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RC2D4HAPIYFX Palestinian twins Uday (L) and Hamza Abu Odah eat inside their tent where they shelter with their mother and siblings, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 12, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother Iman is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES. TEMPLATE OUT
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RC2D4HA5SCB2 Palestinian woman Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq holds her newborn twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah inside the maternity ward at Nasser hospital, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, November 2, 2023. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES. TEMPLATE OUT
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RC2JZGA5ILF3 Displaced Palestinian mother Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq enjoys the seawater with her twin sons Uday and Hamza Abu Odah near a tent camp where they shelter, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 20, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2MZGANVZ7E Palestinian boy Hamza Abu Odah looks on inside a tent where he shelters with his twin brother Uday, their siblings and mother Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 18, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2KZGAM9EM6 Palestinian woman Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq holds her newborn twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah inside the maternity ward at Nasser hospital, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, November 2, 2023. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES. TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
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RC2KZGAWVY28 A tent camp where displaced Palestinian mother Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq shelters with her twin sons Uday and Hamza Abu Odah and her other children, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 18, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2KZGAZ1O7M Palestinian twins Uday (L) and Hamza Abu Odah eat inside their tent where they shelter with their mother and siblings, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 12, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother Iman is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES. TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
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RC2MZGAIWOC3 Displaced Palestinian mother Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq holds her twin sons Uday and Hamza Abu Odah at their tent where they shelter, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 18, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES. TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
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RC2QZGAGMDQ8 Displaced Palestinian mother Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq bathes her twin son Uday Abu Odah in a bucket inside their tent where they shelter, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 13, 2025. Twins Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES. TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
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RC2LZGAUO1TM Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq, the displaced Palestinian mother of twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah, walks as she carries water containers outside her tent where she shelters with her children, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 26, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2KZGAYV797 Palestinian woman Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq holds her newborn twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah inside the maternity ward at Nasser hospital, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, November 2, 2023. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2KZGAW2601 Palestinian women wait outside the maternity ward of Nasser hospital where Palestinian woman Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq gave birth to her twin sons, Uday and Hamza Abu Odah, in November 2023, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 25, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2JZGAB907S Displaced Palestinian mother Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq walks with her twin sons Uday (L) and Hamza Abu Odah at a tent camp where they shelter, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 20, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2KZGAI8RIX A doctor examines Palestinian twin brothers Uday and Hamza Abu Odah at a medical tent in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 18, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother Iman is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES. TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
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RC2MZGAL8EX5 Palestinian midwife Samah Qeshta looks after one of Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq's newborn twins inside the maternity ward at Nasser hospital, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, November 2, 2023. Iman's twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2NZGAKURNX Displaced Palestinian mother Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq sits inside her tent as her twin sons Uday and Hamza Abu Odah sleep, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 12, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2LZGAJXHRC Palestinian twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah play outside their tent where they shelter with their mother and siblings, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 18, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother Iman is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2KZGA2A8G9 A Palestinian medical worker holds one of Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq's newborn twins inside the maternity ward at Nasser hospital, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, November 2, 2023. Iman's twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2KZGAJ71QT Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq, the displaced mother of Palestinian twin boys Uday and Hamza Abu Odah, bakes bread inside their tent where they shelter, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 12, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2JZGAQXX09 Displaced Palestinian mother Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq holds her twin sons Uday (L) and Hamza Abu Odah as they enjoy the beach near a tent camp where they shelter, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 20, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2KZGARC2OE Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq, the displaced Palestinian mother of twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah, shows a picture of her husband Ayman, whom she lost in the war, at a tent where she shelters with her children, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 26, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2JZGAQ46HO Displaced Palestinian mother Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq carries her twin sons Uday (L) and Hamza Abu Odah as she walks through a tent camp where they shelter, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 18, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2MZGAOCAMK Palestinian boy Uday Abu Odah looks on inside their tent where he shelters with his twin brother Hamza, their siblings and mother Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 18, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2QZGAW5ROR Palestinian twin boy Uday Abu Odah (L) plays with his older brothers Qasim and Rasheed inside their tent where they shelter with their mother and other siblings, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 13, 2025. Twins Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2KZGABMQCK Palestinian twin boy Uday Abu Odah holds bread as he eats inside the tent where he shelters with his mother and siblings, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 12, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother Iman is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2RZGAMMR96 Displaced Palestinian mother Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq breastfeeds her twin son Uday Abu Odah inside their tent where they shelter, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 13, 2025. Twins Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2NZGAMC53V Palestinian twins Uday (R) and Hamza Abu Odah sleep inside their tent where they shelter with their mother and siblings, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 12, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother Iman is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2RZGA9CR2J Displaced Palestinian mother Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq breastfeeds her twin son Uday Abu Odah inside their tent where they shelter, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 13, 2025. Twins Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2LZGAQJI8X Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq, the displaced mother of Palestinian twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah, washes clothes inside their tent where they shelter, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 12, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2QZGAMNWW0 Displaced Palestinian mother Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq holds her twin son Uday Abu Odah inside their tent where they shelter, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 13, 2025. Twins Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2RZGA4XBA1 Palestinian twins Uday (L) and Hamza Abu Odah play inside their tent where they shelter with their mother and siblings, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 13, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother Iman is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2HZGA81NMS A nurse looks after a baby in an incubator at the maternity ward of Nasser hospital where Palestinian woman Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq gave birth to her twin sons, Uday and Hamza Abu Odah, in November 2023, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 25, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2KZGA8PNV1 A medical worker adjusts equipment at the maternity ward of Nasser hospital where Palestinian woman Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq gave birth to her twin sons, Uday and Hamza Abu Odah, in November 2023, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 25, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2IZGAY1DG9 A baby lies in an incubator at the maternity ward of Nasser hospital where Palestinian woman Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq gave birth to her twin sons, Uday and Hamza Abu Odah, in November 2023, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 25, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2HZGAUQNAB A baby lies in an incubator at the maternity ward of Nasser hospital where Palestinian woman Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq gave birth to her twin sons, Uday and Hamza Abu Odah, in November 2023, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 25, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2X84ABFO6J Israeli soldiers stand amid rubble, during the ongoing ground invasion against Palestinian group Hamas in the northern Gaza Strip, November 8, 2023. Palestinian twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother Iman is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun EDITOR’S NOTE: REUTERS PHOTOGRAPHS WERE REVIEWED BY THE IDF AS PART OF THE CONDITIONS OF THE EMBED. NO PHOTOS WERE REMOVED. SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2KZGALHRJ2 Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq, the displaced Palestinian mother of twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah, shows a picture of the twins taken inside their house, on her mobile phone at a tent where she shelters with her children, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 26, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2LZGAD3F6L Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq, the displaced Palestinian mother of twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah, shows a picture of Uday taken inside their house in 2024, on her mobile phone at a tent where she shelters with her children, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 26, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2LZGAP0GZK Iman Abdel Halim Abu Mutlaq, the displaced Palestinian mother of twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah, shows a picture of Hamza taken inside their house in 2024, on her mobile phone at a tent where she shelters with her children, in Mawasi area, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 26, 2025. Uday and Hamza were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC29ICAJU2PY Palestinians, who were displaced to the south at Israel's order during the war, make their way back to their homes in northern Gaza, amid a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, in the central Gaza Strip, January 27, 2025. Palestinian twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother Iman is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2IY9AP9GDM Palestinians gather to receive food cooked by a charity kitchen, amid the Israel-Hamas conflict, in the northern Gaza Strip, September 11, 2024. Palestinian twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother Iman is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Mahmoud Issa SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2CVGAL0CKX Displaced Palestinians, fleeing northern Gaza due to an Israeli military operation, move southwards after Israeli forces ordered residents of Gaza City to evacuate to the south, in the central Gaza Strip, September 20, 2025. Palestinian twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother Iman is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Dawoud Abu Alkas SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2W26AC3U0W Children rest outside, as Palestinians arrive in Rafah after they were evacuated from Nasser hospital in Khan Younis due to the Israeli ground operation, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, in the southern Gaza Strip, February 15, 2024. Palestinian twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother Iman is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2GL4AA831E Palestinians walk among the rubble, as they inspect houses destroyed in Israeli strikes during the conflict, amid the temporary truce between Hamas and Israel, at Khan Younis refugee camp in the southern Gaza Strip, November 27, 2023. Palestinian twins Uday and Hamza Abu Odah were born on 2 November 2023, less than four weeks after the Hamas attack that triggered Israel's devastating assault on Gaza that has defined and encompassed their brief lives. They have lost their home and lived in tents and on the street. Their father was killed seeking aid and two brothers were wounded. They have suffered constant hunger, frequent bouts of sickness and repeated episodes of terrifying bombardment. Their mother Iman is frightened that the longer Israel's assault goes on, the more they - and the new generation of Gazans - will be scarred. "We are afraid this war will never stop, that it has a beginning and no end," she said. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem SEARCH "GAZA TWINS ODAH" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC21MU9F5XFK Jenna Ortega reacts after winning the Most Frightened Performance Award the MTV Movie & TV Awards at Barker Hangar in Santa Monica, California, U.S., June 5, 2022. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
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RC2U7T9A6H1U Ukrainian refugee Alexandra Zhuravel, 38, comforts her daughter Alevtina Bravorichenko-Crane, 8, as she becomes frightened by the sound of a helicopter in the sky that she mistakes for shelling, in the grounds of the Benedictine Sisters Monastery which has welcomed refugees amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Jaroslaw, Poland, March 22, 2022. "Alevtina is still very scared," Zhuravel said. "She is under constant stress and we try to distract her by going to the pool and taking walks. We try to walk as much as possible and play outside and bit by bit she is getting through it." REUTERS/Hannah McKay SEARCH "MCKAY POLAND MONASTERY" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES
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RC2Q3T9S6CKP Garbage is pictured at a polluted beach on the banks of Guanabara Bay in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil March 16, 2022. REUTERS/Ricardo Moraes
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RC2Q3T99WFHL A man walks by garbage at a polluted beach on the banks of Guanabara Bay in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil March 16, 2022. REUTERS/Ricardo Moraes
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RC2OJS9UE7T9 Raquel Neves, a marine biologist at Rio de Janeiro’s Federal University shows an urchin collected for her research in Arpoador beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil February 14, 2022. Picture taken February 14, 2022. REUTERS/Ricardo Moraes
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RC2OJS9LQJ0D Raquel Neves, a marine biologist at Rio de Janeiro’s Federal University shows an urchin collected for her research at Arpoador beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, February 14, 2022. Picture taken February 14, 2022. REUTERS/Ricardo Moraes
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RC2OJS9JJX2M Raquel Neves, a marine biologist at Rio de Janeiro’s Federal University shows an urchin collected for her research in Arpoador beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil February 14, 2022. Picture taken February 14, 2022. REUTERS/Ricardo Moraes
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RC2SEL9ZUK4K Reena Jani, 34, a health worker, rides on her neighbour's motorcycle as she travels to Mathalput Community Health Centre to receive the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Koraput, India, January 16, 2021. Jani's name was on a list of 100 health workers at Mathalput Community Health Centre, making her one of the first Indians to be inoculated against COVID-19 earlier this month, as the country rolls out a vaccination programme the government calls the world's biggest. But she had heard rumours of serious side effects and worried about what would happen were she to get ill. "I was frightened because of my son and daughters. If something happens to me, what will they do?" Jani said. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui SEARCH "SIDDIQUI OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES
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RC2SEL93SNDE Reena Jani, 34, a health worker, leaves Mathalput Community Health Centre after receiving the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Koraput, India, January 16, 2021. Jani's name was on a list of 100 health workers at Mathalput Community Health Centre, making her one of the first Indians to be inoculated against COVID-19 earlier this month, as the country rolls out a vaccination programme the government calls the world's biggest. But she had heard rumours of serious side effects and worried about what would happen were she to get ill. "I was frightened because of my son and daughters. If something happens to me, what will they do?" Jani said. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui SEARCH "SIDDIQUI OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES
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RC2SEL9MXSOI Reena Jani, 34, a health worker, sits outside her home with her husband Suna Jani, 15-year-old daughter Rajani and 10-year-old son Sujeet, a day before receiving the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Pendajam village in Koraput, India, January 15, 2021. Jani became an accredited social health activist (ASHA) community health worker, a lynchpin of India's rural healthcare system, around seven years ago. She helps to monitor pregnant women in her village of 500 people, and helps with malaria tests and doles out basic medication for fever and diarrhoea. The main breadwinner for her family of five, Jani draws a monthly salary of 3,000 rupees ($41), helping put her two daughters and one son through school. When she first learned she was to be vaccinated, Jani said she wasn't worried. Then she heard a rumour. "Someone told me that people are fainting, they are developing fever and some are dying after taking the injection," she said. "That is why I was frightened." REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui SEARCH "SIDDIQUI OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES
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RC2SEL9X7HOP Reena Jani, 34, a health worker, speaks to one of her patients who is pregnant, before travelling to Mathalput Community Health Centre to receive the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Pendajam village in Koraput, India, January 16, 2021. Jani became an accredited social health activist (ASHA) community health worker, a lynchpin of India's rural healthcare system, around seven years ago. She helps to monitor pregnant women in her village of 500 people, and helps with malaria tests and doles out basic medication for fever and diarrhoea. The main breadwinner for her family of five, Jani draws a monthly salary of 3,000 rupees ($41), helping put her two daughters and one son through school. When she first learned she was to be vaccinated, Jani said she wasn't worried. Then she heard a rumour. "Someone told me that people are fainting, they are developing fever and some are dying after taking the injection," she said. "That is why I was frightened." REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui SEARCH "SIDDIQUI OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES
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RC2SEL9QEX9V Reena Jani, 34, a health worker, arrives at Mathalput Community Health Centre on her neighbour's motorcycle, to receive the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Koraput, India, January 16, 2021. Jani's name was on a list of 100 health workers at the centre, making her one of the first Indians to be inoculated against COVID-19 earlier this month, as the country rolls out a vaccination programme the government calls the world's biggest. But she had heard rumours of serious side effects and worried about what would happen were she to get ill. "I was frightened because of my son and daughters. If something happens to me, what will they do?" Jani said. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui SEARCH "SIDDIQUI OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES
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RC2SEL9MRV5N Reena Jani, 34, a health worker, waits to receive the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca at Mathalput Community Health Centre, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Koraput, India, January 16, 2021. Jani's name was on a list of 100 health workers at Mathalput Community Health Centre, making her one of the first Indians to be inoculated against COVID-19 earlier this month, as the country rolls out a vaccination programme the government calls the world's biggest. But she had heard rumours of serious side effects and worried about what would happen were she to get ill. "I was frightened because of my son and daughters. If something happens to me, what will they do?" Jani said. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui SEARCH "SIDDIQUI OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY.
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RC2SEL9BDO5Q Reena Jani, 34, a health worker, gets ready to ride on her neighbour's motorcycle to Mathalput Community Health Centre, where she is scheduled to receive the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Pendajam village in Koraput, India, January 16, 2021. Jani's name was on a list of 100 health workers at Mathalput Community Health Centre, making her one of the first Indians to be inoculated against COVID-19 earlier this month, as the country rolls out a vaccination programme the government calls the world's biggest. But she had heard rumours of serious side effects and worried about what would happen were she to get ill. "I was frightened because of my son and daughters. If something happens to me, what will they do?" Jani said. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui SEARCH "SIDDIQUI OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES
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RC2SEL95MJ28 Reena Jani, 34, a health worker, cooks a meal before travelling to Mathalput Community Health Centre to receive the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, at her home in Pendajam village in Koraput, India, January 16, 2021. Jani became an accredited social health activist (ASHA) community health worker, a lynchpin of India's rural healthcare system, around seven years ago. She helps to monitor pregnant women in her village of 500 people, and helps with malaria tests and doles out basic medication for fever and diarrhoea. The main breadwinner for her family of five, Jani draws a monthly salary of 3,000 rupees ($41), helping put her two daughters and one son through school. When she first learned she was to be vaccinated, Jani said she wasn't worried. Then she heard a rumour. "Someone told me that people are fainting, they are developing fever and some are dying after taking the injection," she said. "That is why I was frightened." REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui SEARCH "SIDDIQUI OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES
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RC2SEL99B3J1 Reena Jani, 34, a health worker, washes her utensils before travelling to Mathalput Community Health Centre to receive the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Pendajam village in Koraput, India, January 16, 2021. Jani became an accredited social health activist (ASHA) community health worker, a lynchpin of India's rural healthcare system, around seven years ago. She helps to monitor pregnant women in her village of 500 people, and helps with malaria tests and doles out basic medication for fever and diarrhoea. The main breadwinner for her family of five, Jani draws a monthly salary of 3,000 rupees ($41), helping put her two daughters and one son through school. When she first learned she was to be vaccinated, Jani said she wasn't worried. Then she heard a rumour. "Someone told me that people are fainting, they are developing fever and some are dying after taking the injection," she said. "That is why I was frightened." REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui SEARCH "SIDDIQUI OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES
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RC2SEL9REXKR Reena Jani, 34, a health worker, gets ready to leave her home before travelling to Mathalput Community Health Centre to receive the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Pendajam village in Koraput, India, January 16, 2021. Jani became an accredited social health activist (ASHA) community health worker, a lynchpin of India's rural healthcare system, around seven years ago. She helps to monitor pregnant women in her village of 500 people, and helps with malaria tests and doles out basic medication for fever and diarrhoea. The main breadwinner for her family of five, Jani draws a monthly salary of 3,000 rupees ($41), helping put her two daughters and one son through school. When she first learned she was to be vaccinated, Jani said she wasn't worried. Then she heard a rumour. "Someone told me that people are fainting, they are developing fever and some are dying after taking the injection," she said. "That is why I was frightened." REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui SEARCH "SIDDIQUI OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES
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RC2SEL9YJ82B Reena Jani, 34, a health worker, puts on a protective face mask as she gets ready to travel to Mathalput Community Health Centre to receive the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Pendajam village in Koraput, India, January 16, 2021. Jani became an accredited social health activist (ASHA) community health worker, a lynchpin of India's rural healthcare system, around seven years ago. She helps to monitor pregnant women in her village of 500 people, and helps with malaria tests and doles out basic medication for fever and diarrhoea. The main breadwinner for her family of five, Jani draws a monthly salary of 3,000 rupees ($41), helping put her two daughters and one son through school. When she first learned she was to be vaccinated, Jani said she wasn't worried. Then she heard a rumour. "Someone told me that people are fainting, they are developing fever and some are dying after taking the injection," she said. "That is why I was frightened." REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui SEARCH "SIDDIQUI OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES
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RC2SEL9RQ980 Reena Jani, 34, a health worker, cooks a meal before travelling to Mathalput Community Health Centre to receive the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, at her home in Pendajam village in Koraput, India, January 16, 2021. Jani became an accredited social health activist (ASHA) community health worker, a lynchpin of India's rural healthcare system, around seven years ago. She helps to monitor pregnant women in her village of 500 people, and helps with malaria tests and doles out basic medication for fever and diarrhoea. The main breadwinner for her family of five, Jani draws a monthly salary of 3,000 rupees ($41), helping put her two daughters and one son through school. When she first learned she was to be vaccinated, Jani said she wasn't worried. Then she heard a rumour. "Someone told me that people are fainting, they are developing fever and some are dying after taking the injection," she said. "That is why I was frightened." REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui SEARCH "SIDDIQUI OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES
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RC2SEL9XH6CM Reena Jani, 34, a health worker, gets ready at her home before travelling to Mathalput Community Health Centre to receive the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Pendajam village in Koraput, India, January 16, 2021. Jani became an accredited social health activist (ASHA) community health worker, a lynchpin of India's rural healthcare system, around seven years ago. She helps to monitor pregnant women in her village of 500 people, and helps with malaria tests and doles out basic medication for fever and diarrhoea. The main breadwinner for her family of five, Jani draws a monthly salary of 3,000 rupees ($41), helping put her two daughters and one son through school. When she first learned she was to be vaccinated, Jani said she wasn't worried. Then she heard a rumour. "Someone told me that people are fainting, they are developing fever and some are dying after taking the injection," she said. "That is why I was frightened." REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui SEARCH "SIDDIQUI OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES. TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY.
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RC2SEL9ODK0Y Reena Jani, 34, a health worker, receives the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca at Mathalput Community Health Centre, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Koraput, India, January 16, 2021. Jani's name was on a list of 100 health workers at Mathalput Community Health Centre, making her one of the first Indians to be inoculated against COVID-19 earlier this month, as the country rolls out a vaccination programme the government calls the world's biggest. But she had heard rumours of serious side effects and worried about what would happen were she to get ill. "I was frightened because of my son and daughters. If something happens to me, what will they do?" Jani said. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui SEARCH "SIDDIQUI OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES. TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY.
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RC2SEL9KRMJK Ramishi, 13, whose mother Reena Jani, is a health worker scheduled to receive the vaccine developed by Oxford/AstraZeneca, tries to find signal on her phone so she can ring her mother the day before Jani is vaccinated, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, in Pendajam village in Koraput, India, January 15, 2021. Jani became an accredited social health activist (ASHA) community health worker, a lynchpin of India's rural healthcare system, around seven years ago. She helps to monitor pregnant women in her village of 500 people, and helps with malaria tests and doles out basic medication for fever and diarrhoea. The main breadwinner for her family of five, Jani draws a monthly salary of 3,000 rupees ($41), helping put her two daughters and one son through school. When she first learned she was to be vaccinated, Jani said she wasn't worried. Then she heard a rumour. "Someone told me that people are fainting, they are developing fever and some are dying after taking the injection," she said. "That is why I was frightened." REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui SEARCH "SIDDIQUI OXFORD/ASTRAZENECA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES. TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY.
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RC12DA678980 2019 MTV Movie and TV Awards - Santa Monica, California, U.S., June 15, 2019. Sandra Bullock wins Most Frightening Performance Award for "Bird Box". Picture taken June 15, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Blake
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RC1B7F64B400 2019 MTV Movie and TV Awards - Santa Monica, California, U.S., June 15, 2019. Sandra Bullock wins Most Frightening Performance Award for "Bird Box". Picture taken June 15, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Blake
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RC11D70CD820 2019 MTV Movie and TV Awards - Santa Monica, California, U.S., June 15, 2019. Israeli actress Gal Gadot presents Sandra Bullock with Most Frightening Performance Award for "Bird Box". Picture taken June 15, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Blake
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RC1C22876830 2019 MTV Movie and TV Awards - Santa Monica, California, U.S., June 15, 2019. Sandra Bullock wins Most Frightening Performance Award for "Bird Box". Picture taken June 15, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Blake
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RC1F583A82D0 "Walkers" Jose Sanchez, Matthew Tomlin, and Terrie Hamrick attempt to frighten people during The Walking Dead Tour, where part of the AMC production was filmed in Haralson, Georgia, U.S. June 15, 2019. Sanchez and Hamrick acted as Walkers in the season 10 TV production. Picture taken on June 15, 2019. REUTERS/Chris Aluka Berry
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RC1DBD3A4D60 Jose Sanchez, who portrays a "Walker" in Season 10 of The Walking Dead attempts to frighten people during The Walking Dead Tour in Haralson, Georgia, U.S. June 15, 2019. Picture taken on June 15, 2019. REUTERS/Chris Aluka Berry
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RC1690F03000 Jose Sanchez, who portrays a "Walker" in Season 10 of the AMC show The Walking Dead attempts to frighten people during The Walking Dead Tour in Haralson, Georgia, U.S. June 15, 2019. Picture taken on June 15, 2019. REUTERS/Chris Aluka Berry
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RC183335AE30 "Walkers" Jose Sanchez, Matthew Tomlin, and Terrie Hamrick attempt to frighten people during The Walking Dead Tour, where part of the AMC production was filmed in Haralson, Georgia, U.S. June 15, 2019. Sanchez and Hamrick acted as Walkers in the season 10 TV production. Picture taken on June 15, 2019. REUTERS/Chris Aluka Berry
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RC16DFEAF400 "Walkers" Jose Sanchez, Matthew Tomlin, and Terrie Hamrick attempt to frighten tourists during The Walking Dead Tour, where part of the AMC production was filmed in Haralson, Georgia, U.S. June 15, 2019. Sanchez and Hamrick acted as Walkers in the season 10 TV production. Picture taken on June 15, 2019. REUTERS/Chris Aluka Berry
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RC1D4034B0C0 "Walkers" Jose Sanchez, Matthew Tomlin, and Terrie Hamrick attempt to frighten tourist Skylar Powers and her mother Amy Powers during The Walking Dead , where part of the AMC production was filmed in Haralson, Georgia, U.S. June 15, 2019. Sanchez and Hamrick acted as Walkers in the season 10 TV production. Picture taken on June 15, 2019. REUTERS/Chris Aluka Berry
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RC1BA82B78C0 Tourist Skylar Powers laughs as "Walkers" Jose Sanchez, Matthew Tomlin, and Terrie Hamrick attempt to frighten her during The Walking Dead Tour, where part of the AMC production was filmed in Haralson, Georgia, U.S. June 15, 2019. Sanchez and Hamrick acted as Walkers in the season 10 TV production. Picture taken on June 15, 2019. REUTERS/Chris Aluka Berry
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RC1A5A703C40 Tourist Skylar Powers laughs as "Walkers" Jose Sanchez, Matthew Tomlin, and Terrie Hamrick attempt to frighten her and her mother Amy Powers during The Walking Dead Tour, where part of the AMC production was filmed in Haralson, Georgia, U.S. June 15, 2019. Sanchez and Hamrick acted as Walkers in the season 10 TV production. Picture taken on June 15, 2019. REUTERS/Chris Aluka Berry
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RC1821B3EA10 A woman holds a sign "I am Sad, solitary, affected, shocked angry, saddened, frighten" in front of Denmark's embassy in Rabat to honour Maren Ueland from Norway and Louisa Vesterager Jespersen from Denmark, who were killed in Morocco, in Rabat, Morocco December 22, 2018. REUTERS/Youssef Boudlal
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RC1805EC68A0 Actor Noah Schnapp accepts the Most Frightened Performance award at the 2018 MTV Movie & TV Awards at Barker Hangar in Santa Monica, California, U.S., June 16, 2018. Picture taken June 16, 2018. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
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RC1C4E20E320 It's midnight on one of the most dangerous roads in Latin America and Venezuelan trucker Humberto Aguilar hurtles through the darkness with 20 tons of vegetables freshly harvested from the Andes for sale in the capital Caracas. When he set off at sunset from the town of La Grita in western Venezuela on his 900-km (560-mile) journey, Aguilar knew he was taking his life in his hands. With hunger widespread amid a fifth year of painful economic implosion under President Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela has seen a frightening surge in attacks on increasingly lawless roads. Just a few days earlier, Aguilar said he sat terrified when hundreds of looters swarmed a stationary convoy, overwhelming drivers by sheer numbers. They carted off milk, rice and sugar from other trucks but left his less-prized vegetables alone. "Every time I say goodbye to my family, I entrust myself to God and the Virgin," said the 36-year-old trucker. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY SEARCH "LAWLESS ROADS" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.?
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RC16C21E7600 Rohingya refugee Mohamed Jabair, 21, poses for a photograph to show burns on his bodies, which he said he sustained when his house was set on fire in Myanmar, at Kutupalang refugee camp, near Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh, October 17, 2017. Knocked unconscious and badly burned, Jabair was carried by his brother and others for four days to Cox's Bazar. "I was blind for many weeks and admitted to a government hospital in Cox's Bazar for 23 days. I was frightened that I would be blind forever," he said. Jabair said money sent by relatives in Malaysia had run out and he could no longer afford treatment. REUTERS/Jorge Silva SEARCH "ROHINGYA INJURIES" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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S1AETZYCNVAA Sonrisa is pictured at the Famproa dogs shelter in Los Teques, Venezuela August 18, 2016. "Sonrisa (smile), was given that name, because when someone approached her, she was frightened as if she were being beaten, but showing her teeth as if were smiling," said Maria Silva who takes care of dogs at the shelter. "She live outside the shelter and likes to interact with everybody, but she barks a lot. She is one of the guard dogs of the place. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins SEARCH "DOG LIFE" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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S1AETZYCKJAB Sonrisa is pictured at the Famproa dogs shelter in Los Teques, Venezuela August 16, 2016. "Sonrisa (smile), was given that name, because when someone approached her, she was frightened as if she were being beaten, but showing her teeth as if were smiling," said Maria Silva who takes care of dogs at the shelter. Sonrisa died the following week after the photo was taken. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins SEARCH "DOG LIFE" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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D1AETETNIJAA Walid Murait (C), 39, a religion teacher, poses for a photograph among his students, in Sanaa, Yemen, April 29, 2016. "All the negotiating parties bear the responsibility for finding a way out for Yemen and the Yemeni people from this disastrous and frightening situation" Murait said. "I call upon all parties to give priority to the culture of wisdom, tolerance, love and building mutual trust, not the culture of exclusion," he added. Anxiety reigns in the Yemeni capital Sanaa, where ordinary people await the outcome of almost a month of peace talks they hope can end a devastating war. REUTERS/Mohamed al-Sayaghi SEARCH "YEMEN PEACE" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "THE WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES
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GF10000292567 A man stands next to a masked reveller during carnival celebrations in Ituren February 1, 2016. Bell carrying dancers known as Joaldunak from Zubieta and neighbouring Ituren visit each other's villages performing a ritual dance to ward off evil spirits and awaken the coming spring. Alongside the dancers, villagers dress in bizarre and frightening costumes to harass and scare visitors. REUTERS/Vincent West
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GF10000292565 A man dressed in sheepskin smokes a cigarette during carnival celebrations in Ituren February 1, 2016. Bell carrying dancers known as Joaldunak from Zubieta and neighbouring Ituren visit each other's villages performing a ritual dance to ward off evil spirits and awaken the coming spring. Alongside the dancers, villagers dress in bizarre and frightening costumes to harass and scare visitors. REUTERS/Vincent West
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GF10000292564 Girls wearing masks carry animal skins and a skull during carnival celebrations in Ituren February 1, 2016. Bell carrying dancers known as Joaldunak from Zubieta and neighbouring Ituren visit each other's villages performing a ritual dance to ward off evil spirits and awaken the coming spring. Alongside the dancers, villagers dress in bizarre and frightening costumes to harass and scare visitors. REUTERS/Vincent West
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GF10000292562 A man swings a chainsaw, with the sawchain removed, during carnival celebrations in Ituren February 1, 2016. Bell carrying dancers known as Joaldunak from Zubieta and neighbouring Ituren visit each other's villages performing a ritual dance to ward off evil spirits and awaken the coming spring. Alongside the dancers, villagers dress in bizarre and frightening costumes to harass and scare visitors. REUTERS/Vincent West
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GF10000292423 A boy carries a horses head during carnival celebrations in Ituren February 1, 2016. Bell carrying dancers known as Joaldunak from Zubieta and neighbouring Ituren visit each other's villages performing a ritual dance to ward off evil spirits and awaken the coming spring. Alongside the dancers, villagers dress in bizarre and frightening costumes to harass and scare visitors. REUTERS/Vincent West
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GF10000292422 Villagers dressed as a priest and nun sit together in a wheelchair during carnival celebrations in Ituren February 1, 2016. Bell carrying dancers known as Joaldunak from Zubieta and neighbouring Ituren visit each other's villages performing a ritual dance to ward off evil spirits and awaken the coming spring. Alongside the dancers, villagers dress in bizarre and frightening costumes to harass and scare visitors. REUTERS/Vincent West
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GF10000292418 A man rides a customized motorbike during carnival celebrations in Ituren February 1, 2016. Bell carrying dancers known as Joaldunak from Zubieta and neighbouring Ituren visit each other's villages performing a ritual dance to ward off evil spirits and awaken the coming spring. Alongside the dancers, villagers dress in bizarre and frightening costumes to harass and scare visitors. REUTERS/Vincent West
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GF10000292406 A man wears a costume made of sticks during carnival celebrations in Ituren February 1, 2016. Bell carrying dancers known as Joaldunak from Zubieta and neighbouring Ituren visit each other's villages performing a ritual dance to ward off evil spirits and awaken the coming spring. Alongside the dancers, villagers dress in bizarre and frightening costumes to harass and scare visitors. REUTERS/Vincent West
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GF10000292402 A man dressed in a bear costume performs alongside dancers during carnival celebrations in Ituren February 1, 2016. Bell carrying dancers known as Joaldunak from Zubieta and neighbouring Ituren visit each other's villages performing a ritual dance to ward off evil spirits and awaken the coming spring. Alongside the dancers, villagers dress in bizarre and frightening costumes to harass and scare visitors. REUTERS/Vincent West
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GF10000292401 A man wearing red paint drinks from a bottle alongside friends during carnival celebrations in Ituren February 1, 2016. Bell carrying dancers known as Joaldunak from Zubieta and neighbouring Ituren visit each other's villages performing a ritual dance to ward off evil spirits and awaken the coming spring. Alongside the dancers, villagers dress in bizarre and frightening costumes to harass and scare visitors. REUTERS/Vincent West
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GF10000292400 Villagers wear masks and costumes during carnival celebrations in Ituren February 1, 2016. Bell carrying dancers known as Joaldunak from Zubieta and neighbouring Ituren visit each other's villages performing a ritual dance to ward off evil spirits and awaken the coming spring. Alongside the dancers, villagers dress in bizarre and frightening costumes to harass and scare visitors. REUTERS/Vincent West
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GF10000292399 A masked man hits a car with an axe during carnival celebrations in Ituren February 1, 2016. Bell carrying dancers known as Joaldunak from Zubieta and neighbouring Ituren visit each other's villages performing a ritual dance to ward off evil spirits and awaken the coming spring. Alongside the dancers, villagers dress in bizarre and frightening costumes to harass and scare visitors. REUTERS/Vincent West
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GF10000292398 A man dressed in sheepskin stands on a car during carnival celebrations in Ituren February 1, 2016. Bell carrying dancers known as Joaldunak from Zubieta and neighbouring Ituren visit each other's villages performing a ritual dance to ward off evil spirits and awaken the coming spring. Alongside the dancers, villagers dress in bizarre and frightening costumes to harass and scare visitors. REUTERS/Vincent West
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GF10000292397 Dancers are transported in an open trailer during carnival celebrations in Ituren February 1, 2016. Bell carrying dancers known as Joaldunak from Zubieta and neighbouring Ituren visit each other's villages performing a ritual dance to ward off evil spirits and awaken the coming spring. Alongside the dancers, villagers dress in bizarre and frightening costumes to harass and scare visitors. REUTERS/Vincent West TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
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GF10000292396 A boy carries a dead fox during carnival celebrations in Ituren February 1, 2016. Bell carrying dancers known as Joaldunak from Zubieta and neighbouring Ituren visit each other's villages performing a ritual dance to ward off evil spirits and awaken the coming spring. Alongside the dancers, villagers dress in bizarre and frightening costumes to harass and scare visitors. REUTERS/Vincent West
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