tree trunk in slum area
Ezbet Khairallah, Cairo, Egypt. (AP Photo/Nariman
El-Mofty)
Oct.28, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
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110. “There is something very wrong with the order of priorities,” said political analyst Hassan
Nafaa. “Maybe el-Sissi wants to go down in history as the leader who built the new capital, but
if Egyptians don’t see an improvement in their living conditions and services, he will be
remembered as the president who destroyed what is left of the middle class.”
The government argues that Cairo is already bursting at the seams and will grow to 40 million
by 2050.
The new city is being built on 170,000 acres about 28 miles east of Cairo and nearly twice its
size. Construction began in 2016, and the first of its forecast 6.5 million residents is scheduled
to move there next year.
The city will house the presidency, Cabinet, parliament and ministries. Planners promise a 21-
mile-long public park, an airport, an opera house, a sports complex and 20 skyscrapers,
including Africa’s highest, at 345 meters.
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 110
111. In this Oct. 29, 2018 photo, a woman
walks in between buildings in the
Imbaba neighborhood of Giza, Egypt.
(AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)
Oct.29, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 111
112. “Throughout the history of Cairo, the ruling elite and the rich have failed to completely isolate themselves
from the rest of the population,” said novelist Hamdy Abu Golayyel, who authored a book about the city called
“Cairo, Streets and Stories.” It will take draconian laws to keep the new city distinct, he said.
No one knows how Cairo will be impacted by a new capital and the shift of the seat of power outside of the
city for the first time since the Muslim conquest in the 7th Century.
Many government buildings in Cairo, for example, are palaces and mansions confiscated by the socialist
government of the 1950s and 1960s. In theory, they could be renovated and turned into museums or hotels,
proponents argue. But then, many such empty architectural treasures are already left to fall apart or even torn
down.
The government is renovating some of Cairo’s illegally built neighborhoods. But in one case, it razed a run-
down district and moved out residents after compensating them to make way for a high-end district.
Amar Ali Hassan, a sociopolitical expert, believes Cairo’s woes will only deepen.
“It could be neglected, become estranged and left to die a slow death,” he said.
Sameh Abdallah Alayli, an urban planning expert, wrote in the Al-Shorouk newspaper that the idea of a new
capital was unacceptable, construction should be halted and the focus put back on overhauling the ancient
city.
“Historical Cairo must remain the political capital of Egypt,” he wrote.
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 112
113. In this Oct. 29, 2018 photo, a
woman hangs a rug in her home in
the Imbaba neighborhood of Giza,
Egypt. (AP Photo/Nariman El-
Mofty)
Oct.29, 2018
TEXT FROM THE AP NEWS STORY, WITH
NEW EGYPT CAPITAL BEING BUILT,
WHAT BECOMES OF CAIRO?, HAMZA
HENDAWI.
PHOTOS BY NARIMAN EL-MOFTY
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 113
114. Reuters / Monday, October 29, 2018
Migrants, part of a caravan from Central America en
route to the United States, waves the colors of the
Honduras flag as they celebrate after crossing into
Mexico from Guatemala through the Suchiate River
in Ciudad Hidalgo, Mexico. REUTERS/Adrees Latif
Oct.29, 2018
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115. Princess Ayako, right, dressed in a
traditional ceremonial robe, and groom
Kei Moriya speak to reporters after
their wedding ceremony at the Meiji
Shrine in Tokyo, on Monday, Oct. 29,
2018. The daughter of the emperor's
cousin married the commoner in a
ritual-filled ceremony. (Kyodo News via
AP)
Oct.29, 2018
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116. Migrants ride on a truck near
Tapanatepec, Mexico, Monday,
Oct. 29, 2018. Thousands of
migrants traveling together for
safety resumed their journey to
the U.S. border after taking a
rest day Sunday in Tapanatepec,
while hundreds more migrants
were pushing for entry to
Mexico. (AP Photo/Rebecca
Blackwell)
Oct.29, 2018
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117. A second group of Central
American migrants are met by
Mexican Federal Police after they
waded in mass across the
Suchiate River, which connects
Guatemala and Mexico, in Tecun
Uman, Guatemala, Monday, Oct.
29, 2018. The first group was able
to cross the river on rafts, an
option now blocked by Mexican
Navy river and shore patrols, but
police eventually allowed their
passage. (AP Photo/Santiago
Billy)
Oct.29, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 117
118. Families of passengers of Lion Air
flight JT610 stand as they look at the
belongings of the passengers at
Tanjung Priok port in Jakarta,
Indonesia. REUTERS/Beawiharta
Oct.29, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 118
119. A wallet belonging to a victim of the
Lion Air passenger jet that crashed
floats in the waters of Ujung
Karawang, West Java, Indonesia, on
Oct. 29.
A Lion Air flight crashed into the sea
just minutes after taking off from
Indonesia's capital on Monday in a
blow to the country's aviation safety
record after the lifting of bans on its
airlines by the European Union and
U.S.
— Achmad Ibrahim / AP
Oct.29, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 119
121. Paiz told his twin brother, Gaspar, that he
made an initial payment of $500 to a
smuggler - known as a "coyote" - who
promised to get him across the border. He
would owe another $5,500 if he made it.
After making their way to the Mexican
town of Sasabe on the border with
Arizona, Paiz and Gomez waited 12 days
for their turn to cross with a guide,
according to family members.
In one of their last phone conversations,
Paiz told his father: "Soon it will be my
turn."
8 SEP 2018. SASABE, UNITED STATES. REUTERS/LUCY NICHOLSON
A backpack left by a migrant in the Sonoran Desert
Sept 8
2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
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122. Each year hundreds of migrants die
trying to cross into the United States
from Mexico. Thousands more need
rescuing. The Border Patrol tallied 294
deaths in fiscal year 2017, the last
year for which data is available. But
experts believe the actual figure is far
higher. Some who die are never found.
A quarter of those known deaths - 72
people - came in the Tucson border
sector, where summer temperatures
routinely hit triple digits. Between
October of 2017 and October of 2018,
the Tucson Border Patrol launched 923
rescue operations, a 22 percent rise
from a year before, according to an
agency official.
10 SEP 2018. SASABE, UNITED STATES. REUTERS/LUCY NICHOLSON
Pima County Sheriff's deputies cover the body of Misael Paiz.
Sept 10
2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
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123. Finding Gomez, 43, and his nephew, Misael Paiz, 25, would prove difficult. The cell phone
Gomez used did not provide his GPS coordinates. Using the cell phone towers that transmitted
the 911 emergency call did little to help; the signal had bounced off towers up to 100 miles (161
km) away.
Headquartered in a modern two-story brown brick building, the Tucson Border Patrol sector is
responsible for 262 miles (422 km) of sweeping desert, canyons and cactus-studded hills.
Gomez and Paiz could have been anywhere in this territory. Agents were not even certain they
were on the U.S. side of the border.
The sector has a staff of 4,200 at its disposal, backed by helicopters and unarmed drones, with
technology ranging from motion and image sensors to cameras able to spot migrants from
seven miles (11 km) away. It is one of the busiest sectors on the border for apprehensions and
rescues of illegal migrants as well as seizures of marijuana. More than twice a day, on average,
agents launch rescue missions.
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 123
124. After crossing and walking for
about six hours, Paiz began to
complain of a severe headache.
He collapsed next to a dirt track
called Cemetery Road.
Their guide poured water over
Paiz's head. When that didn't
help, he took off with three
other migrants in their group.
Gomez stayed with his nephew.
10 SEP 2018. SASABE, UNITED STATES. REUTERS/LUCY NICHOLSON
The body of Misael Paiz.
Sept 10
2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
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125. Gomez's efforts to revive his nephew
failed. He called family members in
Aguacate, told Paiz's mother to pray.
Then, knowing it would mean another
failed attempt to rejoin his family, Gomez
placed the 911 call.
At first light on Sept. 10, helicopters
launched by U.S. Customs and Border
Protection and Pima County started
scouring known migrant paths in the area.
An elite Border Patrol medical unit set out
across the desert.
Following the 911 dispatcher's instruction,
Gomez lit a fire in the hope that it could
guide the rescuers. But it burned hot and
clean, producing little smoke.
10 SEP 2018. SASABE, UNITED STATES. REUTERS/LUCY NICHOLSON
Pima County Sheriff's deputies carry away the body of Misael Paiz.
Sept 10
2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 125
126. The 911 emergency call came in to
the U.S. Border Patrol's Tucson
station around midnight.
Joselino Gomez Esteban's voice
crackled through an older cell
phone from somewhere in Arizona's
Sonoran Desert, the final stretch of
a 2,000 mile (3,218 km) migration
from Guatemala.
Gomez said he was lost. He needed
help. His nephew had collapsed,
wouldn't respond.
11 SEP 2018. LUKEVILLE, UNITED STATES. REUTERS/LUCY NICHOLSON
The U.S.-Mexico border near Lukeville.
Sept 11
2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 126
127. 3 OCT 2018. SASABE, UNITED STATES. REUTERS/LUCY NICHOLSON
Left: A cross placed by artist Alvaro
Enciso on the spot where Misael Paiz
died.
Right: Artist Alvaro Enciso places a
cross on the spot where Misael Paiz
died in the Sonoran Desert.
Oct3, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 127
128. 3 OCT 2018. SASABE, UNITED STATES. REUTERS/LUCY NICHOLSON
Oct.3, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 128
129. It wasn't until 1:30 that afternoon
that agents got word that a rancher
had happened across the two men.
A short while later, Border Patrol
agents reached the location and
took Gomez into custody.
They took Paiz away in a black body
bag.
28 OCT 2018. AGUACATE, GUATEMALA. REUTERS/LUCY NICHOLSON
Family members mourn around a coffin carrying the body of Misael Paiz
Oct28, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 129
130. "We always played together. We would
go to the mountains together to collect
wood," said Gaspar, his twin. "We
discussed which one of us would go to
the U.S. and decided it would be
Misael."
In Aguacate, some 250 people met the
ambulance transporting Paiz's body.
They stood in ankle-deep mud and
pouring rain as eight men lifted his
coffin out and took it into the family
home.
Oct28, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 130
131. At times, rescues turn to
recovery efforts. Deaths come
mostly from heat stroke in
summer, hypothermia in winter.
The dead are taken to the Pima
County medical examiner's
office.
“We see this day in and day
out,” said Greg Hess, the
county's chief medical examiner.
Sometimes only bones are
recovered; sometimes
identifications are impossible.
When they can, the office
arranges for the return of
remains to family members back
home.
29 OCT 2018. AGUACATE, GUATEMALA. REUTERS/LUCY NICHOLSON
A man rides a horse past the indigenous community jail in Aguacate.
Oct29, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 131
132. Two weeks earlier, Gomez and Paiz
had set off from Aguacate, a
struggling Guatemalan farming
town of 1,500 people near the
Mexican border. The following
account is based on more than two
dozen interviews with family
members, government officials,
border patrol agents and human
rights workers.
Paiz, a restaurant cook who had
worked in Mexico, hoped to find
work in the United States and send
money back home. His uncle,
Gomez, planned to join his wife and
three children in South Carolina. He
had been deported two years earlier
and tried and failed three times
since to make it back. This would be
his fourth attempt.
29 OCT 2018. AGUACATE, GUATEMALA. REUTERS/LUCY NICHOLSON
Miguel Domingo Paiz sits near Misael's grave at his funeral.
Oct29, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 132
133. "The family is disintegrating because
here we don’t have work," said Paiz's
father, Miguel Domingo Paiz, 59.
Domingo knows that leaving for a
better future is a life-or-death
gamble. His eldest son Ovidio was
shot dead in Mexico last year after
moving there to find a job.
In recent years, the number of
Guatemalans caught crossing illegally
into the United States has risen
steadily from about 57,000 in 2015 to
nearly 117,000 in 2018, and is second
only to apprehensions of Mexicans.
The figures, experts say, reflect a
greater willingness among
Guatemalans to brave the perils of
migration to escape rising violence,
poverty and political turmoil.
29 OCT 2018. AGUACATE, GUATEMALA. REUTERS/LUCY NICHOLSON
Noe Paiz, 20, holds up a photo of his dead brother
Misael as a child with Misael's twin brother, Gaspar
Oct29, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 133
134. The Pima County Medical Examiner
would later determine Paiz succumbed
to heat stroke. Seven weeks after his
death, Paiz's body was flown to
Guatemala City, a journey paid for by
the Guatemalan government. His
coffin arrived along with a half dozen
others, all bearing remains of
Guatemalan migrants.
A Red Cross ambulance transported
Paiz's body on the 12-hour drive along
primitive roads from the capital to
Aguacate. His family followed behind
in a bus.
29 OCT 2018. AGUACATE, GUATEMALA. REUTERS/LUCY NICHOLSON
Gaspar Paiz, 25, hugs a friend at the funeral of his twin brother.
Oct29, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 134
143. Rescue workers lay out recovered
belongings believed to be from the
crashed Lion Air flight JT610 at Tanjung
Priok port in Jakarta, Indonesia.
REUTERS/Edgar Su
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 143
144. A man walks in front of the India Gate
shrouded in smog in New Delhi, India.
REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 144
145. A general view of Lazio's eagle
mascot before their match against
Inter Milan at Rome's Stadio
Olimpico. REUTERS/Tony Gentile
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 145
146. Britain's Prince Harry interacts with a
child at Viaduct Harbour in Auckland,
New Zealand. REUTERS/Phil Noble
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 146
147. Cesar Altieri Sayoc, accused of mailing
14 pipe bombs to prominent critics of
U.S. President Donald Trump, appears
handcuffed in federal court to answer
charges against him in an artist's
sketch in Miami, Florida.
REUTERS/Daniel Pontet
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 147
148. Migrants, travelling with a caravan of
thousands from Central America en
route to the United States, walk to
Santiago Niltepec from San Pedro
Tapanatepec, Mexico.
REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 148
149. A woman belonging to a
shepherd community is seen
adorned with a nose ornament
as she sits in a field on the
outskirts of Ahmedabad, India.
REUTERS/Amit Dave
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 149
150. North Korean leader Kim Jong
Un inspects Samjiyon County.
KCNA/via REUTERS
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 150
151. NYPD Police officers stand outside the
New York Times Building after reports
of a suspicious package was found, in
New York. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 151
152. A hooded youth prepares to throw a petrol
bomb during clashes with riot police as Greek
students demonstrate against a draft bill
changing university entrance requirements in
Athens, Greece. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 152
153. German Chancellor Angela Merkel reacts as
she attends a news conference following the
Hesse state election in Berlin, Germany.
REUTERS/Hannibal Hanschke
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 153
154. Migrants, part of a caravan of thousands from
Central America en route to the United States,
hitchhike on a truck along the highway to
Santiago Niltepec from San Pedro
Tapanatepec, Mexico. REUTERS/Ueslei
Marcelino
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 154
155. Turkey's President Tayyip Erdogan drives
an airport golf cart with his wife Emine
Erdogan and officials during the official
opening ceremony of Istanbul's new
airport in Istanbul, Turkey. Kayhan
Ozer/Presidential Press Office/via
REUTERS
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 155
156. North Korea's youth soccer players warm up
before a soccer game against South Korea
during the 5th Ari Sports Cup in Chuncheon,
South Korea. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 156
157. Portugal's Socialist party deputy
Isabel Moreira paints her nails during
a debate on 2019 state budget at the
parliament in Lisbon, Portugal.
REUTERS/Rafael Marchante
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 157
158. A member of the Egyptian Arab
Federation of Professional Wrestlers
EWR attends a training at a class of the
Abu Sultan High School, before a public
fight in Ismailiya, northern of Cairo,
Egypt. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 158
159. Reuters / Tuesday, October 30, 2018
Fans sign a book of condolence for Leicester City's owner Thai
businessman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, and four other
people who died when their helicopter crashed as it left the
ground after the match on Saturday, at the King Power
Stadium, in Leicester, Britain . REUTERS/Eddie Keogh
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 159
160. Reuters / Tuesday, October 30, 2018
A relative of Palestinian man Mohammed Abu
Obada, who was killed during a protest along the
Gaza Strip's beachfront border with Israel, is
reflected in a mirror as she mourns during his
funeral in Al-Shati refugee camp in Gaza City.
REUTERS/Suhaib Salem
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 160
161. A model presents a creation from the
Heaven Gaia Spring/Summer 2019 collection
show by Xiong Ying during the China Fashion
Week in Beijing. REUTERS/StringerOct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 161
162. Trump visits Pittsburgh after synagogue shooting
Reuters / Tuesday, October 30, 2018
President Donald Trump and first lady Melania
Trump place stones on a memorial to shooting
victims as they stand with Tree of Life Synagogue
Rabbi Jeffrey Myers outside the synagogue where a
gunman killed 11 people and wounded six during a
mass shooting in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, October
30, 2018. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 162
163. White House senior advisors Jared Kushner (L)
and his wife Ivanka Trump stand with Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin at a makeshift
memorial. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 163
164. Reuters / Tuesday, October
30, 2018
President Donald Trump and
first lady Melania Trump walk
with Tree of Life Synagogue
Rabbi Jeffrey Myers as White
House advisor Ivanka Trump
and her husband Jared
Kushner walk with Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin
outside the synagogue.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 164
165. A participant in the march in
memory of the victims holds a sign
opposing President Donald Trump in
Pittsburgh. REUTERS/Cathal
McNaughton
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 165
166. President Donald Trump places a stone as he
stands with first lady Melania Trump and Tree of
Life Synagogue Rabbi Jeffrey Myers at a
makeshift memorial. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 166
167. Reuters / Tuesday, October 30,
2018
White House advisor and
daughter of the president
Ivanka Trump and her husband
and fellow advisor Jared
Kushner walk with Tree of Life
Synagogue Rabbi Jeffrey Myers
as President Donald Trump and
first lady Melania Trump walk
with Israeli Ambassador to the
U.S. Ron Dermer outside the
synagogue. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 167
168. People march in memory of the
victims of the Tree of Life Synagogue
shooting, in Pittsburgh.
REUTERS/Cathal McNaughton
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 168
169. President Donald Trump and first lady
Melania Trump stand with Rabbi Jeffrey
Myers as they place stones on a makeshift
memorial outside the Tree of Life
synagogue. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 169
170. Reuters / Tuesday, October 30, 2018
Women hold signs with pictures of late preschool television educator Mr
Rogers during a march in memory of the victims of the Tree of Life
Synagogue shooting in Pittsburgh. Fred Rogers grew up in the Squirrel Hill
neighborhood where the shootings occurred and broadcast his popular
children's show from Pittsburgh. REUTERS/Jessica Resnick-Ault
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 170
171. Reuters / Tuesday, October 30, 2018
President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump pay
their respects at a makeshift memorial outside the Tree of
Life synagogue in the wake of the shooting at the
synagogue where 11 people were killed and six people
were wounded in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, October 30,
2018. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 171
172. A woman holds a sign with a picture from
preschool television show Mr Rogers'
Neighborhood during a march in memory of the
victims of the Tree of Life Synagogue shooting in
Pittsburgh. REUTERS/Jessica Resnick-Ault
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 172
173. Glenda Escobar, 33, a
migrant from Honduras, rests
on the road with her son
Adonai, as they make their
way to Pijijiapan from
Mapastepec, Mexico,
October 25, 2018.
REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino
Oct.25, 2018
Children of the caravan
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 173
174. Migrant siblings from
Honduras, Jenni, 5, Irvin, 6,
and Alexander, 3, look out
from the metal bars of a
truck after hitching a ride to
Arriaga from Pijijiapan,
Mexico October 26, 2018.
REUTERS/Adrees Latif
Oct.26, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 174
175. A man carries a girl through
the Suchiate River into
Mexico from Guatemala in
Ciudad Hidalgo, Mexico
October 29, 2018.
REUTERS/Adrees Latif
Oct.29, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 175
176. Migrants, Julian Zelaya, 12, and his
sister Jasmine Zelaya, 10, rest at in a
small town after crossing the river
from Guatemala to Mexico in Ciudad
Hidalgo and continuing to walk in
Mexico October 29, 2018.
REUTERS/Leah Millis
Oct.29, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 176
177. Genesis Cordona, a 6-year-
old migrant girl from
Honduras, lays next to her
dolls as she rests in
Santiago Niltepec, Mexico,
October 29, 2018.
REUTERS/Hannah McKay
Oct.29, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 177
178. Yolani, a 1-year-old migrant
girl traveling from Honduras,
cries because she is hungry as
she rests on the roadside in
Santiago Niltepec, Mexico,
October 29, 2018.
REUTERS/Hannah McKay
Oct.29, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 178
179. Central American migrants cross the
Suchiate river, the natural border
between Guatemala and Mexico, as
seen from Ciudad Hidalgo, Mexico,
October 29, 2018. REUTERS/Carlos
Garcia Rawlins
Oct.29, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 179
180. Migrants sleep at the border
crossing, after they were stopped
there the day before in Ciudad
Tecun Uman, Guatemala October
29, 2018. REUTERS/Leah Millis
Oct.29, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 180
181. Reuters / Tuesday, October 30,
2018
Rosendo Noviega, a 38-year-old
migrant from Guatemala, part of a
caravan of thousands from Central
America en route to the United
States, holds his daughter Belinda
Izabel as he walks along the
highway to Juchitan from
Santiago Niltepec, Mexico,
October 30, 2018. An estimated
2,300 children are traveling with
the migrant caravan headed north
to the U.S.-Mexico border, UNICEF
said, adding that they needed
protection and access to essential
services like healthcare, clean
water and sanitation.
REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 181
182. A migrant woman pushes
her son in a wheelchair as
she walks along the
highway to Juchitan from
Santiago Niltepec, Mexico,
October 30, 2018.
REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 182
183. Yemeni teacher turns his home into school for 700 students
Reuters / Tuesday, October 30,
2018
Almost 700 children come daily
to the home of Yemeni teacher
Adel al-Shorbagy, after he
converted it into a school in the
government-held city of Taiz,
which has been at the center of
a three-and-a-half-year civil war
that has left millions on the
brink of famine.
REUTERS/Anees Mahyoub
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 183
184. Reuters / Tuesday, October 30,
2018
Al-Shorbagy opened the school
following the outbreak of war
saying he had nowhere to send
his own children. However, 500
boys and girls aged between six
and 15 signed up for lessons in
that first year. "All the schools
closed down and we had a
problem that our kids were on the
street," Al-Shorbagy told Reuters.
REUTERS/Anees Mahyou
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 184
185. Inside the house, facilities are
basic, with exposed brick
walls and big gaps where
windows should be. Ripped
curtains are used to divide up
space for classrooms.
REUTERS/Anees Mahyoub
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 185
186. Undeterred, the eager
children find any space they
can on the floor, with barely
any room to move, let alone
write. They share donated
books and follow what one
of the 16 volunteer teachers
writes on a broken white
board. REUTERS/Anees
Mahyoub
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 186
187. Despite the ramshackle setting
and lack of facilities, the school is
oversubscribed in a country
where education has been
decimated and accessible, free
school options are limited.
REUTERS/Anees Mahyoub
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 187
188. Classes include maths, science and
English, with Al-Shorbagy saying he
follows the pre-war Yemeni
curriculum. REUTERS/Anees
Mahyoub
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 188
189. Students walk into their classes at
the teacher's house, who turned
it into a makeshift free school
that hosts 700 students, in Taiz,
Yemen October 18, 2018. Picture
taken October 18, 2018.
REUTERS/Anees Mahyoub
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 189
190. The government-held city of Taiz
has been at the center of a
three-and-a-half-year civil war
that has left millions on the
brink of famine. REUTERS/Anees
Mahyoub
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 190
191. The only other option in the city are private schools
but they cost up to 100,000 Yemeni riyal ($400) per
year, putting them out of reach for many in the
impoverished Arab country. REUTERS/Anees
Mahyoub
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 191
192. Violent storms batter Italy
Reuters / Tuesday, October 30, 2018
A woman looks at destroyed yachts which lie on
the shore after windstorm and the strong sea
storm in Rapallo, October 30. Violent storms
battered Italy for a third consecutive day on
Tuesday, killing at least 11 people, and flooding
much of Venice. REUTERS/Massimo Pinca
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 192
193. A man looks at destroyed yachts
which lie on the shore after
windstorm and the strong sea
storm in Rapallo, October 30.
REUTERS/Massimo Pinca
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 193
194. Semi-submerged yacht of Pier Silvio
Berlusconi is seen in the harbour
after windstorm and the strong sea
storm in Rapallo, October 30.
Reuters/Massimo Pinca
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 194
195. Destroyed yachts lie on the shore after
windstorm and the strong sea storm in
Rapallo, October 30. REUTERS/Massimo
Pinca
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 195
196. People help to remove debris around
destroyed yachts which lie on the
shore after windstorm and the strong
sea storm in Rapallo, October 30.
Reuters/Massimo Pinca
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 196
197. A man removes debris around destroyed
yachts on the shore after windstorm and
the strong sea storm in Rapallo, October
30. Reuters/Massimo Pinca
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 197
198. Destroyed yachts lie on the shore after
windstorm and the strong sea storm in
Rapallo, October 30. REUTERS/Massimo
Pinca
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 198
199. Semi-submerged yacht is seen in the
harbour after windstorm and the
strong sea storm in Rapallo, October
30. REUTERS/Massimo PincaOct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 199
200. Destroyed yachts lie on the shore after
windstorm and the strong sea storm in
Rapallo, October 30. Reuters/Massimo Pinca
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 200
201. Indonesia searches for downed airliner
A woman, who is family of passengers
on the crashed Lion Air flight JT610,
cries at Bhayangkara R. Said Sukanto
hospital in Jakarta, October 30.
REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 201
202. A rescue ship is seen near the location of the
Lion Air flight JT610 crash during rescue
operations off the north coast of Karawang
regency, West Java province, Indonesia,
October 30. REUTERS/Beawiharta
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 202
203. Rescue workers of crashed Lion Air flight
JT610 carry a bag of debris off a boat at
Tanjung Priok port in Jakarta, October 30.
REUTERS/Edgar Su
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 203
204. Police personnel identify recovered
belongings believed to be from the
crashed Lion Air flight JT610 at
Tanjung Priok port in Jakarta,
October 30. REUTERS/Edgar Su
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 204
205. Rescue workers of the crashed Lion Air
flight JT610 sort out newly recovered
debris at Tanjung Priok port in Jakarta,
October 30. REUTERS/Edgar Su
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 205
206. Rescue workers lay out newly recovered
debris of Lion Air flight JT610 at Tanjung
Priok port in Jakarta, October 30.
REUTERS/Edgar Su
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 206
207. People, who are relatives of
passengers on the crashed Lion Air
flight JT610, cry at Bhayangkara R.
Said Sukanto hospital in Jakarta,
October 30. REUTERS/Willy
Kurniawan
Oct.30, 2018
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208. Rescue workers lay out newly recovered
debris of Lion Air flight JT610 at Tanjung
Priok port in Jakarta, October 30.
REUTERS/Edgar Su
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 208
209. An Indonesian navy soldier jumps to dive at
the location of the Lion Air flight JT610 crash
off the north coast of Karawang regency,
West Java province, October 30.
REUTERS/Beawiharta
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 209
210. Indonesia's President Joko Widodo
inspects the recovered debris of Lion Air
flight JT610 at Tanjung Priok port in
Jakarta, October 30. REUTERS/Edgar Su
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 210
211. Indonesia's Transport Minister Budi
Karya Sumadi looks at recovered
debris from the crashed Lion Air flight
JT610 at Tanjung Priok port in Jakarta,
October 30. REUTERS/Edgar Su
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 211
212. Mourning after Pittsburgh synagogue shooting
Police stand at the entrance to Rodef
Shalom Temple before funeral services for
brothers Cecil and David Rosenthal, victims
of the Tree of Life Synagogue shooting, in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, October 30,
2018. REUTERS/Cathal McNaughton
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 212
213. A casket is carried from Rodef Shalom
Temple after funeral services for
brothers Cecil and David Rosenthal,
victims of the Tree of Life Synagogue
shooting, in Pittsburgh, October 30,
2018. REUTERS/Cathal McNaughton
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 213
214. A family member embraces a police officer in
front of Rodef Shalom Temple after funeral
services for brothers Cecil and David
Rosenthal, victims of the Tree of Life
Synagogue shooting, in Pittsburgh, October
30, 2018. REUTERS/Cathal McNaughton
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 214
215. The caskets are carried from Rodef
Shalom Temple after funeral services
for brothers Cecil and David
Rosenthal, victims of the Tree of Life
Synagogue shooting, in Pittsburgh,
October 30, 2018. REUTERS/Cathal
McNaughton
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 215
216. Mourners follow the hearse on foot
after the funeral of Tree of Life
Synagogue shooting victim Jerry
Rabinowitz in Pittsburgh, October
30, 2018. The sign on the movie
theater at right reads "PGH is
stronger than hate".
REUTERS/Jessica Resnick-Ault
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 216
217. Mourners line up to pay their respects at
visitation services for brothers Cecil and
David Rosenthal, victims of the Tree of
Life Synagogue shooting, at Rodef
Shalom Temple in Pittsburgh, October
30, 2018. REUTERS/Cathal McNaughton
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 217
218. People walk past a makeshift
memorial outside the Tree of Life
synagogue following a shooting at the
synagogue in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
October 29, 2018. REUTERS/Cathal
McNaughton
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 218
219. Harry and Meghan's first overseas tour
Prince Harry watches as Meghan,
Duchess of Sussex, participates in a
contest during an event unveiling the
Queen's Commonwealth Canopy in
Redvale, North Shore, New Zealand
October 30, 2018. Dominic Lipinski/Pool
via REUTERS
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 219
220. Prince Harry holding a toy
from young child in the
crowd at the Viaduct
Harbour October 30, 2018 in
Auckland, New Zealand.
Chris Jackson/Pool via
REUTERS
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 220
221. Reuters / Tuesday, October 30, 2018
Meghan, Duchess of Sussex receives a
bouquet of flowers during a visit to Pillars, a
charity operating across New Zealand that
supports children who have a parent in
prison by providing special mentoring
schemes in Auckland, New Zealand October
30, 2018. Kirsty Wigglesworth/Pool via
REUTERS
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 221
222. A day at an Irish fair
Henry Judge from Sligo holds Connemara
ponies he is selling at the annual Maam
Cross fair in the Connemara region of
Maam Cross in Galway, Ireland, October
30, 2018. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 222
223. A boy keeps an eye on a duck that
he is selling. REUTERS/Clodagh
Kilcoyne
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 223
224. A farmer checks the teeth of some
Jacobs sheep. REUTERS/Clodagh
KilcoyneOct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 224
225. A man holds Connemara ponies he is
selling. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 225
226. A pony waits at a derelict cottage to be
sold. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 226
227. Students from the Yeshiva School in the Squirrel Hill
neighborhood of Pittsburgh, react as the funeral
procession for Dr. Jerry Rabinowitz passes their school
en route to the Homewood Cemetery following a
funeral service at the Jewish Community Center,
Tuesday Oct. 30, 2018. Rabinowitz was one of those
killed while worshipping at the Tree of Life synagogue
on Saturday, Oct. 27, 2018. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 227
228. Young women, with their faces
painted as a clown and zombie
for Halloween, travel in the
subway in Santiago, Chile,
Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2018. (AP
Photo/Esteban Felix)
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 228
229. Central American migrants
gather around a fire at a camp
set up by a caravan of thousands
of migrants, in Juchitan, Mexico,
after sunset Tuesday, Oct. 30,
2018. This caravan of about
4,000 mainly Honduran migrants
set up camp Tuesday in the
Oaxaca state city of Juchitan,
which was devastated by an
earthquake in September 2017.
(AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 229
230. Argentina's River Plate
players celebrate
defeating Brazil's Gremio
at a Copa Libertadores
semifinal second leg
match in Porto Alegre,
Brazil, Oct. 30, 2018.
River advances to the
finals. (AP Photo/Andre
Penner)
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 230
231. A man walks in front of the India Gate
shrouded in smog in New Delhi, India.
Pollution levels surged to "severe" and
"hazardous" levels in New Delhi this
week. Picture taken October 29.
REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis
India's toxic smog problem
Oct.29, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 231
232. Reuters / Monday, October 29,
2018
The apparent lack of concern
about the toxic air - whether
through ignorance, apathy or
the blinding impact of poverty
-gives federal and local
politicians the cover they need
for failing to vigorously
address the problem, said
pollution activists, social
scientists and political experts.
A bird flies past the Humayun's
Tomb shrouded in smog in
New Delhi, India, October 29.
REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis
Oct.29, 2018
GALLLERY PHOTOS
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233. Residential buildings are seen
shrouded in smog in New Delhi, India,
October 30. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui
Oct.30, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 233
235. International Space Station turns 20
The International Space Station
(ISS) photographed by Expedition
56 crew members from a Soyuz
spacecraft after undocking, October
2018. NASA/Roscosmos
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 235
236. The Northrop Grumman Antares
rocket, with Cygnus resupply
spacecraft onboard, launches
from NASA's Wallops Flight
Facility in Virginia. Courtesy Joel
Kowsky/NASA
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 236
237. The International Space Station photographed
by Expedition 56 crew members from a Soyuz
spacecraft after undocking, October 2018.
NASA/Roscosmos
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 237
238. Expedition 51 Flight Engineer Thomas Pesquet of
the European Space Agency photographed
Orbital ATK's Cygnus spacecraft as it approached
the International Space Station, April 2017.
NASA/ESA
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 238
239. A photo taken by European Space Agency astronaut
Tim Peake aboard the International Space Station
shows an Aurora over northern Canada, taken from
a point just north of Vancouver, January 2016.
REUTERS/NASA/Tim Peake
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 239
240. NASA astronaut Scott Kelly corrals the
supply of fresh fruit that arrived on the
Kounotori 5 H-II Transfer Vehicle (HTV-
5), August 2015. REUTERS/NASA
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 240
241. Space tourist Anousheh Ansari is
photographed in her seat on board
the Soyuz TMA-9 spacecraft while
enroute to the International Space
Station, September 2006.
REUTERS/NASA
GALLLERY PHOTOS
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 241
242. Reuters / Wednesday, October
31, 2018
Members of the Islamic
Movement of Nigeria prepare
the bodies of its members, who
were killed after security forces
opened fire during the Shi'ite
group's protests in the capital
Abuja this week, before their
burial in Mararaba, Nigeria.
REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
Oct.31, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 242
243. Halloween night
A participant in costume and
make-up poses for a photo during
a Halloween parade at Walibi park
in Wavre, Belgium, October 31,
2018. REUTERS/Yves Herman
Oct.31, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 243
244. A boy in costume walks during
Halloween celebrations in La Paz,
Bolivia. REUTERS/David Mercado
Oct.31, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 244
245. Iraqi men are seen in zombie make-
up as they celebrate Halloween in
Sulaimaniya, Iraq. REUTERS/Ako
Rasheed
Oct.31, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 245
246. A participant is pictured in front of a
Ferris wheel during a Halloween
event at an amusement park in
Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. REUTERS/B.
Rentsendorj
Oct.31, 2018
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247. People in costume attend
Halloween celebrations in
La Paz, Bolivia.
REUTERS/David Mercado
Oct.31, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 247
248. A participant in costume and make-up
poses for a photo during a Halloween
parade at Walibi park in Wavre,
Belgium. REUTERS/Yves Herman
Oct.31, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 248
249. Reuters / Wednesday,
October 31, 2018
Logan Campbell, garbed as a
"Star Wars" stormtrooper,
participates in an underwater
Halloween costume
competition as he dives in
the Florida Keys National
Marine Sanctuary, off Key
Largo, Florida. Courtesy
Frazier Nivens/Florida Keys
News Bureau/Handout via
REUTERS
Oct.31, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 249
250. People in costume participate in the 45th
Annual Village Halloween Parade in
Manhattan, New York. REUTERS/Jeenah
Moon
Oct.31, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 250
251. A participant in costume and make-
up poses for a photo during a
Halloween parade at Walibi park in
Wavre, Belgium. REUTERS/Yves
Herman
Oct.31, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 251
252. People in costume pose for a
photograph during Halloween
celebrations in La Paz, Bolivia.
REUTERS/David Mercado
Oct.31, 2018
November 28, 2018 Pictures of the day - Oct.29 - Oct.31, 2018 - vinhbinh2010 252