Tapir, toad tadpoles and Trump's bodyguards: the 2025 Siena awards festival in pictures
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Tapir, toad tadpoles and Trump's bodyguards: the 2025 Siena awards festival  in pictures
"Muska, 14, returned to Jalalabad in eastern Afghanistan from Pakistan with her family in February 2024. She was going to school in Pakistan and is determined to continue her education. Here the restrictions are more than in Pakistan. I used to go to a Madrasa in Pakistan, but here I cannot go. I'm good at reading and writing. I'd rather live in Pakistan, there I could at least pursue my education."
"Caribou just outside the Nunamiut community of Anaktuvuk Pass, Alaska in April 2021. Anaktuvuk means the place of many caribou droppings and Anaktuvuk Pass is located along the traditional migration routes for the Western Arctic and Teshekpuk caribou herds in the heart of Alaska's Brooks Range. In the Arctic, climate breakdown has dramatically reduced caribou populations from 5m to 2m in a few decades. Orlinsky has documented indigenous communities in Alaska and Canada for more than 10 years."
"The Pulitzer prize winner has spent half of his life documenting the effects of conflict through the eyes of the most vulnerable. His images capture the life that continues even in the heart of war: makeshift games in the rubble, fragile smiles, acts of courage and resilience testimonies that can break down stereotypes and give voice to the voiceless."
Muska, 14, returned to Jalalabad from Pakistan in February 2024 with her family and faces stricter education restrictions under Taliban rule, preventing attendance at a madrasa she previously attended. A show at Area Verde Camollia 85 presents collective stories of Afghan women experiencing those restrictions. Photographs document Arctic caribou declines linked to climate breakdown, with populations falling from about 5 million to 2 million, and record indigenous community life across Alaska and Canada. Images also portray life inside Palestinian refugee camps, children playing amid rubble, and migrants confronting border forces at the Rio Grande.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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