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  • Two women and a baby relaxing in a shelter attached to the Cambodian Landmine Museum in the outskirts of Siem Reap, Cambodia.
    PNS_Landmine_Cambodia_013.JPG
  • A landmine survivor attending a workshop on textiles in a school set up by a local NGO near the Cambodian Landmine Museum in Siem Reap's province, Cambodia.
    PNS_Landmine_Cambodia_014.JPG
  • Landmine survivors laying down at the shade of a building under construction in the outskirts of Siem Reap, Cambodia.
    PNS_Landmine_Cambodia_011.JPG
  • A man in a physiotherapy room at the Handicap International Belgium's Rehabilitation Centre in Siem Reap, Cambodia.
    PNS_Landmine_Cambodia_010.JPG
  • A family waiting for the doctor assessment of their young child's condition at the Siem Reap's Hospital in Cambodia.
    PNS_Landmine_Cambodia_007.JPG
  • 36 years old Sem Touca, who lost his leg and two fingers when stepped in a active landmine while trying to cross the border between Cambodia and Thailand 18 years a go.
    PNS_Landmine_Cambodia_003.JPG
  • A prosthetic leg been made in a working counter at the Handicap International Belgium's Rehabilitation Centre in Siem Reap, Cambodia.
    PNS_Landmine_Cambodia_002.JPG
  • Pheakdei, a landmine survivor, playing football in the courtyard of the Cambodian Landmine Museum in the Siem Reap's province, Cambobia. This boy lost one arm in a active landmine while playing outside his school.
    PNS_Landmine_Cambodia_015.JPG
  • Pupils attending an awareness class on landmine and UXOs recognition, in a school set up by a local NGO near the Cambodian Landmine Museum in Siem Reap's province, Cambodia.
    PNS_Landmine_Cambodia_009.JPG
  • Botum, a 12 year old landmine survivor, looking trough a window in Siem Reap's Hospital, Cambodia.
    PNS_Landmine_Cambodia_008.JPG
  • Sok Piseth, an 16 years old survivor of a landmine accident, waiting for a routine checkup at the handicap International Belgium's Rehabilitation Centre in Siem Reap, cambodia..
    PNS_Landmine_Cambodia_005.JPG
  • 48 years old Thang Thig, who lost part of his leg when stepped in a landmine while working at the rice fields 10 Km from his home. Mr. Thang only received medical assistance 24 hours after the accident.
    PNS_Landmine_Cambodia_004.JPG
  • A sign warning for the danger of active landmines in a fenced field outside Siem Reap, Cambodia.
    PNS_Landmine_Cambodia_001.JPG
  • Pupils attending an awareness class on landmine and UXOs recognition, in a school set up by a local NGO near the Cambodian Landmine Museum in Siem Reap's province, Cambodia.
    PNS_Landmine_Cambodia_012.JPG
  • Channary, a 13 years old landmine survivor, at the Handicap International Belgium's Rehabilitation Centre in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Channary as been selected to represent Cambodia in an International beauty contest for landmine and UXO survivors, organised by ONGs all over the world.
    PNS_Landmine_Cambodia_006.JPG
  • Peter Mulryan, a former resident of the St. Mary’s Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, working at his family home in Ballinasloe, Ireland. Mulryan, who grew up in a abusive foster family, is seeking information about the fate of the infant sister he has never known after she went into the St. Mary’s Mother and Baby Home in Tuam. He says Catherine Corless, whose research uncovered a pit at the home where it is suspected many children were buried, contacted him in 2014 to say she believed she had identified his sister among the 796 children interred at the site.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_09.jpg
  • Local historian Catherine Corless contemplates childhood photographs in her house in the outskirts of Tuam, Ireland. Corless's investigation into a burial site in St. Mary’s Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, where she believed 796 children, most of them infants, were interred between 1925 and 196, proved to be right when a state-financed investigation uncovered the remains of babies, small children and foetuses interred where she said they would.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_03.jpg
  • An anti-abortion preacher handles a miniature baby while demonstrating the supposed size of a 12 week foetus to people passing by in a shopping street in central Dublin, Ireland.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_22.jpg
  • Frannie Hopkins, who at age of 12 in 1975, while playing with a friend, found the remains of children at St. Mary’s Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, poses for a portrait at his house in Tuam, Ireland.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_18.jpg
  • The tomb of Julia Devaney in Tuam Cemetery, Tuam. Julia Devaney is unique in that she left a record of her almost 40 years in the Tuam Mother and Baby Home. From entering the home as a child in about 1923, to leaving it as an employee when it closed its doors for the last time on September 16, 1961, she had an insight into every aspect of the place.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_19.jpg
  • A mother carrying a baby rests under the shade of a tree before continue the three to four day journey to a refugee camp in the neighbour South Sudan.Thousands have fled the bombardments and hunger in South Kordofan.
    NubaMountains_08.jpg
  • A memorial plaque is seen among vegetation in a corner of the grave site where Catherine Corless, a local historian from Tuam, claims to be the resting place of 796 children, most of them infants, who died between 1925 and 1961 at the ‘Home’, a old single mother and baby orphanage called St. Mary’s, run by Sisters of Bons Secours. The story that emerged from Corless’s research has been reported in recent weeks in dramatic headlines around the world, with many describing the site, used in the past as a septic tank for the orphanage, as a mass grave.
    Ireland_LosingFaith_08.jpg

Paulo Nunes dos Santos

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