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  • Many slum dwellers farm pigeons to generate additional income for a better life of their families on 07 September 2021. Bangladesh is home to many passionate pigeon lovers and a long tradition of pigeon races.
    Where dreams fly away_19.JPG
  • Early morning in Rajasthan, India, December 09, 2013. Jodhpur is second largest city in the Indian state of Rajasthan and has long been a popular destination among international tourists. However, surprisingly few visitors know the origins of its sobriquet, "the blue city". The old town is a wonderful example of vivid colors providing a photogenic backdrop to everyday life. The old city is blue.  Local guides say that the blue wash of the houses originally indicated the homes of the upper -caste Brahmins, custodians of holy places and the written word. Varieties of blue, from royal blue to aquamarine, form the backdrop for a theatre of color played out in the streets, defying the parched orange of the surrounding desert.
    Guardians of Nature - Bishnoi Tribe_...JPG
  • Ripon a Bangladeshi young youth poses for pictures when he was working on a coal unloading ship in Dhaka, Bangladesh on August 13, 2020. He has come to Dhaka city from a remote village Panchagor. He was trying to study. But his family condition is no good. To support his family, he did not get the chance to go to school.
    Portrait Of Climate Refugees_03.jpg
  • After collecting drinking water, a woman is on her way back home through the garbage in the Chad Uddan slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 25 July 2021. What is a slum now, was originally a garbage dumping site for city residents.
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  • Bird’s eye view of the Chad Uddan slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 27 July 2021.
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  • A girl plays with mud amidst the garbage in the Chad Uddan slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 30 September 2021.
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  • A little girl takes a shower under the open sky at a public water collection point in the Chad Uddan slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 07 September 2021. Fresh water can only be collected in the mornings and evenings.
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  • Dhaka is the most densely populated city in the world, it can no longer cope. Because space is rare, houses are built on the streets and the government demolishes hundreds of such buildings every year on 26 September 2021.
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  • An older woman taking a rest at the Chad Uddan slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 27 July 2021.
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  • People live in a congested and very unhealthy environment in the Chad Uddan slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 25 July 2021.
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  • A girl with her sister sitting outside their home at the Chad Uddan slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 30 September 2021.
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  • Shower, toilet, kitchen – everything is in the same place in the Boatghat slum (anchored boats), Mohammadpur, Dhaka, Bangladesh on 28 July 2021.
    Where dreams fly away_12.JPG
  • Children play in a very dirty and unhealthy environment in the Chad Uddan slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 30 September 2021.
    Where dreams fly away_10.jpg
  • Mala sits in front of her home in the Kamrangirchar slum area in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 26 September 2021. The house is built on a garbage pile on the side of the road. Her parents came to Dhaka many years ago, as climate refugees. Since Mala’s father passed away, collecting bricks and selling them on the market has been the only source of income for her family.
    Where dreams fly away_04.jpg
  • Masud poses for pictures when he was working on a coal unloading ship in Dhaka, Bangladesh on August 13, 2020. He says without any education it's not possible to get a job except day labour job in this city.
    Portrait Of Climate Refugees_10.jpg
  • Khala (65) poses for pictures when she was working on a coal unloading ship in Dhaka, Bangladesh on September 14, 2020. With her family around thirty years ago, she moves to Dhaka from a village chapainawabganj. After entered the Dhaka city, Khala was doing various kind of job to feed her children. Now her all the children got married and left him. Now she is alone. That’s why Khala still working as day labour to survive.
    Portrait Of Climate Refugees_09.JPG
  • Al Kadnur a Bangladeshi young youth poses for pictures when he was working on a coal unloading ship in Dhaka, Bangladesh on September 14, 2020. One year ago, he moves to Dhaka from a village Bramonbaria. He told, “his family doing farming”. But day by day villagers losing the farming environment for various reason like climate change, Industrial pollutions. That’s why he moves to Dhaka to support his family and start doing the labour job. Because this job easy to get in the capital city of Dhaka.
    Portrait Of Climate Refugees_04.JPG
  • Antor Hossain a Bangladeshi young youth poses for pictures when he was working on a coal unloading ship in Dhaka, Bangladesh on August 13, 2020. He is a student and living in the village of Manikgonj. His father and mother are doing day labor jobs in Dhaka city. Before the Covid-19 lockdown, he came to saw his family. But after lockdown, all the school closes. That’s why he thinks to work this coalfield to earns money for his family.
    Portrait Of Climate Refugees_02.jpg
  • Mala (10 years) and her family members collect bricks from the street to make a living at Kamrangirchar in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 26 September 2021.
    Where dreams fly away_02.jpg
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  • A boy saves the remains of what used to be his family’s household goods. Hundreds of people have nothing left after the massive fire has swallowed their homes in the Maniknagar slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 21 February 2021.
    Where dreams fly away_18.jpg
  • Nasima (10 years) plays with her friends in at the edge of the street in the Boatghat slum (anchored boats) in Mohammadpur, Dhaka, Bangladesh on 28 July 2021. She got admitted to class one in a public primary school, the school is located more than one kilometer away from her home. After admission, she didn’t get the chance to go to class due to Covid-19. Schools across Bangladesh remained closed for more than one and a half years because of Covid-19.
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  • A boy searches for his toy, it somehow fell in the dirty and toxic water of a sewer in the Chad Uddan slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 27 July 2021.
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  • A little girl collects water with her older sister in the Chad Uddan slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 30 September 2021.
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  • A girl showers in the monsoon rain in the Mohammadpur slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 29 July 2021. In the urban slum areas, people have access to fresh water only two times a day – in the morning and in the evening.
    Where dreams fly away_01.jpg
  • Chandrababu (50) poses for pictures when she was working on a coal unloading ship in Dhaka, Bangladesh on September 14, 2020. After losing her all the homeland by the river erosion she moves to Dhaka with 4 family members around 15 years ago from village Sherpur. She says "I don't have any educations that's why I can do only labour job".
    Portrait Of Climate Refugees_08.JPG
  • Rita a Bangladeshi young girl poses for pictures when she was working on a coal unloading ship in Dhaka, Bangladesh on September 14, 2020. After losing her house by the river erosion she moves to Dhaka with 5 family members around 10 years ago from village Vola. After entering Dhaka city first her mother starts working as labour. That time Rita tries to do educations. But a few years later observing her mother she starts doing the same labour job to run their family.
    Portrait Of Climate Refugees_05.JPG
  • Mala’s mother smashes the bricks into small pieces and sells them on the market as a building material at Kamrangirchar in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 26 September 2021.
    Where dreams fly away_03.jpg
  • Minara Begum (35 years) prepares fish for cooking. Her home is located in the Boatghat slum (anchored boats) in Mohammadpur, Dhaka, Bangladesh on 29 July 2021.
    Where dreams fly away_13.JPG
  • An widow watches as others dance as she takes part in celebrate Holi or 'festival of colors' at the Meerasahabhagini Ashram in Vrindavan on March 2015. Widows congregated on a small patio of the ashram in which they live and danced and played with colored powder to celebrate the occasion. The widows of this and other ashrams in this northern town are sponsored by the NGO, Sulabh International that funds most of their needs. Ignored from society when their husbands die, not for religious reasons, but because of tradition, many Indian widows have been hated from society and no longer live with their families and are forced to beg for food. Almost 2,000 of the estimated 34 million widows currently living in India live in Vrindavan and benefit from the welfare extended by the NGO. Holi, the popular Hindu spring 'festival of colors’ is observed in India at the end of the winter season on the last full moon of the lunar month.
    Widow celebrate Holi_24.jpg
  • Belal poses for pictures when he was working on a coal unloading ship in Dhaka, Bangladesh on August 13, 2020. Before Covid-19 pandemic, he was working on a garment’s factory in Savar. But after the Covid-19 lockdown, many garments factory close their work and many labours lost the job. After losing his garments job Belal starts working as day labour to feed his family.
    Portrait Of Climate Refugees_14.JPG
  • Rahela (55) poses for pictures when she was working on a coal unloading ship in Dhaka, Bangladesh on August 13, 2020. Before the Covid-19 pandemic in Bangladesh, she works door to door in the Dhaka city as a maid. When the Covid-19 pandemic starts people don’t allow to enter any outsider in their home. And Rahela lost her daily job. Without founding any option, she starts working as day labour in coal unloading ship.
    Portrait Of Climate Refugees_07.JPG
  • Mojid Bangladeshi young youth poses for pictures when he was working on a coal unloading ship in Dhaka, Bangladesh on August 13, 2020. He say’s “after unloading 32 basket coal I got around $1”.
    Portrait Of Climate Refugees_01.JPG
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  • Hanging village in the deep forest area at Kalabogi in Dacope, Sundarban Bangladesh on February 12, 2020. Cyclones, floods, and erosion are common for them. Bangladesh projected to lose nearly 2,270 hectares of land this year to riverbank erosion.
    Climate Change Life_17.jpg
  • Puspo rani gain (60) her house close to the Sundarbans forest. She living kalabogi around 40 years and move her hour almost 8 times due to over flooding water. She predicts in the coming rainy season water will enter her house and destroy everything again in Dacope, Sundarban Bangladesh on February 11, 2020.
    Climate Change Life_11.jpg
  • In the morning woman collects drinking water from a wet dew-damp cloth at coastal hanging village Kalabogi close to the Bay of Bengal in Dacope, Sundarban Bangladesh on 27 September 2020. Where people mostly affected by climate change. Everyday people struggle for sweet water because of the growing salinity in the river water in Shatkhira.
    Climate Change Life_02.jpg
  • Aerial view of hanging village Kalabogi surround by the high tide water in the coastal area in Dacope, Sundarban Bangladesh on September 28, 2020. Coastal village Kalabogi people mostly affected by climate change. Cyclones, floods, and erosion are common for them. There's house is made on the bamboo pole around 5 feet up from the ground in fear of frequent high tide. Every family lost their houses several times by this rive.
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  • Woman collects drinking water from the rain at coastal hanging village Kalabogi close to the Bay of Bengal in Dacope, Sundarban Bangladesh on 27 September 2020. Where people mostly affected by climate change. Everyday people struggle for sweet water because of the growing salinity in the river water in Shatkhira.
    Climate Change Life_16.JPG
  • A woman prays to Tiger as a Hindu God when they celebrate Bonbibi festival at Sundarbans forest in Khulna. Bonbibi the lady of the forest is a guardian spirit of the forests respected by both Hindu and Muslim inhabitants of the Sundarbans forest areas. She is called upon by the honey-collectors and the woodcutters before entering the forest for safety against the attacks from the tigers. It is believed that the demon king, Dakkhin Rai, an arch-enemy of Bonbibi actually appears in the disguise of a tiger and attacks human beings.
    Climate Change Life_14.jpg
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  • Farida begum housewife living beside the forest at Kalabogi in Sundarbans 16 January 2020. She says they were some paddy fields before. But now they don’t have any paddy field because most of the land lost the ability to grow crops due to growing salinity in water.
    Climate Change Life_23.jpg
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  • People try to repair the broken dam after the landfall of cyclone Amphan in Satkhira, Bangladesh on May 21, 2020. At least 15 people in Bangladesh and 72 people in India died after cyclone Amphan to hit parts of Bangladesh and eastern India.
    Climate Change Life_10.jpg
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  • A boy catches fish in the river beside Sundarbans forest at coastal hanging village Kalabogi in Dacope, Sundarban Bangladesh on September 27, 2020. Most of the family living here by catching shrimps in the river and few people work in the Sundarbans, but recently they are in fear because the government banned catching shrimp from the river.
    Climate Change Life_12.jpg
  • Oindrila (30) with her son poses for a picture at costal hanging village Kalabogi close to the Bay of Bengal, where people mostly affected by climate change in Dacope, Sundarban  Bangladesh on 11 February 2020. She move her house due to over flooded water at least four time in this village.
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  • A broken Hindu temple at Kalabogi village in Sundarbans on 12 February 2020. This temple destroys due to over flooded water.
    Climate Change Life_24.jpg
  • In the heavy rain a woman tries to tied her house with a rope at coastal hanging village Kalabogi close to the Bay of Bengal, where people mostly affected by climate change in Dacope, Sundarban Bangladesh on 27 September 2020.
    Climate Change Life_07.jpg
  • Trees block the road after the landfall of cyclone Amphan in Satkhira, Bangladesh on May 21, 2020. At least 15 people in Bangladesh and 72 people in India died after cyclone Amphan to hit parts of Bangladesh and eastern India.
    Climate Change Life_09.jpg
  • Romjan (40) poses for a picture at the empty street when he waiting for passengers in Dhaka city during the nationwide lockdown as a preventive measure against the (COVID-19) coronavirus pandemic in Bangladesh. I asked him are you know the COVID can take your life? He just replied to me yes, I know. But will die for hunger if doesn't earn money.
    Can COVID19 Stop the Wheel?_05.jpg
  • A doctor examines a 10-day-old Rohungya child in a medical center in a Refugee camp at Ukhiya, Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh 05 October 2017. International organizations have reported claims of human rights violations and summary executions allegedly carried out by the Myanmar army.
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  • Badly injured garment worker fighting with life or death at pongu hospital in Dhaka, Bangladesh 28 April 2013. Over 290 unclaimed and unidentified bodies were buried after taken the DNA samples.
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  • Badly injured garment worker fighting with life or death at pongu hospital in Dhaka, Bangladesh 28 April 2013. Over 290 unclaimed and unidentified bodies were buried after taken the DNA samples.
    Cost of slavery_016.jpg
  • A woman draws drinking water from a cloth set out to catch rainwater, in the village of Kalabogi, in the Sundarbans mangrove forest, the Bay of Bengal, Bangladesh on 27 September 2020.
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