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1991 – 2/1991, Iraq. David Turnley, USA, Detroit Free Press / Black Star.

6/2009, Tehran, Iran. Pietro Masturzo, Italy, AFP. Women shout their dissent from a Tehran rooftop on 24 June, following Iran’s disputed presidential election. The result had been a victory for President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad over opposition candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi, but there were allegations of vote-rigging. In the ensuing weeks, violent demonstrations took place in the streets. At night, people shouted from the roofs, an echo of protests that took place during the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
August 28, 1955 Mogens VON Haven, Denmark. One competitor falls from his motorcycle during a tournament in Randers, Denmark.
1956 Helmuth PIRATH, Germany, KEYSTONTE PRESS. A German taken prisoner by the Soviets in World War II meets with his daughter in Germany.
September 4, 1957 Douglas MOARTIN, USA, The Associated Press. Dorothy Counts, one of the first black students to enter the new institute interracial Harry Harding High School, in Charlotte, North Carolina (USA).
09/1958, Prague, Czechoslovakia. Stanislav Tereba, Czech Republic/Vecernik Praha. National Football Championships between Prague and Bratislava.
12/10/1960, Yasushi Nagao, Japan, Mainichi Shimbun. A right-wing student assassinates Inejiro Asanuma, Socialist Party Chairman, during his speech at the Hibiya Hall.
4/6/1962, Héctor Rondón Lovera, Venezuela, Publication La República. Priest Luis Padillo offers last rites to a loyalist soldier who is mortally wounded by a sniper during military rebellion against President Bétancourt at Puerto Cabello naval base.
10/6/1963, Saigon-Vietnam, Malcolm W. Browne, USA, The Associated Press. Buddhist monk Thich Quang Duc sets himself ablaze in protest against the persecution of Buddhists by the South Vietnamese government.
04/1964, Ghaziveram-Cyprus, Don McCullin, The Observer / Quick / Life. A Turkish woman mourns her dead husband, a victim of the Greek-Turkish civil war.
09/1965, Loc Thuong, Binh Dinh, Vietnam. Kyoichi Sawada, Japan, United Press International. A mother and her children wade across a river to escape US bombing. The US Air Force had evacuated their village because it was suspected of being used as a base camp by the Vietcong.
24/2/1966, Tan Binh, Vietnam. Kyoichi Sawada, Japan, United Press International. The body of a Vietcong soldier is dragged behind an American armored vehicle en route to a burial site after fierce fighting.
05/1967, Vietnam. Co Rentmeester, Netherlands, Life. The commander of an M48 tankgunner of the US 7th regiment in Vietnam's 'Iron Triangle'.
1/2/1968, Saigon, Vietnam. Eddie Adams, USA, The Associated Press. South Vietnam national police chief Nguyen Ngoc Loan executes a suspected Viet Cong member.
5/1969, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom. Hanns-Jörg Anders, Germany, Stern. A young Catholic wears a gasmask during clashes with British troops. People had been fleeing from teargas after a night of street fighting.
29/12/1971, Baltersweiler, West Germany. Wolfgang Peter Geller, Germany. During negotiations on the safe-conduct of a group of criminals on the run, police superintendent Gross suddenly shoots down gang leader Kurt Vicenik. The gang, who had disappeared after a bank-robbery in Cologne, re-emerged near Saarbrücken, carrying a hostage with them. A chase followed and the police and the robbers met at Baltersweiler. The two other men were captured in a wild fight. The men running away from the bullets are policemen.
8/6/1972, Trang Bang, Vietnam. Nick Ut, USA, The Associated Press. Phan Thi Kim Phuc (center) flees with other children after South Vietnamese planes mistakenly dropped napalm on South Vietnamese troops and civilians.
11/9/1973, Santiago, Chile. Orlando Lagos, Chile, The New York Times. Democratically elected President Salvador Allende moments away from death during military coup at Moneda presidential palace.
7/1974, Kao, Niger. Ovie Carter, USA, Chicago Tribune. The Faces of Hunger. A mother comforts her child, both victims of drought.
22/7/1975, Boston, USA. Stanley Forman, USA, Boston Herald. A mother and her daughter are hurled off a collapsing fire-escape in an apartment house fire. Together with a fire-fighter, they waited for the rescue ladder to reach them. As the fire-fighter climbed onto the ladder, the fire-escape collapsed under their feet and they fell to the ground five floors below. The woman was killed but the child survived, her fall cushioned by the woman's body.
1/1976, Beirut, Lebanon. Françoise Demulder, France, Gamma. Palestinian refugees in district La Quarantaine.
8/1977, South Africa. Leslie Hammond, South Africa, The Argus. Police throw tear-gas at a group of chanting residents of the Modderdam squatter camp protesting against the demolition of their homes outside Cape Town.
3/1978, Narita, Japan. Sadayuki Mikami, Japan, The Associated Press. A demonstrator is engulfed in flames of the molotov cocktail he was about to throw at the police during protests against the construction of the New Tokyo International Airport. The original Narita Airport plan was unveiled in 1966. To acquire the initial land, the government had to evict protesting landowners. Violent clashes between the opponents and authorities resulted in 13 deaths, including five police officers. The new airport opened in May 1978.
11/1979, Sa Keo province, Thailand. David Burnett, USA, Contact Press Images. A Cambodian woman cradles her child while waiting for food to be distributed at a refugee camp.
4/1980, Karamoja district, Uganda. Mike Wells, United Kingdom. A starving boy and a missionary.
23/2/1981, Madrid, Spain. Manuel Pérez Barriopedro, Spain, Agencia EFE. Lt. Col. Antonio Tejero Molina orders everyone to remain seated and be quiet after armed Guardia Civil soldiers stormed the Assembly Hall of the Spanish Parliament. Three hundred deputies and cabinet members were in session to vote upon the succession of premier Suarez. They were released next morning after having been held hostage for almost 18 hours; the coup was a failure.
18/9/1982, Beirut, Lebanon. Robin Moyer, USA, Black Star for Time. The war in Lebanon: The aftermath of the massacre of Palestinians by Christian Phalangists in the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps.
30/10/1983, Koyunoren, Turkey. Mustafa Bozdemir, Turkey, Hürriyet Gazetesi. Kezban Özer (37) finds her five children buried alive after a devastating earthquake. At five o'clock in the morning she and her husband were milking the cows as their children slept. A few minutes later, 147 villages in the region were destroyed by an earthquake of magnitude 7.1 on the Richter scale; 1,336 people died.
12/1984, Bhopal, India. Pablo Bartholomew/Publication Gamma. A child killed by the poisonous gas leak in the Union Carbide chemical plant disaster.
16/11/1985, Frank Fournier,  France, Contact Press Images. Omaira Sanchez (12) is trapped in the debris caused by the eruption of Nevado del Ruíz volcano. After sixty hours she eventually lost consciousness and died of a heart attack.
9/1986, San Francisco, USA. Alon Reininger, USA , Contact Press Images. Ken Meeks' (42) skin is marked with lesions caused by Aids-related Kaposi's Sarcoma.
18/12/1987, Kuro, South Korea. Anthony Suau, USA, Black Star. A mother clings to a riot policeman's shield at a polling station. Her son was one of thousands of demonstrators arrested because they tried to prove that the presidential election on December 15, which was won by the government candidate, had been rigged.
12/1988, Leninakan, Soviet Union. David Turnley, USA, Detroit Free Press / Black Star. Boris Abgarzian grieves for his 17-year-old son, victim of the Armenian earthquake.
4/6/1989, Tiananmen Square, Beijing, China. Charlie Cole, USA, Newsweek. A demonstrator confronts a line of People's Liberation Army tanks during protests for democratic reform.
28/1/1990, Nogovac, Kosovo, Yugoslavia. Georges Merillon, France, Gamma. Family and neighbors mourn the death of Elshani Nashim (27), killed during a protest against the Yugoslavian government's decision to abolish the autonomy of Kosovo.
2/1991, Iraq. David Turnley, USA, Detroit Free Press / Black Star. US Sergeant Ken Kozakiewicz (23), gives vent to his grief as he learns that the body bag at his feet contains the remains of his friend Andy Alaniz. 'Friendly fire' claimed Alaniz's life and injured Kozakiewicz. On the last day of the Gulf War they were taken away from the war zone by a MASH unit evacuation helicopter.
11/1992, Bardera, Somalia. James Nachtwey, USA, Magnum Photos for Libération. A mother carries her dead child to the grave, after wrapping it in a shroud according to local custom. A bad drought coupled with the effects of civil war caused a terrible famine in Somalia which claimed the lives of between one and two million people over a period of two years, more than 200 a day in the worst affected areas. The international airlift of relief supplies which started in July was hampered by heavily armed gangs of clansmen who looted food storage centers and slowed down the distribution of the supplies by aid organizations.
3/1993, Gaza City, Gaza Strip. Larry Towell, Canada, Magnum Photos. Boys raise toy guns in a gesture of defiance. The Palestinian uprising, which began in December 1987, strengthened the Arab population in their determination to fight the occupying force. In March Israel closed its border with Gaza, causing a massive rise in unemployment. With more than 800,000 people contained in the Israeli-patrolled, eight-km-wide strip of land, bloodshed increased sharply. The peace agreement signed in Washington on September 13 promised limited authority for the Gaza Strip and a withdrawal of the Israeli army.
06/1994, Rwanda. James Nachtwey, USA, Magnum Photos for Time. A Hutu man at a Red Cross hospital, his face mutilated by the Hutu 'Interahamwe' militia, who suspected him of sympathizing with the Tutsi rebels. The animosity between the Hutu and Tutsi population groups in Rwanda had been simmering for decades. In April, the death of Hutu president Habyarimana in a plane crash near the capital of Kigali sparked murderous attacks on the Tutsi minority and Hutu moderates. The situation deteriorated further when the mainly Tutsi rebels of the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) started pushing south from their stronghold in northern Rwanda. A mass exodus of people trying to escape excessive violence was underway by July.
5/1995, Chechnya, Russia. Lucian Perkins, USA, The Washington Post. A bus on the road leading to Grozny during fighting between Chechen independence fighters and Russian troops. The civil war which erupted when President Yeltsin sent troops to the rebellious province in December 1994 was still dragging on months later. When the Chechen fighters fled Grozny, the capital, where the war had claimed a horrendous human and material toll, Russian troops pursued them into the countryside to the south and east.
4/1996, Kuito, Angola. Francesco Zizola, Italy, Contrasto. Landmine victims in Kuito, a town where many people were killed and traumatized during the civil war. To date some 70,000 Angolans, 8,000 of them children, have been disabled by exploding mines. For decades colonizers, armies and freedom fighters laid mines randomly on roads and bridges in order to disrupt communications. As a result, there are today probably as many unexploded land mines in Angola as there are inhabitants.
23/9/1997, Algiers, Algeria. Hocine, Algeria, Agence France-Presse. A woman cries outside the Zmirli Hospital, where the dead and wounded were taken after a massacre in Bentalha. Mass killings and bomb blasts dominated life since the army annulled the results of the 1992 elections, in which it appeared the Muslim fundamentalist party, FIS, would win. The conflict had claimed more than 60,000 lives in five years.
6/11/1998, Izbica, Kosovo, Yugoslavia. Dayna Smith, USA, The Washington Post. A woman is comforted by relatives and friends at the funeral of her husband. The man was a soldier with the ethnic Albanian rebels of the Kosovo Liberation Army, fighting for independence from Serbia. He had been shot the previous day while on patrol.
5/4/1999, Kukës, Albania. Claus Bjørn Larsen, Denmark, Berlingske Tidende. A man walks the streets in one of the largest gathering points for ethnic Albanian refugees fleeing violence in Kosovo.
3/12/2000, Las Colonias, Texas, USA. Lara Jo Regan, USA, Life. The mother of a Mexican immigrant family makes piñatas to support herself and her children. The family numbers among the millions of 'uncounted' Americans, people who for one reason or another have been missed by the national census and so don't exist in population records. Census records determine where new schools, hospitals, firehouses and basic social services are needed. Areas like Las Colonias, where this family lives, thus lack many amenities and have high illiteracy rates
7/6/2001, Pakistan. Erik Refner, Denmark, Berlingske Tidende. The body of a one-year-old boy who died of dehydration is prepared for burial at Jalozai refugee camp. The child's family, originally from North Afghanistan, had sought refuge in Pakistan from political instability and the consequences of drought. The family gave the photographer permission to attend as they washed and wrapped his body in a white funeral shroud, according to Muslim tradition. In the overcrowded Jalozai camp, 80,000 refugees from Afghanistan endured squalid conditions. Decades of political instability and drought drove millions of people over the border into Pakistan. By June, Jalozai could not cope with the numbers, and food and shelter were scarce. Although relief workers tried to provide basic health services, children died from disease or dehydration. Eight months later, the United Nations closed the camp, moving refugees to other areas.
23/6/2002, Qazvin, Iran. Eric Grigorian, Armenia, Polaris Images. A boy holds his dead father's trousers as he squats beside the spot where his father is to be buried, surrounded by soldiers and villagers digging graves for victims of an earthquake. The earthquake, measuring 6.0 on the Richter scale, struck on June 23. Dozens of villages were destroyed and hundreds of people killed across the province.
31/3/2003, Iraq. Jean-Marc Bouju, France, The Associated Press. An Iraqi man comforts his four-year-old son at a holding center for prisoners of war, in the base camp of the US Army 101st Airborne Division near An Najaf. The boy had become terrified when, according to orders, his father was hooded and handcuffed. A soldier later severed the plastic handcuffs so that the man could comfort his child. Hoods were placed over detainees' heads because they were quicker to apply than blindfolds. The military said the bags were used to disorient prisoners and protect their identities. It is not known what happened to the man or the boy.
28/12/2004, Cuddalore, Tamil Nadu, India. Arko Datta, India, Reuters. A woman mourns a relative killed in the tsunami. On December 26, a 9.3 magnitude earthquake off the coast of Sumatra, Indonesia, triggered a series of deadly waves that traveled across the Indian Ocean, wreaking havoc in nine Asian countries, and causing fatalities as far away as Somalia and Tanzania. The quake was so strong that it altered the tilt of the planet by 2.5cm. More than 200,000 people died or were reported missing, and millions were left destitute in the worst natural disaster in living memory. In India, the fishing communities in Tamil Nadu were among the worst hit, with homes, lives and livelihoods being wiped away.
1/8/2005, Tahoua, Niger. Finbarr O'Reilly, Canada/Reuters. The fingers of malnourished Alassa Galisou (1) are pressed against the lips of his mother Fatou Ousseini at an emergency feeding center. One of the worst droughts in recent times, together with a particularly heavy plague of locusts that had destroyed the previous year's harvest, left millions of people severely short of food. Heavy rains promised well for the 2005 crops, but hindered aid workers bringing supplies. Relief had been slow to come. Accusations were leveled variously blaming the United Nations, Western governments, the international aid community and officials in Niger itself for failing to respond early enough to an imminent crisis.
15/8/2006, Beirut, Lebanon. Spencer Platt, USA, Getty Images. Young Lebanese drive down a street in Haret Hreik, a bombed neighborhood in southern Beirut. For nearly five weeks Israel had been targeting that part of the city and towns across southern Lebanon in a campaign against Hezbollah militants. As a ceasefire gradually came into force from August 14, thousands of Lebanese began to return to their homes. According to the Lebanese government, 15,000 homes and 900 commercial concerns were damaged.
16/9/2007, Korengal Valley, Afghanistan. Tim Hetherington, United Kingdom, Vanity Fair.  A soldier of Second Platoon, Battle Company of the Second Battalion of the US 503rd Infantry Regiment sinks onto an embankment in the Restrepo bunker at the end of the day. The Korengal Valley was the epicenter of the US fight against militant Islam in Afghanistan and the scene of some of the deadliest combat in the region.
26/3/2008, Cleveland, Ohio. Anthony Suau, USA,Time. Detective Robert Kole of the Cuyahoga County Sheriff's Office enters a home, following mortgage foreclosure and eviction. He needs to check that the owners have vacated the premises, and that no weapons have been left lying around. Officers go in at gunpoint as a precaution, as many houses have been vandalized or occupied by squatters or drug addicts. Towards the end of 2007, the severity of losses to US banks incurred over sub-prime mortgages was beginning to emerge. In the first months of 2008, rising interest rates together with increasing unemployment and a slowdown in the housing market, meant that many borrowers could no longer afford payments on their homes. Banks involved heavily in such debts were threatened with collapse. In the following months the financial crisis spread worldwide. www.archive.anthonysuau.com

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