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  • 1977, Film Title: DEEP, Director: PETER YATES, Pictured: BEEFCAKE, NICK NOLTE. (Credit Image: SNAP/ZUMAPRESS.com) (Credit Image: © SNAP/Entertainment Pictures/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20020609_dvc_s87_0012912rti.jpg
  • November 13, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - People stand on long queue for exchange Rupees 500 and 1000 notes PM Narendra Modi ordered ban Rupees 500 and 1000 notes as NDA Government fights against black money and corruption at Bank branch. (Credit Image: © Amar Deep/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zaa_p133_490.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - People stand on long queue for exchange Rupees 500 and 1000 notes PM Narendra Modi ordered ban Rupees 500 and 1000 notes as NDA Government fights against black money and corruption at Bank branch. (Credit Image: © Amar Deep/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zaa_p133_489.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - People stand on long queue for exchange Rupees 500 and 1000 notes PM Narendra Modi ordered ban Rupees 500 and 1000 notes as NDA Government fights against black money and corruption at Bank branch. (Credit Image: © Amar Deep/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zaa_p133_487.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - People stand on long queue for exchange Rupees 500 and 1000 notes PM Narendra Modi ordered ban Rupees 500 and 1000 notes as NDA Government fights against black money and corruption at Bank branch. (Credit Image: © Amar Deep/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zaa_p133_486.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - People stand on long queue for exchange Rupees 500 and 1000 notes PM Narendra Modi ordered ban Rupees 500 and 1000 notes as NDA Government fights against black money and corruption at Bank branch. (Credit Image: © Amar Deep/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zaa_p133_485.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - People stand on long queue for exchange Rupees 500 and 1000 notes PM Narendra Modi ordered ban Rupees 500 and 1000 notes as NDA Government fights against black money and corruption at Bank branch. (Credit Image: © Amar Deep/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zaa_p133_484.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - People stand on long queue for exchange Rupees 500 and 1000 notes PM Narendra Modi ordered ban Rupees 500 and 1000 notes as NDA Government fights against black money and corruption at Bank branch. (Credit Image: © Amar Deep/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zaa_p133_468.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - People stand on long queue for exchange Rupees 500 and 1000 notes PM Narendra Modi ordered ban Rupees 500 and 1000 notes as NDA Government fights against black money and corruption at Bank branch. (Credit Image: © Amar Deep/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zaa_p133_490.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - People stand on long queue for exchange Rupees 500 and 1000 notes PM Narendra Modi ordered ban Rupees 500 and 1000 notes as NDA Government fights against black money and corruption at Bank branch. (Credit Image: © Amar Deep/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zaa_p133_489.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - People stand on long queue for exchange Rupees 500 and 1000 notes PM Narendra Modi ordered ban Rupees 500 and 1000 notes as NDA Government fights against black money and corruption at Bank branch. (Credit Image: © Amar Deep/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zaa_p133_487.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - People stand on long queue for exchange Rupees 500 and 1000 notes PM Narendra Modi ordered ban Rupees 500 and 1000 notes as NDA Government fights against black money and corruption at Bank branch. (Credit Image: © Amar Deep/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zaa_p133_486.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - People stand on long queue for exchange Rupees 500 and 1000 notes PM Narendra Modi ordered ban Rupees 500 and 1000 notes as NDA Government fights against black money and corruption at Bank branch. (Credit Image: © Amar Deep/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zaa_p133_485.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - People stand on long queue for exchange Rupees 500 and 1000 notes PM Narendra Modi ordered ban Rupees 500 and 1000 notes as NDA Government fights against black money and corruption at Bank branch. (Credit Image: © Amar Deep/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zaa_p133_484.JPG
  • November 13, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - People stand on long queue for exchange Rupees 500 and 1000 notes PM Narendra Modi ordered ban Rupees 500 and 1000 notes as NDA Government fights against black money and corruption at Bank branch. (Credit Image: © Amar Deep/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20161113_zaa_p133_468.JPG
  • Ben Affleck rides a bike on the set of Deep Water in New Orleans. 13 Nov 2019 Pictured: Ben Affleck. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA548517_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Ben Affleck filming his new movie "Deep Water" in New Orleans. Ben is seen wearing a wedding ring and looks comfortable wearing it, He is later seen joking with director with the ring. 11 Nov 2019 Pictured: Ben Affleck. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA546834_051.jpg
  • It was the wet T-shirt seen ’round the world — the poster for 1977’s “The Deep” that made Jacqueline Bisset the source of many a fantasy. A less talented actress would see her career dry up faster than that T-shirt. But Bisset’s beauty, humor and savvy have kept her on-screen ever since. Now, lithe and lovely at 74, she’s featured in “Here and Now,” out Friday. Sarah Jessica Parker stars as a singer facing a deadly diagnosis, but Bisset steals every scene she’s in as Parker’s brittle, self-absorbed mother. The character happens to be French, but Bisset (rhymes with “kiss it”) is not. The 74 year-old legend is see here at Essex House in New York. **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 30 Oct 2018 Pictured: Jacqueline Bisset. Photo credit: New York Post / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA304600_004.jpg
  • It was the wet T-shirt seen ’round the world — the poster for 1977’s “The Deep” that made Jacqueline Bisset the source of many a fantasy. A less talented actress would see her career dry up faster than that T-shirt. But Bisset’s beauty, humor and savvy have kept her on-screen ever since. Now, lithe and lovely at 74, she’s featured in “Here and Now,” out Friday. Sarah Jessica Parker stars as a singer facing a deadly diagnosis, but Bisset steals every scene she’s in as Parker’s brittle, self-absorbed mother. The character happens to be French, but Bisset (rhymes with “kiss it”) is not. The 74 year-old legend is see here at Essex House in New York. **NO NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, NO NEW YORK TIMES, NO NEWSDAY**. 30 Oct 2018 Pictured: Jacqueline Bisset. Photo credit: New York Post / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA304600_003.jpg
  • South Africa – Johannesburg – Benrose train yard looted. 15 September 2020. A train yard at Benrose adjacent to an industrial area at City Deep looks abandoned and multiple train lines stolen mounting up to kilometres of track. Some looters are still stripping metal but the main attack is done. The entire train yard is stripped of its metal by what seems to be an organized gang who has spent the last few months looting the train infrastructure around Gauteng.  Picture: Timothy Bernard/African News Agency(ANA)
    Benrose-train-yard-looted---9-.JPG
  • South Africa – Johannesburg – Benrose train yard looted. 15 September 2020. A train yard at Benrose adjacent to an industrial area at City Deep looks abandoned and multiple train lines stolen mounting up to kilometres of track. Some looters are still stripping metal but the main attack is done. The entire train yard is stripped of its metal by what seems to be an organized gang who has spent the last few months looting the train infrastructure around Gauteng.  Picture: Timothy Bernard/African News Agency(ANA)
    Benrose-train-yard-looted---2-.JPG
  • CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA, MAY 24, 2017. A laughing young black Xhosa African man stands in front of his red office cubicle wearing a deep blue cardigan and black jeans.(Picture: JULIAN GOLDSWAIN)
    20170524_VirginActive_5DII_MG_2281.jpg
  • Karima McAdams pose at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365372.jpg
  • Alistair Petrie, Karima McAdams, Lynn Renee, Joe Dempsie, Mark Strong, Anastasia Griffiths pose at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365589.jpg
  • (L-R) Alistair Petrie, Karima McAdams, Lynn Renee, Joe Dempsie, Mark Strong, Anastasia Griffiths pose at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365379.jpg
  • Lynn Renee pose at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365177.jpg
  • Mark Strong pose at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365311.jpg
  • Karima McAdams pose at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365590.jpg
  • Joe Dempsie poses at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365381.jpg
  • Anastasia Griffiths poses at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365358.jpg
  • Anastasia Griffiths poses at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365507.jpg
  • Alistair Petrie pose at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365578.jpg
  • Alistair Petrie, Karima McAdams, Lynn Renee, Joe Dempsie, Mark Strong, Anastasia Griffiths pose at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365178.jpg
  • Lynn Renee pose at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365629.jpg
  • Lynn Renee pose at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365195.jpg
  • Mark Strong pose at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365274.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Cheryl Ladd proves she gets better with age in these photographs taken ten years apart of her striking the iconic Charlie’s Angels pose. The 67-year-old actress — who was brought in to replace Farrah Fawcett in the 1970s TV show — recreated the classic look alongside charity cohorts Lisa O’Hurley, 46 — the wife of Seinfeld actor John O’Hurley — and U.S. news presenter Megyn Kelly, 48. The ladies joined forces once again at the 15th Annual Childhelp Drive The Dream Gala on February 2 at the Phoenician Resort in Scottsdale, Arizona — the same event where they first struck the Angels pose ten years ago. Cheryl — who played private eye Kris Munroe on the hit American show, the sister of Fawcett’s character, after the actress quit following the first season — looked stunning in a deep V-neck black, long-sleeve, floor-length dress. An insider at the event revealed how the three ‘real life angels’ caused a stir on account of how youthful they appeared. The source said: ‘They thought it would be fun to recreate the photo that they took at the ball in 2009, and when you compare the two pictures, they actually look better now. Everyone wants to know what their secret is.’ Megyn, who parted ways with American network NBC last year and received a reported $35 million payout — also wowed in a black and gold sequin gown. Lisa, meanwhile, turned on the glamor in a classic black off-the-shoulder mermaid dress, teamed with a sparkling diamond choker necklace. The trio helped raised $4million at the gala, which Lisa said would go to help ‘profoundly abused and neglected children’. The Childhelp organization was also celebrating its Diamond Jubilee, marking 60 years dedicated to the prevention and treatment of child abuse since 1959. Megyn — who received an award from Childhelp back in 2009 for her work as a Fox News anchor covering the subject of child abuse — said at the event: ‘I’ve been working with Childhelp for about a dozen
    MEGA353144_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Cheryl Ladd proves she gets better with age in these photographs taken ten years apart of her striking the iconic Charlie’s Angels pose. The 67-year-old actress — who was brought in to replace Farrah Fawcett in the 1970s TV show — recreated the classic look alongside charity cohorts Lisa O’Hurley, 46 — the wife of Seinfeld actor John O’Hurley — and U.S. news presenter Megyn Kelly, 48. The ladies joined forces once again at the 15th Annual Childhelp Drive The Dream Gala on February 2 at the Phoenician Resort in Scottsdale, Arizona — the same event where they first struck the Angels pose ten years ago. Cheryl — who played private eye Kris Munroe on the hit American show, the sister of Fawcett’s character, after the actress quit following the first season — looked stunning in a deep V-neck black, long-sleeve, floor-length dress. An insider at the event revealed how the three ‘real life angels’ caused a stir on account of how youthful they appeared. The source said: ‘They thought it would be fun to recreate the photo that they took at the ball in 2009, and when you compare the two pictures, they actually look better now. Everyone wants to know what their secret is.’ Megyn, who parted ways with American network NBC last year and received a reported $35 million payout — also wowed in a black and gold sequin gown. Lisa, meanwhile, turned on the glamor in a classic black off-the-shoulder mermaid dress, teamed with a sparkling diamond choker necklace. The trio helped raised $4million at the gala, which Lisa said would go to help ‘profoundly abused and neglected children’. The Childhelp organization was also celebrating its Diamond Jubilee, marking 60 years dedicated to the prevention and treatment of child abuse since 1959. Megyn — who received an award from Childhelp back in 2009 for her work as a Fox News anchor covering the subject of child abuse — said at the event: ‘I’ve been working with Childhelp for about a dozen
    MEGA353144_001.jpg
  • Anastasia Griffiths poses at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365427.jpg
  • (L-R) Alistair Petrie, Karima McAdams, Lynn Renee, Joe Dempsie, Mark Strong, Anastasia Griffiths pose at the photocall of 'Deep State' during MIPCOM (International Market of Communications Programmes) at Palais des Festivals et des Congres, Cannes<br />
Marche international des contenus audiovisuels du 16-19 Octobre 2017, Palais des Festivals, Cannes, France.<br />
 (Photo by Lionel Urman/Sipa USA)
    RTIsipausa_21365231.jpg
  • Lucy Hale and co-star Jason Blair filming Life Sentence in Vancouver, Canada Lucy Hale, 28 had a starring role on TV's Pretty Little Liars and is set to play a 15-year-old version of her character, Aiden Abbott, in the upcoming CW show. Lucy wore a pink beanie and jacket as she filmed the scenes in Deep Cove, British Columbia. 11 Oct 2017 Pictured: Lucy Hale, Jayson Blair. Photo credit: Atlantic Images/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA98615_021.jpg
  • Lucy Hale and co-star Jason Blair filming Life Sentence in Vancouver, Canada Lucy Hale, 28 had a starring role on TV's Pretty Little Liars and is set to play a 15-year-old version of her character, Aiden Abbott, in the upcoming CW show. Lucy wore a pink beanie and jacket as she filmed the scenes in Deep Cove, British Columbia. 11 Oct 2017 Pictured: Lucy Hale, Jayson Blair. Photo credit: Atlantic Images/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA98615_014.jpg
  • Oct 30, 2008 - Lyttelton, South Island, New Zealand - Containers are stacked high on the deck of the ''Cap Pasley'' in Lyttelton, Christchurch's major deep-water port and trade gateway to New Zealand's South Island. The container ship sails between Asia and Australia/New Zealand for the Hamburg SŸd Group (Credit Image: © Arnold Drapkin/ZUMA Press)
    20081030_ptf_d84_793.jpg
  • June 5, 2017 - Toronto, ON, Canada - TORONTO, ON - June 5: Double D's restaurant has received tons of buzz for its deep-dish, sauce-filled, Chicago-style pizza. Toronto Star reader Marisa wants to know whether this style of pizza is any healthier than a traditional slice. The Dish finds out. June 5, 2017. Randy Risling/Toronto Star (Credit Image: © Randy Risling/The Toronto Star via ZUMA Wire)
    20170605_zan_t14_004.jpg
  • Jennifer Lopez arriving at the Met Gala Celebrating Camp: Notes On Fashion - May 6, 2019 - Photo: Runway Manhattan
    h_00595311.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Great white sharks have mysteriously vanished from one of their most popular hunting grounds in South Africa leaving tourism bosses baffled as to what has driven away one of their biggest money spinners. Theories include a fear of Orca's who have been targeting the apex predators tearing them open to eat their fatty livers as well as pollution, climate change and over fishing of much of the great whites natural prey. Between 2010 and 2016 shark spotters recorded an average of 205 great white sightings a year in False Bay which is a 600 square mile section of the Atlantic Ocean near tourist hot spot Cape Town. In 2018 they were only 50 sightings of the deadly predators made famous by the Hollywood blockbuster Jaws and so far this year not a single one of the much-feared great white shark has been spotted. And it has been two years since the Shark Spotters Applied Research Programme has picked up a signal from any of the great white’s that had been tagged by scientists and were resident in False Bay. This comes after 5 great white sharks were washed up along the South African coastline in 2017 with gaping wounds on their side with their livers having been bitten out by two killer whales in the area. The killer whales bite a large slit in the side of the great whites after attacking as a pair and then suck out the fatty liver which is 600lb meat delicacy in a phenomenon that has only recently been discovered. The two Orca’s responsible – known as Port and Starboard as their dorsal fins hang to the left on one and to the right on the other – spurned their natural prey like seals having developed a taste for shark. The great whites population in False Bay sea to be taking no chances and have moved to new hunting grounds away from Seal Island but it is hoped that they will in time return to their usual hunting ground. The City of Cape Town said: ”Great white sharks have been noticeably absent from False Bay during 2019 prompting questions as to when t
    MEGA491637_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Great white sharks have mysteriously vanished from one of their most popular hunting grounds in South Africa leaving tourism bosses baffled as to what has driven away one of their biggest money spinners. Theories include a fear of Orca's who have been targeting the apex predators tearing them open to eat their fatty livers as well as pollution, climate change and over fishing of much of the great whites natural prey. Between 2010 and 2016 shark spotters recorded an average of 205 great white sightings a year in False Bay which is a 600 square mile section of the Atlantic Ocean near tourist hot spot Cape Town. In 2018 they were only 50 sightings of the deadly predators made famous by the Hollywood blockbuster Jaws and so far this year not a single one of the much-feared great white shark has been spotted. And it has been two years since the Shark Spotters Applied Research Programme has picked up a signal from any of the great white’s that had been tagged by scientists and were resident in False Bay. This comes after 5 great white sharks were washed up along the South African coastline in 2017 with gaping wounds on their side with their livers having been bitten out by two killer whales in the area. The killer whales bite a large slit in the side of the great whites after attacking as a pair and then suck out the fatty liver which is 600lb meat delicacy in a phenomenon that has only recently been discovered. The two Orca’s responsible – known as Port and Starboard as their dorsal fins hang to the left on one and to the right on the other – spurned their natural prey like seals having developed a taste for shark. The great whites population in False Bay sea to be taking no chances and have moved to new hunting grounds away from Seal Island but it is hoped that they will in time return to their usual hunting ground. The City of Cape Town said: ”Great white sharks have been noticeably absent from False Bay during 2019 prompting questions as to when t
    MEGA491637_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Great white sharks have mysteriously vanished from one of their most popular hunting grounds in South Africa leaving tourism bosses baffled as to what has driven away one of their biggest money spinners. Theories include a fear of Orca's who have been targeting the apex predators tearing them open to eat their fatty livers as well as pollution, climate change and over fishing of much of the great whites natural prey. Between 2010 and 2016 shark spotters recorded an average of 205 great white sightings a year in False Bay which is a 600 square mile section of the Atlantic Ocean near tourist hot spot Cape Town. In 2018 they were only 50 sightings of the deadly predators made famous by the Hollywood blockbuster Jaws and so far this year not a single one of the much-feared great white shark has been spotted. And it has been two years since the Shark Spotters Applied Research Programme has picked up a signal from any of the great white’s that had been tagged by scientists and were resident in False Bay. This comes after 5 great white sharks were washed up along the South African coastline in 2017 with gaping wounds on their side with their livers having been bitten out by two killer whales in the area. The killer whales bite a large slit in the side of the great whites after attacking as a pair and then suck out the fatty liver which is 600lb meat delicacy in a phenomenon that has only recently been discovered. The two Orca’s responsible – known as Port and Starboard as their dorsal fins hang to the left on one and to the right on the other – spurned their natural prey like seals having developed a taste for shark. The great whites population in False Bay sea to be taking no chances and have moved to new hunting grounds away from Seal Island but it is hoped that they will in time return to their usual hunting ground. The City of Cape Town said: ”Great white sharks have been noticeably absent from False Bay during 2019 prompting questions as to when t
    MEGA491637_003.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_002.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_005.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_007.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_009.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_008.jpg
  • September 12, 2018 - New York, New York, U.S - September, 2018 - New York, New York  U.S. - A model on the runway at the HOGAN MCLAUGHLIN S/S 2019 RTW show during New York Fashion Week 2018.  (Credit image (c) Theano Nikitas/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com (Credit Image: © Theano Nikitas/ZUMA Wire)
    20180912_zap_n285_237.jpg
  • September 12, 2018 - New York, New York, U.S - September, 2018 - New York, New York  U.S. - Models on the runway at the HOGAN MCLAUGHLIN S/S 2019 RTW show during New York Fashion Week 2018.  (Credit image (c) Theano Nikitas/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com (Credit Image: © Theano Nikitas/ZUMA Wire)
    20180912_zap_n285_236.jpg
  • September 12, 2018 - New York, New York, U.S - September, 2018 - New York, New York  U.S. - A model on the runway at the DAN LIU S/S 2019 RTW show during New York Fashion Week 2018.  (Credit image (c) Theano Nikitas/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com (Credit Image: © Theano Nikitas/ZUMA Wire)
    20180912_zap_n285_188.jpg
  • Adele arriving for the 2016 Brit Awards at the O2 Arena, London. Credit: Doug Peters/ EMPICS Entertainment
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  • EXCLUSIVE: Great white sharks have mysteriously vanished from one of their most popular hunting grounds in South Africa leaving tourism bosses baffled as to what has driven away one of their biggest money spinners. Theories include a fear of Orca's who have been targeting the apex predators tearing them open to eat their fatty livers as well as pollution, climate change and over fishing of much of the great whites natural prey. Between 2010 and 2016 shark spotters recorded an average of 205 great white sightings a year in False Bay which is a 600 square mile section of the Atlantic Ocean near tourist hot spot Cape Town. In 2018 they were only 50 sightings of the deadly predators made famous by the Hollywood blockbuster Jaws and so far this year not a single one of the much-feared great white shark has been spotted. And it has been two years since the Shark Spotters Applied Research Programme has picked up a signal from any of the great white’s that had been tagged by scientists and were resident in False Bay. This comes after 5 great white sharks were washed up along the South African coastline in 2017 with gaping wounds on their side with their livers having been bitten out by two killer whales in the area. The killer whales bite a large slit in the side of the great whites after attacking as a pair and then suck out the fatty liver which is 600lb meat delicacy in a phenomenon that has only recently been discovered. The two Orca’s responsible – known as Port and Starboard as their dorsal fins hang to the left on one and to the right on the other – spurned their natural prey like seals having developed a taste for shark. The great whites population in False Bay sea to be taking no chances and have moved to new hunting grounds away from Seal Island but it is hoped that they will in time return to their usual hunting ground. The City of Cape Town said: ”Great white sharks have been noticeably absent from False Bay during 2019 prompting questions as to when t
    MEGA491637_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Great white sharks have mysteriously vanished from one of their most popular hunting grounds in South Africa leaving tourism bosses baffled as to what has driven away one of their biggest money spinners. Theories include a fear of Orca's who have been targeting the apex predators tearing them open to eat their fatty livers as well as pollution, climate change and over fishing of much of the great whites natural prey. Between 2010 and 2016 shark spotters recorded an average of 205 great white sightings a year in False Bay which is a 600 square mile section of the Atlantic Ocean near tourist hot spot Cape Town. In 2018 they were only 50 sightings of the deadly predators made famous by the Hollywood blockbuster Jaws and so far this year not a single one of the much-feared great white shark has been spotted. And it has been two years since the Shark Spotters Applied Research Programme has picked up a signal from any of the great white’s that had been tagged by scientists and were resident in False Bay. This comes after 5 great white sharks were washed up along the South African coastline in 2017 with gaping wounds on their side with their livers having been bitten out by two killer whales in the area. The killer whales bite a large slit in the side of the great whites after attacking as a pair and then suck out the fatty liver which is 600lb meat delicacy in a phenomenon that has only recently been discovered. The two Orca’s responsible – known as Port and Starboard as their dorsal fins hang to the left on one and to the right on the other – spurned their natural prey like seals having developed a taste for shark. The great whites population in False Bay sea to be taking no chances and have moved to new hunting grounds away from Seal Island but it is hoped that they will in time return to their usual hunting ground. The City of Cape Town said: ”Great white sharks have been noticeably absent from False Bay during 2019 prompting questions as to when t
    MEGA491637_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Great white sharks have mysteriously vanished from one of their most popular hunting grounds in South Africa leaving tourism bosses baffled as to what has driven away one of their biggest money spinners. Theories include a fear of Orca's who have been targeting the apex predators tearing them open to eat their fatty livers as well as pollution, climate change and over fishing of much of the great whites natural prey. Between 2010 and 2016 shark spotters recorded an average of 205 great white sightings a year in False Bay which is a 600 square mile section of the Atlantic Ocean near tourist hot spot Cape Town. In 2018 they were only 50 sightings of the deadly predators made famous by the Hollywood blockbuster Jaws and so far this year not a single one of the much-feared great white shark has been spotted. And it has been two years since the Shark Spotters Applied Research Programme has picked up a signal from any of the great white’s that had been tagged by scientists and were resident in False Bay. This comes after 5 great white sharks were washed up along the South African coastline in 2017 with gaping wounds on their side with their livers having been bitten out by two killer whales in the area. The killer whales bite a large slit in the side of the great whites after attacking as a pair and then suck out the fatty liver which is 600lb meat delicacy in a phenomenon that has only recently been discovered. The two Orca’s responsible – known as Port and Starboard as their dorsal fins hang to the left on one and to the right on the other – spurned their natural prey like seals having developed a taste for shark. The great whites population in False Bay sea to be taking no chances and have moved to new hunting grounds away from Seal Island but it is hoped that they will in time return to their usual hunting ground. The City of Cape Town said: ”Great white sharks have been noticeably absent from False Bay during 2019 prompting questions as to when t
    MEGA491637_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Great white sharks have mysteriously vanished from one of their most popular hunting grounds in South Africa leaving tourism bosses baffled as to what has driven away one of their biggest money spinners. Theories include a fear of Orca's who have been targeting the apex predators tearing them open to eat their fatty livers as well as pollution, climate change and over fishing of much of the great whites natural prey. Between 2010 and 2016 shark spotters recorded an average of 205 great white sightings a year in False Bay which is a 600 square mile section of the Atlantic Ocean near tourist hot spot Cape Town. In 2018 they were only 50 sightings of the deadly predators made famous by the Hollywood blockbuster Jaws and so far this year not a single one of the much-feared great white shark has been spotted. And it has been two years since the Shark Spotters Applied Research Programme has picked up a signal from any of the great white’s that had been tagged by scientists and were resident in False Bay. This comes after 5 great white sharks were washed up along the South African coastline in 2017 with gaping wounds on their side with their livers having been bitten out by two killer whales in the area. The killer whales bite a large slit in the side of the great whites after attacking as a pair and then suck out the fatty liver which is 600lb meat delicacy in a phenomenon that has only recently been discovered. The two Orca’s responsible – known as Port and Starboard as their dorsal fins hang to the left on one and to the right on the other – spurned their natural prey like seals having developed a taste for shark. The great whites population in False Bay sea to be taking no chances and have moved to new hunting grounds away from Seal Island but it is hoped that they will in time return to their usual hunting ground. The City of Cape Town said: ”Great white sharks have been noticeably absent from False Bay during 2019 prompting questions as to when t
    MEGA491637_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Great white sharks have mysteriously vanished from one of their most popular hunting grounds in South Africa leaving tourism bosses baffled as to what has driven away one of their biggest money spinners. Theories include a fear of Orca's who have been targeting the apex predators tearing them open to eat their fatty livers as well as pollution, climate change and over fishing of much of the great whites natural prey. Between 2010 and 2016 shark spotters recorded an average of 205 great white sightings a year in False Bay which is a 600 square mile section of the Atlantic Ocean near tourist hot spot Cape Town. In 2018 they were only 50 sightings of the deadly predators made famous by the Hollywood blockbuster Jaws and so far this year not a single one of the much-feared great white shark has been spotted. And it has been two years since the Shark Spotters Applied Research Programme has picked up a signal from any of the great white’s that had been tagged by scientists and were resident in False Bay. This comes after 5 great white sharks were washed up along the South African coastline in 2017 with gaping wounds on their side with their livers having been bitten out by two killer whales in the area. The killer whales bite a large slit in the side of the great whites after attacking as a pair and then suck out the fatty liver which is 600lb meat delicacy in a phenomenon that has only recently been discovered. The two Orca’s responsible – known as Port and Starboard as their dorsal fins hang to the left on one and to the right on the other – spurned their natural prey like seals having developed a taste for shark. The great whites population in False Bay sea to be taking no chances and have moved to new hunting grounds away from Seal Island but it is hoped that they will in time return to their usual hunting ground. The City of Cape Town said: ”Great white sharks have been noticeably absent from False Bay during 2019 prompting questions as to when t
    MEGA491637_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Great white sharks have mysteriously vanished from one of their most popular hunting grounds in South Africa leaving tourism bosses baffled as to what has driven away one of their biggest money spinners. Theories include a fear of Orca's who have been targeting the apex predators tearing them open to eat their fatty livers as well as pollution, climate change and over fishing of much of the great whites natural prey. Between 2010 and 2016 shark spotters recorded an average of 205 great white sightings a year in False Bay which is a 600 square mile section of the Atlantic Ocean near tourist hot spot Cape Town. In 2018 they were only 50 sightings of the deadly predators made famous by the Hollywood blockbuster Jaws and so far this year not a single one of the much-feared great white shark has been spotted. And it has been two years since the Shark Spotters Applied Research Programme has picked up a signal from any of the great white’s that had been tagged by scientists and were resident in False Bay. This comes after 5 great white sharks were washed up along the South African coastline in 2017 with gaping wounds on their side with their livers having been bitten out by two killer whales in the area. The killer whales bite a large slit in the side of the great whites after attacking as a pair and then suck out the fatty liver which is 600lb meat delicacy in a phenomenon that has only recently been discovered. The two Orca’s responsible – known as Port and Starboard as their dorsal fins hang to the left on one and to the right on the other – spurned their natural prey like seals having developed a taste for shark. The great whites population in False Bay sea to be taking no chances and have moved to new hunting grounds away from Seal Island but it is hoped that they will in time return to their usual hunting ground. The City of Cape Town said: ”Great white sharks have been noticeably absent from False Bay during 2019 prompting questions as to when t
    MEGA491637_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Great white sharks have mysteriously vanished from one of their most popular hunting grounds in South Africa leaving tourism bosses baffled as to what has driven away one of their biggest money spinners. Theories include a fear of Orca's who have been targeting the apex predators tearing them open to eat their fatty livers as well as pollution, climate change and over fishing of much of the great whites natural prey. Between 2010 and 2016 shark spotters recorded an average of 205 great white sightings a year in False Bay which is a 600 square mile section of the Atlantic Ocean near tourist hot spot Cape Town. In 2018 they were only 50 sightings of the deadly predators made famous by the Hollywood blockbuster Jaws and so far this year not a single one of the much-feared great white shark has been spotted. And it has been two years since the Shark Spotters Applied Research Programme has picked up a signal from any of the great white’s that had been tagged by scientists and were resident in False Bay. This comes after 5 great white sharks were washed up along the South African coastline in 2017 with gaping wounds on their side with their livers having been bitten out by two killer whales in the area. The killer whales bite a large slit in the side of the great whites after attacking as a pair and then suck out the fatty liver which is 600lb meat delicacy in a phenomenon that has only recently been discovered. The two Orca’s responsible – known as Port and Starboard as their dorsal fins hang to the left on one and to the right on the other – spurned their natural prey like seals having developed a taste for shark. The great whites population in False Bay sea to be taking no chances and have moved to new hunting grounds away from Seal Island but it is hoped that they will in time return to their usual hunting ground. The City of Cape Town said: ”Great white sharks have been noticeably absent from False Bay during 2019 prompting questions as to when t
    MEGA491637_001.jpg
  • Jennifer Lopez arriving at the Vanity Fair Oscar Party in Beverly Hills, California - Feb 24, 2019 - Photo: Runway Manhattan
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  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_006.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_004.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_010.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_003.jpg
  • March 25, 2019 - Buenos Aires, Federal Capital, Argentina - The kings of Spain, Felipe VI and Letizia Ortiz, arrived on Sunday night, March 24, in Buenos Aires as part of the State visit to Argentina..According to the predicted, the official activities of the monarchs began this Monday, March 25, with a bulky agenda of activities..In the morning they met at Casa Rosada with President Mauricio Macri and the First Lady, Juliana Awada..The kings arrived at the government headquarters around 11 in the morning and after taking the official photo in the White Room, Macri and Felipe VI gave a message before entering the presidential office for their personal meeting, which will also be attended by Awada and the Queen Letizia. After the private lunch at the Residencia de Olivos, at night the Kings were entertained with an Honor dinner offered by President Macri, which was held in the Gallery of the Hall of the Shields of the CCK (Kirchner Cultural Center), where the King Felipe VI and Reina Letizia greeted the different invited personalities. (Credit Image: ©  Roberto Almeida Aveledo/ZUMA Wire)
    20190325_zap_a179_038.jpg
  • September 12, 2018 - New York, New York, U.S - September, 2018 - New York, New York  U.S. - A model on the runway at the HOGAN MCLAUGHLIN S/S 2019 RTW show during New York Fashion Week 2018.  (Credit image (c) Theano Nikitas/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com (Credit Image: © Theano Nikitas/ZUMA Wire)
    20180912_zap_n285_238.jpg
  • Model walks on the runway during the Akris Fashion Show during Paris Fashion Week Womenswear Fall Winter 2018-2019 held in Paris, France on March 4, 2018. (Photo by Jonas Gustavsson/Sipa USA)
    Asipausa_22548852.jpg
  • Model walks on the runway during the Akris Fashion Show during Paris Fashion Week Womenswear Fall Winter 2018-2019 held in Paris, France on March 4, 2018. (Photo by Jonas Gustavsson/Sipa USA)
    Asipausa_22548774.jpg
  • July 31, 2017 - Madrid, Spain - A common stingray at Madrid Aquarium. The common stingray (Dasyatis pastinaca),  a species of stingray in the family Dasyatidae,  is found throughout the Mediterranean and Black Seas. (Credit Image: © Jorge Sanz/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
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  • September 12, 2018 - New York, New York, U.S - September, 2018 - New York, New York  U.S. - A model on the runway at the DAN LIU S/S 2019 RTW show during New York Fashion Week 2018.  (Credit image (c) Theano Nikitas/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com (Credit Image: © Theano Nikitas/ZUMA Wire)
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  • August 1, 2017 - Maharashtra, India - Video screen grab of moment the two fall from cliff. Imran Garadi (26) and Pratap Rathod (21), are seen standing on the edge of a precipice, beyond the fence at Amboli Ghat, a popular picnic spot in Maharashtra, India.....Imran, 26 and Pratap, 21, along with five other men went to the popular picnic spot Amboli Ghat to enjoy their evening. The two men went their separate ways from the rest of the group.  They were in a drunken state with bottles in their hands, they climbed over the fence and fell into the deep 2000ft valley. Two rescue teams have been searching for the bodies but they are yet to be recovered. (Credit Image: © Cover Asia Press/Cover Asia via ZUMA Press)
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  • August 4, 2017 - MAHARASHTRA, INDIA - MAHARASHTRA, INDIA- AUGUST, 1, 2017: Imran Garadi (26) and Pratap Rathod (21), are seen climbing the fence at Amboli Ghat, a popular picnic spot in Maharashtra, India.....Imran, 26 and Pratap, 21, along with five other men went to the popular picnic spot Amboli Ghat to enjoy their evening. The two men went their separate ways from the rest of the group. They were in a drunken state with bottles in their hands, they climbed over the fence and fell into the deep 2000ft valley.....Two rescue teams have been searching for the bodies but they are yet to be recovered.....Pictures supplied by : Cover Asia Press (Credit Image: © Cover Asia Press/Cover Asia via ZUMA Press)
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  • November 5, 2016 - Liverpool, England, United Kingdom - Cranes, along with houses in the town of New Brighton in the foreground, stand at the site of the new Liverpool 2 deep-sea container port on November 5, 2016 in Liverpool, England. (Credit Image: © Jonathan Nicholson/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
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  • November 5, 2016 - Liverpool, England, United Kingdom - Cranes, along with New Brighton Lighthouse in the foreground, stand at the site of the new Liverpool 2 deep-sea container port on November 5, 2016 in Liverpool, England. (Credit Image: © Jonathan Nicholson/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
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  • November 5, 2016 - Liverpool, England, United Kingdom - Cranes, along with New Brighton Lighthouse in the foreground, stand at the site of the new Liverpool 2 deep-sea container port on November 5, 2016 in Liverpool, England. (Credit Image: © Jonathan Nicholson/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
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  • November 5, 2016 - Liverpool, England, United Kingdom - Cranes, along with New Brighton Lighthouse in the foreground, stand at the site of the new Liverpool 2 deep-sea container port on November 5, 2016 in Liverpool, England. (Credit Image: © Jonathan Nicholson/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
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  • November 5, 2016 - Liverpool, England, United Kingdom - Cranes, along with houses in the town of New Brighton in the foreground, stand at the site of the new Liverpool 2 deep-sea container port on November 5, 2016 in Liverpool, England. (Credit Image: © Jonathan Nicholson/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
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  • November 5, 2016 - Liverpool, England, United Kingdom - Cranes, along with New Brighton Lighthouse in the foreground, stand at the site of the new Liverpool 2 deep-sea container port on November 5, 2016 in Liverpool, England. (Credit Image: © Jonathan Nicholson/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
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  • November 5, 2016 - Liverpool, England, United Kingdom - Cranes, along with New Brighton Lighthouse in the foreground, stand at the site of the new Liverpool 2 deep-sea container port on November 5, 2016 in Liverpool, England. (Credit Image: © Jonathan Nicholson/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
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  • January 2, 2018 - Orlando, FL, USA - With frigid temperatures blanketing most of the country, a pedestrian in Lake Eola Park bundles up against the chill, in Orlando, Fla., on Tuesday, Jan. 2, 2018. Lows are forecast to dip below freezing in central Florida this week. (Credit Image: © Joe Burbank/TNS via ZUMA Wire)
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  • May 18, 2017 - Antalya, Türkiye - A Turkish Army tank was sunk in the Mediterranean Sea off the coast of the south resort town Kas to serve as an artificial reef and attract tourists as part of a project. The tank was sunk in 5 meters deep of water.  If the weather conditions are good, it will be taken to Guvercin Island of Kas in 20 meters deep water. (Credit Image: © Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
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  • A United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket lifts off from Space Launch Complex 3 at Vandenberg Air Force Base, California, carrying NASA's Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport, or InSight, Mars lander. Liftoff was at 4:05 a.m. PDT (7:05 a.m. EDT). The spacecraft will be the first mission to look deep beneath the Martian surface. It will study the planet's interior by measuring its heat output and listen for marsquakes. InSight will use the seismic waves generated by marsquakes to develop a map of the planet’s deep interior. The resulting insight into Mars’ formation will provide a better understanding of how other rocky planets, including Earth, were created.
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  • 2-6-18. KSC  FL. SpaceX’s first Falcon Heavy rocket lifts off on its inaugural test launch from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 3:45 p.m. EST (2045 GMT). The high-power launcher is attempting to boost Elon Musk’s electric Tesla sports car into deep space as a shakedown for future Falcon Heavy missions. Photo by Gene Blevins/LA DailyNews/SCNG/ZumaPress. (Credit Image: © Gene Blevins via ZUMA Wire)
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  • February 2, 2020, Miami Gardens, FL, USA: San Francisco 49ers tight end George Kittle (85) catches a pass deep in Kansas City territory in the first half of Super Bowl 54 on Feb. 2, 2020 at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, FL. (Credit Image: © TNS via ZUMA Wire)
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  • 9th of Jan 2016..Dramatic rescues as refugee deaths in Aegean reach record high..MOAS team make a sighting of a large rubber dinghy with 48 people onboard ( 8 males, 16 females and 14 children). The boat is in distress in the heavy swell. Three men are then spotted in sea by the MOAS searchlight. The men looking exhausted are encouraged to swim and grasp hold of the Jacobs ladder hanging on the side of the MOAS Rescue ship, Responder. With rescues swimmers at the ready, the men are pulled to safety. The men had fallen from the dinghy and could not climb back due to the high seas and their boat being already so overcrowded. Their rubber boat with their family members aboard was then safely brought alongside the Responder and all remaining 45 people, mainly Syrians were brought on deck, exhausted..ATHAGONISI - Search and rescue charity Migrant Offshore Aid Station (MOAS) has assisted hundreds of refugees from hostile seas between Turkey and Greece since it began operating in the region just before Christmas.. .The MOAS crew has witnessed shocking scenes of life and death, having led complex deep water and nearshore rescues over the past four weeks. The human toll has been described as “distressing” and “desperate” by reporters who have been embedded with MOAS.. .MOAS, which saved almost 12,000 refugees from the Mediterranean Sea since 2014, expanded its operations to the Aegean Sea thanks to thousands of donations that reached the organisation after the horrific death of Alan Kurdi, a Syrian toddler who was photographed washed ashore on a Turkish beach last September.. .The charity is operating off the Greek island of Agathonisi from a 51-metre vessel equipped with two fast rescue launches named after Alan and his brother Galip, who also died in September’s shipwreck.. .According to the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), 2016 appears to be a record year for both refugee arrivals and deaths at sea. In the first three weeks, f
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  • Oct. 8, 2015 - Lesbos Island, Greece - Migrants and refugees wait the departure for Athens in the port of Mytilene, Greek island of Lesbos after crossing the Aegean sea from Turkey on October 8, 2015..More than 400,000 refugees, mostly Syrians and Afghans, arrived in Greece since early January while dozens were drowned trying to make the crossing. In total 710,000 have entered the EU through Greece and Italy during the same period, according to the European Agency Frontex border surveillance. The migration issue has caused deep divisions within the European Union, which is trying to set the distribution of migrants among its member countries or limit the flow. (Credit Image: © Antonio Masiello/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
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  • March 18, 2011 - Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa - The Protea, South Africa's national flower, in the Stellenbosch National Botanical Gardens. Named after the Greek god Proteus, who could change his form at will, Protea are one of the oldest groups of flowering plants and have existed for over 300 million years. This sturdy, dense shrub produces fairly large flowers ranging in color from cream to deep red (Credit Image: © Arnold Drapkin/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • March 18, 2011 - Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa - The Protea, South Africa's national flower, in the Stellenbosch National Botanical Gardens. Named after the Greek god Proteus, who could change his form at will, Protea are one of the oldest groups of flowering plants and have existed for over 300 million years. They range in color from cream to deep red. (Credit Image: © Arnold Drapkin/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • March 18, 2011 - Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa - The Protea, South Africa's national flower, in the Stellenbosch National Botanical Gardens. Named after the Greek god Proteus, who could change his form at will, Protea are one of the oldest groups of flowering plants and have existed for over 300 million years. They range in color from cream to deep red. (Credit Image: © Arnold Drapkin/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • This is a photograph taken by Apollo 11 astronaut Neil Armstrong looking into East Crater, about 60 meters away from the lunar module. He estimated the crater was about 20 to 25 meters in diameter and 4 1/2 to 6 meters deep. The crater wall in the background is in deep shadow. The object at lower left is the stereo close-up camera. The view is roughly towards the northeast. Photo by CNP/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • May 13, 2019 - SãO Paulo, Brazil - SÃO PAULO, SP - 13.05.2019: NOVA DETERMINAÇÃO PARA BAGAGENS DE MÃO - Starting today, non-standard carry-on luggage will be barred from boarding. Cardboard boxes will be used as a template to extract the measurements from the suitcases. Luggage with measures up to (55cm high x 35cm wide and 25cm deep) will be allowed. The employees of the company contracted for this project will make a kind of visual screening, directing the passengers that apparently are with bags with measures superior to those authorized. São Paulo, May 13, 2019. (Credit Image: © Van Campos/Fotoarena via ZUMA Press)
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  • March 29, 2019 - Traditional washer men and women wash a different varieties of clothes manually on the banks of the Dal Lake in Srinagar, in Indian Administered Kashmir on 29 March 2019. Washer men and women scrub the clothes by hand while men wring them in the large outdoor laundry, employing a traditional method passed on through generations in India but currently only practised by few in the remaining open laundries or “dhobi ghat” in the country.  The work is physically demanding, with washmen often standing in knee deep soapy water in a tub hitting and rinsing clothes and linen, and then pounding them on a stone. Work in the laundry usually begins at dawn and continues until late in the evening, and it isn’t a lucrative activity, especially since the advent of technology in the washing profession (Credit Image: © Muzamil Mattoo/IMAGESLIVE via ZUMA Wire)
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  • March 19, 2019 - Beira, Mozambique - Residents begin to repair damaged buildings in Beira, Mozambique, after Cyclone Idai hit the area. Large areas to the west of Beira have been severely flooded. In some areas close to the Buzi and Pungwe rivers, flood water are metres deep and have completely covered homes, telephone lines and trees.. (Credit Image: © Denis Onyodi/IFRC via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 17, 2018 - Strasbourg, France - French President Emmanuel Macron, left, with European Parliament president Antonio Tajani at the European Parliament in Strasbourg. Macron is expected to outline his vision for the future of Europe to push for deep reforms of the 19-nation eurozone and will launch a drive to seek European citizens' opinions on the European Union's future. (Credit Image: © Elyxandro Cegarra/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
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