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RC26L7AOZ7LN Children displaced by gang war violence play at Argentine Bellegarde National School, which was transformed into a shelter where people live in poor conditions, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti May 6, 2024. Nearly half of the country's population is struggling to feed themselves due to the conflict, for many children there are few options to obtain food, and desperation leads many to join gangs. "We need to have a security response force but also a robust humanitarian response," said Jean-Martin Bauer, the Haiti director of the United Nations World Food Programme. "Haiti will never be at peace as long as half its citizens are starving." REUTERS/Ricardo Arduengo SEARCH "ARDUENGO VALTIERRA HAITI HUNGER" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES. TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
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RC26L7A12QPJ Children displaced by gang war violence play at Argentine Bellegarde National School, which was transformed into a shelter where people live in poor conditions in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, May 6, 2024. Nearly half of the country's population is struggling to feed themselves due to the conflict, for many children there are few options to obtain food, and desperation leads many to join gangs. "We need to have a security response force but also a robust humanitarian response," said Jean-Martin Bauer, the Haiti director of the United Nations World Food Programme. "Haiti will never be at peace as long as half its citizens are starving." REUTERS/Ricardo Arduengo SEARCH "ARDUENGO VALTIERRA HAITI HUNGER" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC27L7ACR9K7 A child displaced by gang war violence pretends to feed the head of a broken doll at Argentine Bellegarde National School, which was transformed into a shelter where people live in poor conditions, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, May 6, 2024. Nearly half of the country's population is struggling to feed themselves due to the conflict, for many children there are few options to obtain food, and desperation leads many to join gangs. "We need to have a security response force but also a robust humanitarian response," said Jean-Martin Bauer, the Haiti director of the United Nations World Food Programme. "Haiti will never be at peace as long as half its citizens are starving." REUTERS/Ricardo Arduengo SEARCH "ARDUENGO VALTIERRA HAITI HUNGER" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES. TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
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RC26L7AP1UIY Children displaced by gang war violence play football at Argentine Bellegarde National School, which was transformed into a shelter where people live in poor conditions, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, May 6, 2024. Nearly half of the country's population is struggling to feed themselves due to the conflict, for many children there are few options to obtain food, and desperation leads many to join gangs. "We need to have a security response force but also a robust humanitarian response," said Jean-Martin Bauer, the Haiti director of the United Nations World Food Programme. "Haiti will never be at peace as long as half its citizens are starving." REUTERS/Ricardo Arduengo SEARCH "ARDUENGO VALTIERRA HAITI HUNGER" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2FK7AJ3H7L Children displaced by gang war violence play dominoes at Darius Denis school, which was transformed into a shelter where people live in poor conditions, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, May 5, 2024. Nearly half of the country's population is struggling to feed themselves due to the conflict, for many children there are few options to obtain food, and desperation leads many to join gangs. "We need to have a security response force but also a robust humanitarian response," said Jean-Martin Bauer, the Haiti director of the United Nations World Food Programme. "Haiti will never be at peace as long as half its citizens are starving." REUTERS/Ricardo Arduengo SEARCH "ARDUENGO VALTIERRA HAITI HUNGER" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2SH7A6PMPT Children displaced by gang war violence play at the Antenor Firmin high school transformed into a shelter, where people live in poor conditions, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti May 1, 2024. REUTERS/Ricardo Arduengo
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RC2RH7A094BY A woman and two children displaced by gang war violence take refuge at the Antenor Firmin high school transformed into a shelter, where people live in poor conditions, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti May 1, 2024. REUTERS/Ricardo Arduengo
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RC2M83ATUJT9 A 'Yes' sign, campaigning for Australia's upcoming referendum on Indigenous issues, is vandalised with paint as it hangs outside a school teacher's home in Hermannsburg, Australia, September 15, 2023. On October 14, Australians will vote on whether to recognise Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the constitution and enshrine in it an advisory body called the Voice to Parliament that would give non-binding advice to lawmakers on matters concerning the continent's first inhabitants. Unlike New Zealand, Canada and the U.S., Australia has no treaty with its Indigenous people, who make up about 3.8 per cent of the population. Under government policies they suffered dispossession of their homelands and forced separation of children from their parents until well into the 20th century. Many live in poverty and experience lower life expectancy, high incarceration rates and poor educational outcomes. REUTERS/Jaimi Joy SEARCH "JOY AUSTRALIA VOTE" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2VO0AKDF9D Mariam Yasser Hasson, 12, and Zainab Yasser Hasson, 13, Iraqi students at the mobile school bus operated by Justice Gate Organization, a civil society organization which offers lessons on the school bus to children from poor neighbourhoods, walk with other students in the street, in Baghdad, Iraq, April 30, 2023. REUTERS/Saba Kareem
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RC2WO0A8SN0Y Mariam Yasser Hasson, 12, an Iraqi student at the mobile school bus operated by Justice Gate Organization, a civil society organization which offers lessons on the school bus to children from poor neighbourhoods, washes a spoon, in Baghdad, Iraq, April 30, 2023. REUTERS/Saba Kareem
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RC2WO0AJUYWG Mariam Yasser Hasson ,12, and Zainab Yasser Hasson ,13, Iraqi students at the mobile school bus operated by Justice Gate Organization, a civil society organization which offers lessons on the school bus to children from poor neighbourhoods, eat biscuits in their home, in Baghdad, Iraq, April 30, 2023. REUTERS/Saba Kareem
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RC2WO0AJNJ24 Mariam Yasser Hasson ,12, and Zainab Yasser Hasson ,13, Iraqi students at the mobile school bus operated by Justice Gate Organization, a civil society organization which offers lessons on the school bus to children from poor neighbourhoods, do homework in their home, in Baghdad, Iraq, April 30, 2023. REUTERS/Saba Kareem
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RC2WO0AQ0GL2 Mariam Yasser Hasson ,12, and Zainab Yasser Hasson ,13, Iraqi students at the mobile school bus operated by Justice Gate Organization, a civil society organization which offers lessons on the school bus to children from poor neighbourhoods, do homework in their home, in Baghdad, Iraq, April 30, 2023. REUTERS/Saba Kareem
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RC2UO0ABVCI8 Zainab Yasser Hasson ,13, an Iraqi student plays next to the mobile school bus operated by Justice Gate Organization, a civil society organization which offers lessons on the school bus to children from poor neighbourhoods, in Baghdad, Iraq, April 30, 2023. REUTERS/Saba Kareem
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RC2UO0A5J1RI Iraqi children play next to the mobile school bus operated by Justice Gate Organization, a civil society organization which offers lessons on the school bus to children from poor neighbourhoods, in Baghdad, Iraq, April 30, 2023. REUTERS/Saba Kareem
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RC2JJ0APJAUP Iraqi children attend class on the mobile school bus operated by Justice Gate Organization, a civil society organization which offers lessons on the school bus to children from poor neighbourhoods, in Baghdad, Iraq, April 30, 2023. REUTERS/Saba Kareem
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RC2UO0AE0T0Q Iraqi children attend class on the mobile school bus operated by Justice Gate Organization, a civil society organization which offers lessons on the school bus to children from poor neighbourhoods, in Baghdad, Iraq April 30, 2023. REUTERS/Saba Kareem
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RC2UO0AC87A7 Iraqi children attend class on the mobile school bus operated by Justice Gate Organization, a civil society organization which offers lessons on the school bus to children from poor neighbourhoods, in Baghdad, Iraq April 30, 2023. REUTERS/Saba Kareem
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RC2VO0ALQL5R An Iraqi teacher teaches children on the mobile school bus operated by civil society Justice Gate Organization, which offers lessons on the school bus to children from poor neighbourhoods, in Baghdad, Iraq April 30, 2023. REUTERS/Saba Kareem
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RC2VO0ADUZB7 Mariam Yasser Hasson, an Iraqi student at the mobile school bus operated by Justice Gate Organization, a civil society organization which offers lessons on the school bus to children from poor neighbourhoods, plays with other students, in Baghdad, Iraq, April 30, 2023. REUTERS/Saba Kareem
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RC2FYX9IV96P FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Bill Clinton and Brazilian soccer legend Pele embrace after playing a brief round of soccer at the "Vila Olimpica," a sports-oriented school for poor children, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil October 15, 1997. REUTERS/Rick Wilking/File Photo
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RC2FMS9GCDIB Faridat Bakare, 12, a student enrolled in a special STEM programme for children from poor families at the Knosk Secondary School, for which she pays 100 naira ($ 0.25) per day, walks with her sister after school at Kuje market, in Abuja, Nigeria February 18, 2022. Picture taken February 18, 2022. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
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RC2FMS9E99QY Faridat Bakare, 12, a student enrolled in a special STEM programme for children from poor families at the Knosk Secondary School, for which she pays 100 naira ($ 0.25) per day, walks down the street to join her mother, at a market in Kuje, Abuja, Nigeria February 18, 2022. Picture taken February 18, 2022. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
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RC2FMS9E2IUC Faridat Bakare, 12, a student enrolled in a special STEM programme for children from poor families at the Knosk Secondary School, for which she pays 100 naira ($0.25) per day, looks at her mother, after school at a market in Kuje, Abuja, Nigeria February 18, 2022. Picture taken February 18, 2022. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
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RC2CMS91MFYR Kingsley Bangwell, co-founder of a special STEM programme for children from poor families at the Knosk Secondary School, plays soccer with some students during a lunch break, in Abuja, Nigeria February 18, 2022. Picture taken February 18, 2022. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
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RC2BMS9HK4IW A student attends a class at a special STEM programme for children from poor families at the Knosk Secondary School, in Kuje, Abuja, Nigeria February 18, 2022. Picture taken February 18, 2022. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
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RC2AMS9XOBUY A teacher writes on the board during a class that is part of a special STEM programme for children from poor families at the Knosk Secondary School, in Abuja, Nigeria February 18, 2022. Picture taken February 18, 2022. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
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RC2AMS9NJZXR Faridat Bakare, 12, a student enrolled in a special STEM programme for children from poor families at the Knosk Secondary School, for which she pays 100 naira ($ 0.25) per day, attend a computer class alongside other students in the area of Kuje, in Abuja, Nigeria February 18, 2022. Picture taken February 18, 2022. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
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RC2AMS9EPBXO Students attend a class at a special STEM programme for children from poor families at the Knosk Secondary School in Abuja, Nigeria February 18, 2022. Picture taken February 18, 2022. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
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RC2AMS9E7Q7L Faridat Bakare, 12, a student enrolled in a special STEM programme for children from poor families at the Knosk Secondary School, for which she pays 100 naira ($0.25) per day, attends a class in Kuje, Abuja, Nigeria February 18, 2022. Picture taken February 18, 2022. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
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RC29MS9F8ZWT Faridat Bakare, 12, a student enrolled in a special STEM programme for children from poor families at the Knosk Secondary School, for which she pays 100 naira ($0.25) per day, attends a class in Kuje, Abuja, Nigeria February 18, 2022. Picture taken February 18, 2022. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
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RC29MS9D5FGQ Students attend a class at a special STEM programme for children from poor families at the Knosk Secondary School in Abuja, Nigeria February 18, 2022. Picture taken February 18, 2022. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
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RC12F8B40D20 A girl walks past Sister Mariamo de Gloria Natal, inside the school kitchen at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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RC1BDB104BC0 A girl looks on at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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RC1F1230C240 A girl reads a book at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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RC12825351E0 Sister Mariana Afonso de Amaral looks on as a girl prepares lunch at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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RC1195888180 A worker walks past school children as they are reflected in a window while they queue for lunch at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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RC15EBFC02F0 A worker looks on at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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RC130C1FC510 School children are seen at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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RC1994D6ECA0 Children play as they queue for lunch at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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RC130888B090 School children play at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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RC157A28AAF0 Sister Maria de Jesu's da Silva chats to her colleagues at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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RC1441BE8CD0 A worker and a school girl look on at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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RC171EEC9520 Sister Mariana Afonso de Amaral chats with school girls at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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RC1F42D73600 School girls help with cooking at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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RC1935351F30 Sister Mariamo de Gloria Natal, enters the kitchen as school girls look on at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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RC11C51955C0 Sister Mariamo de Gloria Natal, chats to a school girl as they do laundry at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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RC11F15DD880 A girl sets a table below a painting depicting "The Last Supper" at the Casa Madre Maria Clara (Mother Maria Clara House), a Christian boarding school that accommodates abandoned and orphaned children as well as children from poor backgrounds and teaches them life skills, in Lhanguene, Maputo, Mozambique, August 31, 2019. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
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RC1129B17D80 FILE PHOTO: The mayor of Riace, Domenico Lucano, poses for a photograph in Riace November 23, 2013. Riace is a small village in Calabria, a poor region in the south of Italy. Many of the village's former residents left in search of better opportunities elsewhere in Italy or abroad. In recent years, however, the mayor Domenico Lucano has introduced a scheme to encourage immigrants to come to Riace and breathe new life into the village. The immigrant's children have revitalized the local school, which suffered from a lack of students. Picture taken November 23, 2013. REUTERS/Max Rossi/File Photo
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S1BETRQCLJAC When children began fainting at a Catholic-run school in a poor neighbourhood of Venezuela's capital Caracas, teachers set out to discover what was happening. They asked the 478 kindergarten and primary schoolchildren to draw or describe their most recent meals and also what they expected to eat next. The responses were shocking. Some had gone without breakfast and were also skipping other meals, or expecting to eat only bread, yucca or the local staple "arepa", a form of cornmeal flatbread. REUTERS/Carlos Jasso SEARCH "CHILDREN HUNGER" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "THE WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY Matching text VENEZUELA-SCHOOLCHIDREN/
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S1AETKGMNNAB Many poor and middle-class Venezuelans can no longer prioritise education as they are swept up in the all-consuming quest for ever less food amid a flare-up in lootings and riots. Venezuela's biggest teachers union estimates that every day between 30 to 40 percent of teachers fail to show up at school, chiefly because they are standing in lines for food or medicine. Pupils' attendance is also dropping because children have not eaten, know there will be no food at school, or have to line up and help their parents shop, according to the group. Adding to the tough panorama, power and water cuts are frequent, and for the last two months schools have been closed on Fridays in a government drive to save electricity. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins SEARCH "VENEZUELA SCHOOL" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "THE WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY Matching text VENEZUELA-EDUCATION/
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GF10000357443 Rahul Shaw, 10, reads a textbook in his father's rickshaw before he goes to school in Kolkata, India, March 9, 2016. Shaw said he studies in a government-run school that gives him free meals. He wants to become a doctor and treat people for free. Some people in Kolkata earn a living by selling second-hand clothes, driving rickshaws or in the city’s food markets. Those too poor to afford a home of their own sleep where they work, helping people who moved to the city to find work to send money back home. Outside working hours residents of the city formerly called Calcutta might enjoy a game of chess or carrom, while children play soccer with friends. REUTERS/Rupak De Chowdhuri SEARCH "STREET KOLKATA" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "THE WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES
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GF20000048639 An abandon building is seen near the John Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland November 5, 2015. For many who knew Ben Carson in Baltimore, his U.S. presidential candidacy comes as a surprise. Over more than three decades as a Baltimore resident ending in 2013, Carson - now a front-runner in the race for the Republican Party nomination - rarely spoke about his political views. An unassailable local hero, a Johns Hopkins Hospital neurosurgeon, Carson put his wealth to use helping the poor. He established a scholarship program for school children and hosted a banquet each year to honor its recipients. Picture taken November 5, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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GF20000048638 An man sits on a bench near the John Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland November 5, 2015. For many who knew Ben Carson in Baltimore, his U.S. presidential candidacy comes as a surprise. Over more than three decades as a Baltimore resident ending in 2013, Carson - now a front-runner in the race for the Republican Party nomination - rarely spoke about his political views. An unassailable local hero, a Johns Hopkins Hospital neurosurgeon, Carson put his wealth to use helping the poor. He established a scholarship program for school children and hosted a banquet each year to honor its recipients. Picture taken November 5, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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GF20000048636 Cars are seen waiting on traffic as they enter Baltimore, Maryland November 5, 2015. For many who knew Ben Carson in Baltimore, his U.S. presidential candidacy comes as a surprise. Over more than three decades as a Baltimore resident ending in 2013, Carson - now a front-runner in the race for the Republican Party nomination - rarely spoke about his political views. An unassailable local hero, a Johns Hopkins Hospital neurosurgeon, Carson put his wealth to use helping the poor. He established a scholarship program for school children and hosted a banquet each year to honor its recipients. Picture taken November 5, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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GF20000048632 A traffic sign for Baltimore is seen on a highway near Baltimore, Maryland November 5, 2015. For many who knew Ben Carson in Baltimore, his U.S. presidential candidacy comes as a surprise. Over more than three decades as a Baltimore resident ending in 2013, Carson - now a front-runner in the race for the Republican Party nomination - rarely spoke about his political views. An unassailable local hero, a Johns Hopkins Hospital neurosurgeon, Carson put his wealth to use helping the poor. He established a scholarship program for school children and hosted a banquet each year to honor its recipients. Picture taken November 5, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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GF20000048630 A sign which reads "Run Ben Run" is support of presidential candidate Ben Carson is seen next to a countryside road in Upperco Maryland November 5, 2015. For many who knew Ben Carson in Baltimore, his U.S. presidential candidacy comes as a surprise. Over more than three decades as a Baltimore resident ending in 2013, Carson - now a front-runner in the race for the Republican Party nomination - rarely spoke about his political views. An unassailable local hero, a Johns Hopkins Hospital neurosurgeon, Carson put his wealth to use helping the poor. He established a scholarship program for school children and hosted a banquet each year to honor its recipients. Picture taken November 5, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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GF20000048628 A countryside road is seen during a hazy day in Upperco Maryland November 5, 2015. For many who knew Ben Carson in Baltimore, his U.S. presidential candidacy comes as a surprise. Over more than three decades as a Baltimore resident ending in 2013, Carson - now a front-runner in the race for the Republican Party nomination - rarely spoke about his political views. An unassailable local hero, a Johns Hopkins Hospital neurosurgeon, Carson put his wealth to use helping the poor. He established a scholarship program for school children and hosted a banquet each year to honor its recipients. Picture taken November 5, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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GF20000048627 The John Hopkins Hospital is seen at a area near the downtown of Baltimore, Maryland November 4, 2015. For many who knew Ben Carson in Baltimore, his U.S. presidential candidacy comes as a surprise. Over more than three decades as a Baltimore resident ending in 2013, Carson - now a front-runner in the race for the Republican Party nomination - rarely spoke about his political views. An unassailable local hero, a Johns Hopkins Hospital neurosurgeon, Carson put his wealth to use helping the poor. He established a scholarship program for school children and hosted a banquet each year to honor its recipients. Picture taken November 4, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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GF20000048625 The Spencerville Seventh Day Adventist Church is seen in Silver Spring, Maryland November 4, 2015. For many who knew Ben Carson in Baltimore, his U.S. presidential candidacy comes as a surprise. Over more than three decades as a Baltimore resident ending in 2013, Carson - now a front-runner in the race for the Republican Party nomination - rarely spoke about his political views. An unassailable local hero, a Johns Hopkins Hospital neurosurgeon, Carson put his wealth to use helping the poor. He established a scholarship program for school children and hosted a banquet each year to honor its recipients. Picture taken November 4, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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GF20000048622 A holy Bible Book is seen at the Spencerville Seventh Day Adventist Church in Silver Spring, Maryland November 4, 2015. For many who knew Ben Carson in Baltimore, his U.S. presidential candidacy comes as a surprise. Over more than three decades as a Baltimore resident ending in 2013, Carson - now a front-runner in the race for the Republican Party nomination - rarely spoke about his political views. An unassailable local hero, a Johns Hopkins Hospital neurosurgeon, Carson put his wealth to use helping the poor. He established a scholarship program for school children and hosted a banquet each year to honor its recipients. Picture taken November 4, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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GF20000048621 A man walks by the John Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland November 4, 2015. For many who knew Ben Carson in Baltimore, his U.S. presidential candidacy comes as a surprise. Over more than three decades as a Baltimore resident ending in 2013, Carson - now a front-runner in the race for the Republican Party nomination - rarely spoke about his political views. An unassailable local hero, a Johns Hopkins Hospital neurosurgeon, Carson put his wealth to use helping the poor. He established a scholarship program for school children and hosted a banquet each year to honor its recipients. Picture taken November 4, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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GF20000048619 The John Hopkins Hospital is seen at a area near the downtown of Baltimore, Maryland November 4, 2015. For many who knew Ben Carson in Baltimore, his U.S. presidential candidacy comes as a surprise. Over more than three decades as a Baltimore resident ending in 2013, Carson - now a front-runner in the race for the Republican Party nomination - rarely spoke about his political views. An unassailable local hero, a Johns Hopkins Hospital neurosurgeon, Carson put his wealth to use helping the poor. He established a scholarship program for school children and hosted a banquet each year to honor its recipients. Picture taken November 4, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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GF20000048618 A popeyes restaurant sign is seen on the intersections of Broadway and New Orleans a cross the street from the John Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland November 4, 2015. For many who knew Ben Carson in Baltimore, his U.S. presidential candidacy comes as a surprise. Over more than three decades as a Baltimore resident ending in 2013, Carson - now a front-runner in the race for the Republican Party nomination - rarely spoke about his political views. An unassailable local hero, a Johns Hopkins Hospital neurosurgeon, Carson put his wealth to use helping the poor. He established a scholarship program for school children and hosted a banquet each year to honor its recipients. Picture taken November 4, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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GF20000048616 A man walks by a popeyes restaurant a cross the street from the John Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland November 4, 2015. For many who knew Ben Carson in Baltimore, his U.S. presidential candidacy comes as a surprise. Over more than three decades as a Baltimore resident ending in 2013, Carson - now a front-runner in the race for the Republican Party nomination - rarely spoke about his political views. An unassailable local hero, a Johns Hopkins Hospital neurosurgeon, Carson put his wealth to use helping the poor. He established a scholarship program for school children and hosted a banquet each year to honor its recipients. Picture taken November 4, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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GF20000048615 A man crosses a street in front of the John Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland November 4, 2015. For many who knew Ben Carson in Baltimore, his U.S. presidential candidacy comes as a surprise. Over more than three decades as a Baltimore resident ending in 2013, Carson - now a front-runner in the race for the Republican Party nomination - rarely spoke about his political views. An unassailable local hero, a Johns Hopkins Hospital neurosurgeon, Carson put his wealth to use helping the poor. He established a scholarship program for school children and hosted a banquet each year to honor its recipients. Picture taken November 4, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
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GF20000020817 Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (wearing turban) waves to school children after addressing the nation from the historic Red Fort during Independence Day celebrations in Delhi, India, August 15, 2015. Modi sought to shed an image that he governs for big business on Saturday, vowing to help the poor in an annual speech aimed at bolstering popularity rather than tackling setbacks to his economic reform plans. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
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GF20000020816 Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (R, wearing turban) greets school children after addressing the nation from the historic Red Fort during Independence Day celebrations in Delhi, India, August 15, 2015. Modi sought to shed an image that he governs for big business on Saturday, vowing to help the poor in an annual speech aimed at bolstering popularity rather than tackling setbacks to his economic reform plans. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
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GF10000158923 Children eat their free meal at a school run by Joint Women’s Programme, a non-governmental organization (NGO), at a slum area in Noida on the outskirts of New Delhi, India, July 14, 2015. The U.S.-based Ford Foundation, a leading global charity, has frozen $4 million in funding to India, squeezing aid to the poor, after a clampdown by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on donors deemed to be meddling in domestic politics that has raised concern in Washington. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
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GF10000158915 Children eat their free meal at a school run by Joint Women’s Programme, a non-governmental organization (NGO), at a slum area in Noida on the outskirts of New Delhi, India, July 14, 2015. The U.S.-based Ford Foundation, a leading global charity, has frozen $4 million in funding to India, squeezing aid to the poor, after a clampdown by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on donors deemed to be meddling in domestic politics that has raised concern in Washington. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
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GF10000158914 Children eat their free meal at a school run by Joint Women’s Programme, a non-governmental organization (NGO), at a slum area in Noida on the outskirts of New Delhi, India, July 14, 2015. The U.S.-based Ford Foundation, a leading global charity, has frozen $4 million in funding to India, squeezing aid to the poor, after a clampdown by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on donors deemed to be meddling in domestic politics that has raised concern in Washington. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
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GM1EAB201W601 A trainer helps Kirabo Beatrice as she rehearses her acting moves during a martial arts class organised by local non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and residents, in the Wakaliga slums of Uganda's capital Kampala, November 1, 2014. The slum-based children are trained to take up acting roles in movies which cover issues affecting their communities like child sacrifice, poverty, and theft among others. Earnings from these films have helped the children, who all come from poor families, to stay in school, according to the organisers. REUTERS/Edward Echwalu (UGANDA - Tags: SOCIETY POVERTY ENTERTAINMENT TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)
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GM1EAB201VZ01 A trainer helps Kirabo Beatrice as she rehearses her acting moves during a martial arts class organised by local non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and residents, in the Wakaliga slums of Uganda's capital Kampala, November 1, 2014. The slum-based children are trained to take up acting roles in movies which cover issues affecting their communities like child sacrifice, poverty, and theft among others. Earnings from these films have helped the children, who all come from poor families, to stay in school, according to the organisers. REUTERS/Edward Echwalu (UGANDA - Tags: SOCIETY ENTERTAINMENT POVERTY)
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GM1EAB201VQ01 A boy practises how to kick during a martial arts class organised by local non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and residents, in the Wakaliga slums of Uganda's capital Kampala, November 1, 2014. The slum-based children are trained to take up acting roles in movies which cover issues affecting their communities like child sacrifice, poverty, and theft among others. Earnings from these films have helped the children, who all come from poor families, to stay in school, according to the organisers. REUTERS/Edward Echwalu (UGANDA - Tags: SOCIETY ENTERTAINMENT POVERTY)
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GM1EAB201VA01 A boy practises a kick as he rehearses for his movie role during a martial arts class organised by local non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and residents, in the Wakaliga slums of Uganda's capital Kampala, November 1, 2014. The slum-based children are trained to take up acting roles in movies which cover issues affecting their communities like child sacrifice, poverty, and theft among others. Earnings from these films have helped the children, who all come from poor families, to stay in school, according to the organisers. REUTERS/Edward Echwalu (UGANDA - Tags: ENTERTAINMENT SOCIETY POVERTY)
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GM1EAB201UY01 Kirabo Beatrice rehearses her acting moves during a martial arts class organised by local non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and residents, in the Wakaliga slums of Uganda's capital Kampala, November 1, 2014. The slum-based children are trained to take up acting roles in movies which cover issues affecting their communities like child sacrifice, poverty, and theft among others. Earnings from these films have helped the children, who all come from poor families, to stay in school, according to the organisers. REUTERS/Edward Echwalu (UGANDA - Tags: ENTERTAINMENT SOCIETY POVERTY)
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GM1EAB201UL01 Children rehearse for their movie roles during a martial arts class organised by local non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and residents, in the Wakaliga slums of Uganda's capital Kampala, November 1, 2014. The slum-based children are trained to take up acting roles in movies which cover issues affecting their communities like child sacrifice, poverty, and theft among others. Earnings from these films have helped the children, who all come from poor families, to stay in school, according to the organisers. REUTERS/Edward Echwalu (UGANDA - Tags: SOCIETY ENTERTAINMENT POVERTY)
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GM1EAB201UC01 Children take up positions as they rehearse for their movie roles during a martial arts class organised by local non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and residents, in the Wakaliga slums of Uganda's capital Kampala, November 1, 2014. The slum-based children are trained to take up acting roles in movies which cover issues affecting their communities like child sacrifice, poverty, and theft among others. Earnings from these films have helped the children, who all come from poor families, to stay in school, according to the organisers. REUTERS/Edward Echwalu (UGANDA - Tags: SOCIETY ENTERTAINMENT POVERTY)
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GM1EAB201DM01 Children rehearse for their movie roles during a martial arts class organised by local non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and residents, in the Wakaliga slums of Uganda's capital Kampala, November 1, 2014. The slum-based children are trained to take up acting roles in movies which cover issues affecting their communities like child sacrifice, poverty, and theft among others. Earnings from these films have helped the children, who all come from poor families, to stay in school, according to the organisers. REUTERS/Edward Echwalu (UGANDA - Tags: ENTERTAINMENT SOCIETY POVERTY)
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GM1EA8I03SQ01 Supporters line up to pay their respects to the late Brazilian presidential candidate Eduardo Campos during his wake in Recife, August 17, 2014. The Brazilian Socialist Party plans to launch environmentalist Marina Silva as its presidential candidate next week, replacing party leader Campos who was killed in a plane crash, a senior party official said on Saturday. The banner reads, "The day that the children of the poor and the rich study in the same school, will be the day that Brazil will be the country we hope for." REUTERS/Paulo Whitaker (BRAZIL - Tags: DISASTER POLITICS OBITUARY ELECTIONS)
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GM1EA640V5N01 A boy looks out a window at a school, which is attended by recycling workers' children, in Dongxiaokou village in Beijing May 14, 2014. On the outskirts of Beijing lies Dongxiaokou village, a major centre for recycling old electronic goods, or e-waste. Discarded electrical and electronic products, from abandoned air-conditioners to refrigerators, are collected and recycled mostly by migrant workers who either repair them or sell them on as scrap. Those in the business in Dongxiaokou grapple with poor infrastructure and sanitation facilities, in addition to dangers associated with handling e-waste. The village is now facing demolition to make way for an ambitious urbanisation plan, and residents are worried about losing their homes and work. Environmental issues will be under the spotlight on June 5, which marks World Environment Day. Picture taken May 14, 2014. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon (CHINA - Tags: ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY BUSINESS EMPLOYMENT TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY EDUCATION)ATTENTION EDITORS: PICTURE 16 OF 25 FOR PACKAGE 'ENVIRONMENT DAY - CHINA'S E-WASTE VILLAGE' TO FIND ALL IMAGES SEARCH 'DONGXIAOKOU'
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GM1EA5E11HI01 Activist Aisha Yesufu (L), 40, poses with her daughter Aliya, 12, after picking her up from school in Abuja May 13, 2014. Yesufu, a businesswoman who is originally from Kano and has two children, has joined daily protests calling for the release of secondary school girls abducted from the remote village of Chibok. "I see myself as a Chibok girl 23 years ago in Kano. I grew up poor and when you grow up poor in this part of the world you are defenseless," she said. REUTERS/Joe Penney (NIGERIA - Tags: POLITICS EDUCATION CIVIL UNREST CRIME LAW)
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GM1EA5E116L01 Activist Aisha Yesufu (R), 40, walks to her car with her sister after attending a protest in Abuja May 13, 2014. Yesufu, a businesswoman who is originally from Kano and has two children, has joined daily protests calling for the release of secondary school girls abducted from the remote village of Chibok. "I see myself as a Chibok girl 23 years ago in Kano. I grew up poor and when you grow up poor in this part of the world you are defenseless," she said. REUTERS/Joe Penney (NIGERIA - Tags: POLITICS EDUCATION CIVIL UNREST CRIME LAW)
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GM1EA5E116F01 Activist Aisha Yesufu (C), 40, shouts slogans as she holds placards with fellow protesters in Abuja May 13, 2014. Yesufu, a businesswoman who is originally from Kano and has two children, has joined daily protests calling for the release of secondary school girls abducted from the remote village of Chibok. "I see myself as a Chibok girl 23 years ago in Kano. I grew up poor and when you grow up poor in this part of the world you are defenseless," she said. REUTERS/Joe Penney (NIGERIA - Tags: POLITICS EDUCATION CIVIL UNREST CRIME LAW)
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GM1EA5E113L01 Activist Aisha Yesufu (C), 40, shouts slogans as she holds placards with fellow protesters in Abuja May 13, 2014. Yesufu, a businesswoman who is originally from Kano and has two children, has joined daily protests calling for the release of secondary school girls abducted from the remote village of Chibok. "I see myself as a Chibok girl 23 years ago in Kano. I grew up poor and when you grow up poor in this part of the world you are defenseless," she said. REUTERS/Joe Penney (NIGERIA - Tags: POLITICS EDUCATION CIVIL UNREST CRIME LAW)
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GM1EA5E10XX01 Activist Aisha Yesufu (C), 40, shouts slogans as she holds placards with fellow protesters in Abuja May 13, 2014. Yesufu, a businesswoman who is originally from Kano and has two children, has joined daily protests calling for the release of secondary school girls abducted from the remote village of Chibok. "I see myself as a Chibok girl 23 years ago in Kano. I grew up poor and when you grow up poor in this part of the world you are defenseless," she said. REUTERS/Joe Penney (NIGERIA - Tags: POLITICS EDUCATION CIVIL UNREST CRIME LAW)
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GM1EA5E0ZZP01 Activist Aisha Yesufu, 40, drives to a protest in Abuja May 13, 2014. Yesufu, a businesswoman who is originally from Kano and has two children, has joined daily protests calling for the release of secondary school girls abducted from the remote village of Chibok. "I see myself as a Chibok girl 23 years ago in Kano. I grew up poor and when you grow up poor in this part of the world you are defenseless," she said. REUTERS/Joe Penney (NIGERIA - Tags: POLITICS EDUCATION CIVIL UNREST CRIME LAW)
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GM1EA5E0ZZH01 Activist Aisha Yesufu, 40, prays in her home in Abuja May 13, 2014. Yesufu, a businesswoman who is originally from Kano and has two children, has joined daily protests calling for the release of secondary school girls abducted from the remote village of Chibok. "I see myself as a Chibok girl 23 years ago in Kano. I grew up poor and when you grow up poor in this part of the world you are defenseless," she said. REUTERS/Joe Penney (NIGERIA - Tags: POLITICS EDUCATION RELIGION CIVIL UNREST CRIME LAW)
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GM1EA5E0ZZ901 Activist Aisha Yesufu, 40, takes a business call during lunch at her home in Abuja May 13, 2014. Yesufu, a businesswoman who is originally from Kano and has two children, has joined daily protests calling for the release of secondary school girls abducted from the remote village of Chibok. "I see myself as a Chibok girl 23 years ago in Kano. I grew up poor and when you grow up poor in this part of the world you are defenseless," she said. REUTERS/Joe Penney (NIGERIA - Tags: POLITICS EDUCATION CIVIL UNREST CRIME LAW)
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GM1EA5E0ZEN01 Activist Aisha Yesufu, 40, works out with her personal trainer at a gym in Abuja May 13, 2014. Yesufu, a businesswoman who is originally from Kano and has two children, has joined daily protests calling for the release of secondary school girls abducted from the remote village of Chibok. "I see myself as a Chibok girl 23 years ago in Kano. I grew up poor and when you grow up poor in this part of the world you are defenseless," she said. REUTERS/Joe Penney (NIGERIA - Tags: POLITICS CIVIL UNREST CRIME LAW)
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GM1EA5E0ZEH01 Activist Aisha Yesufu (R), 40, hugs a friend after dropping her daughter off at school in Abuja May 13, 2014. Yesufu, a businesswoman who is originally from Kano and has two children, has joined daily protests calling for the release of secondary school girls abducted from the remote village of Chibok. "I see myself as a Chibok girl 23 years ago in Kano. I grew up poor and when you grow up poor in this part of the world you are defenseless," she said. REUTERS/Joe Penney (NIGERIA - Tags: POLITICS EDUCATION CIVIL UNREST CRIME LAW)
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GM1EA5E0Z3E01 Aliya, 12, waves goodbye to her mother, activist Aisha Yesufu (not pictured), 40, after being dropped off at her school in Abuja May 13, 2014. Yesufu, a businesswoman who is originally from Kano and has two children, has joined daily protests calling for the release of secondary school girls abducted from the remote village of Chibok. "I see myself as a Chibok girl 23 years ago in Kano. I grew up poor and when you grow up poor in this part of the world you are defenseless," she said. REUTERS/Joe Penney (NIGERIA - Tags: POLITICS EDUCATION CIVIL UNREST CRIME LAW)
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GM1EA5E0Z3801 Activist Aisha Yesufu, 40, drives her daughter to school in Abuja May 13, 2014. Yesufu, a businesswoman who is originally from Kano and has two children, has joined daily protests calling for the release of secondary school girls abducted from the remote village of Chibok. "I see myself as a Chibok girl 23 years ago in Kano. I grew up poor and when you grow up poor in this part of the world you are defenseless," she said. REUTERS/Joe Penney (NIGERIA - Tags: POLITICS EDUCATION CIVIL UNREST CRIME LAW)
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GM1EA5E0XV001 Activist Aisha Yesufu, 40, poses for a picture in her home in Abuja May 13, 2014. Yesufu, a businesswoman who is originally from Kano and has two children, has joined daily protests calling for the release of secondary school girls abducted from the remote village of Chibok. "I see myself as a Chibok girl 23 years ago in Kano. I grew up poor and when you grow up poor in this part of the world you are defenseless," she said. REUTERS/Joe Penney (NIGERIA - Tags: POLITICS EDUCATION CIVIL UNREST CRIME LAW)
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GM1EA4616JW01 School children do drawings on the island of Ile-a-Vache, off Haiti's south coast, March 23, 2014. For decades the mostly dirt-poor residents of the small island of Ile-a-Vache off Haiti's south coast lived in anonymity, until last year when the government claimed the 20-square-mile former pirate lair as a "public utility," potentially stripping the 14,000 residents of their land to develop a high-end tourist resort. Picture taken March 23, 2014. REUTERS/David Adams (HAITI - Tags: TRAVEL POLITICS SOCIETY BUSINESS)
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GM1EA411BNQ01 Children play inside a playroom as the tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) volunteers removed ice and snow and levelled dirt in their playground, at a Miyakoji child care center at Miyakoji area in Tamura, Fukushima prefecture, April 1, 2014. People in Japan on Tuesday began their first homecomings in three years to a small area evacuated after the Fukushima disaster, but families are divided as worries about radiation and poor job prospects have kept many away. The reopening of the Miyakoji area of Tamura, a city 220 km (140 miles) northeast of Tokyo and inland from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear station, marks a tiny step for Japan as it attempts to recover from the 2011 disasters. While in temporary facilities outside the evacuation zone, children were limited to 30 minutes outside a day. It is still undecided how long they will be allowed to play outside now that they are back in Miyakoji. REUTERS/Issei Kato (JAPAN - Tags: DISASTER POLITICS ENVIRONMENT)
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GM1EA35035J01 U.S. President Barack Obama interacts with children at Powell Elementary School in Washington March 4, 2014. Obama chose the school as a venue Tuesday to propose an expansion of popular tax credits for middle class and working poor Americans in a fiscal 2015 budget designed to serve as a blueprint for Democrats in this year's congressional elections. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst (UNITED STATES - Tags: POLITICS EDUCATION BUSINESS)
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GM1EA2S1O4401 Children eat at a community soup kitchen in a Buenos Aires neighbourhood February 13, 2014. A sharp currency devaluation in Argentina last month has worsened one of the world's highest inflation rates, threatening to unravel a generous social safety net at the heart of President Cristina Fernandez's economic policies. One in four Argentine families now rely on state welfare programs ranging from payouts for the unemployed to scholarships for poor high school students, as social spending boomed along with the economy over much of the past decade. Picture taken February 13, 2014. To match Feature ARGENTINA-ECONOMY/POVERTY REUTERS/Enrique Marcarian (ARGENTINA - Tags: POLITICS SOCIETY POVERTY BUSINESS)
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GM1EA2P0JJW01 A drawing showing pupils and their names is seen on a classroom door in Riace November 22, 2013. Riace is a small village in Calabria, a poor region in the south of Italy. Many of the village's former residents left in search of better opportunities elsewhere in Italy or abroad. In recent years, however, the mayor Domenico Lucano has introduced a scheme to encourage immigrants to come to Riace and breathe new life into the village. The immigrant's children have revitalized the local school, which suffered from a lack of students. Picture taken November 22, 2013. REUTERS/Max Rossi (ITALY - Tags: POLITICS SOCIETY IMMIGRATION)ATTENTION EDITORS: PICTURE 21 OF 25 FOR PACKAGE 'THE CHANGING FACE OF ITALY'. SEARCH 'RIACE ROSSI' FOR ALL PICTURES PXP101-PXP125
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GM1EA2P0JJN01 Children play after school in Riace November 22, 2013. Riace is a small village in Calabria, a poor region in the south of Italy. Many of the village's former residents left in search of better opportunities elsewhere in Italy or abroad. In recent years, however, the mayor Domenico Lucano has introduced a scheme to encourage immigrants to come to Riace and breathe new life into the village. The immigrant's children have revitalized the local school, which suffered from a lack of students. Picture taken November 22, 2013. REUTERS/Max Rossi (ITALY- Tags: POLITICS SOCIETY IMMIGRATION)ATTENTION EDITORS - ITALIAN LAW REQUIRES THAT THE FACES OF MINORS ARE MASKED IN PUBLICATIONS WITHIN ITALYATTENTION EDITORS: PICTURE 20 OF 25 FOR PACKAGE 'THE CHANGING FACE OF ITALY'. SEARCH 'RIACE ROSSI' FOR ALL PICTURES PXP101-PXP125
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