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  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
    MEGA503504_002.jpg
  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
    MEGA503504_001.jpg
  • June 10, 2017 - Sullivan'S Island, South Carolina, United States of America - Descendants of enslaved Africans brought to Charleston in the Middle Passage hold a prayer service during a remembrance ceremony at Fort Moutrie National Monument June 10, 2017 in Sullivan's Island, South Carolina. The Middle Passage refers to the triangular trade in which millions of Africans were shipped to the New World as part of the Atlantic slave trade. An estimated 15% of the Africans died at sea and considerably more in the process of capturing and transporting. The total number of African deaths directly attributable to the Middle Passage voyage is estimated at up to two million African deaths. (Credit Image: © Richard Ellis via ZUMA Wire)
    20170610_zaf_e02_001.jpg
  • March 29, 2019 - Rome, Italy, Italy - Demonstration by middle school students of the Roman Student Committee against the reform of the new baccalaureate exam in Rome, Italy. The new baccalaureate exam will start in June 2019, precisely from the 19th with the first written Italian exam for the baccalaureate exam. (Credit Image: © Andrea Ronchini/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20190329_zaa_p133_017.jpg
  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
    MEGA503504_006.jpg
  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
    MEGA503504_004.jpg
  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
    MEGA503504_008.jpg
  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
    MEGA503504_003.jpg
  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
    MEGA503504_005.jpg
  • A 75-year-old man suffering from a rare disease has grown a Hellboy-like horn on his head. Shyamal Lal Yadav, hailing from Sagar district of Madhya Pradesh in central India, suffered an injury on his head five years ago. Yadav claims that a horn-like structure started developing in the middle of his head after that. Yadav saw several doctors, but ‘all of them looked clueless’. He finally got the horn sliced with the help of a barber. “I thought to myself finally I had got good riddance from the devil’s horn. But my happiness was short-lived,” said Yadav. As feared, the horn started to grow back on his head and he was completely clueless about his next course of action Fortunately, the growth did not cause any physical discomfort or snowball into a medical issue. But, it had certainly made him a laughing stock. He was embarrassed to roam around in public with the unnatural growth on his head. “I kept doing the rounds of hospitals, but nothing happened. Then I asked my barber to cut the horn with the shaving blade. He did manage to cut it off, but the horn grew back in some time at the same spot,” said the ‘real-life Hellboy’. According to Yadav, he travelled to Bhopal (around 170km from Sagar) and Nagpur (around 388km from his home) to consult senior experts, however, had to come back as he could not afford the cost of the operation. The medical fraternity was in a tizzy as they hadn’t witnessed anything like that. His quest finally ended at a private clinic run by Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye in his home town Sagar. Dr. Gajbhiye said,” “The four-inch horn was solid and had sizable thickness.” The physician carried out a CT scan to ensure that the horn wasn’t deep enough to require the intervention of a neurosurgeon. The physician went ahead with the head surgery to remove the horn. After the horn was removed, the surgeons used the skin of Yadav’s forehead to fill up the gap through plastic surgery. Dr. Gajbhiye calls it a rare case and claimed t
    MEGA503504_007.jpg
  • Glass Globe illustrating Asia, India, China, Russia, Africa, Saudi Arabia, Middle East (Credit Image: © Image Source/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20130812_baa_i19_002.jpg
  • May 13, 2019 - Gaza, khan younis, Palestine - Nickolay Mladenov the U.N. special coordinator for Middle East peace seen speaking during his visits to a solar energy project at Nasser hospital in the southern Gaza Strip. (Credit Image: © Yousef Masoud/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20190513_zaa_s197_001.jpg
  • August 15, 2017 - Ankara, Turkey - A man speaks into a megaphone as activists gathered in front of the main gate of the Middle East Technical University (METU) to protest against the development of the university's natural habitat, chanting the slogan 'METU must be defended' in Ankara, Turkey on August 15, 2017. The university and its students are known for their dissenting opinion as the university's forest land has become a target for the new construction in the last years. (Credit Image: © Altan Gocher/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170815_zaa_n230_189.jpg
  • July 21, 2018 - London, United Kingdom - Janieve Russell of Jamaica and Shamier Little of USA (Middle) in action 400m Hurdles Women.during the Muller Anniversary Games IAAF Diamond League Day One at The London Stadium on July 21, 2018 in London, England. (Credit Image: © Action Foto Sport/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20180721_zaa_n230_547.jpg
  • July 21, 2018 - London, United Kingdom - Janieve Russell of Jamaica and Shamier Little of USA (Middle) in action 400m Hurdles Women.during the Muller Anniversary Games IAAF Diamond League Day One at The London Stadium on July 21, 2018 in London, England. (Credit Image: © Action Foto Sport/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20180721_zaa_n230_539.jpg
  • July 21, 2018 - London, United Kingdom - Janieve Russell of Jamaica and Shamier Little of USA (Middle) in action 400m Hurdles Women.during the Muller Anniversary Games IAAF Diamond League Day One at The London Stadium on July 21, 2018 in London, England. (Credit Image: © Action Foto Sport/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20180721_zaa_n230_536.jpg
  • July 21, 2018 - London, United Kingdom - Janieve Russell of Jamaica and Shamier Little of USA (Middle) in action 400m Hurdles Women.during the Muller Anniversary Games IAAF Diamond League Day One at The London Stadium on July 21, 2018 in London, England. (Credit Image: © Action Foto Sport/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20180721_zaa_n230_522.jpg
  • July 21, 2018 - London, United Kingdom - Janieve Russell of Jamaica and Shamier Little of USA (Middle) in action 400m Hurdles Women.during the Muller Anniversary Games IAAF Diamond League Day One at The London Stadium on July 21, 2018 in London, England. (Credit Image: © Action Foto Sport/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20180721_zaa_n230_523.jpg
  • April 16, 2018 - Burlington, IL, USA - Prairie View Elementary School music teacher Nathan Etter gets a hug from Tristan Schwarz, 6, after he spoke on Monday, April 16, 2018 to members of the School Board at Central Middle School in Burlington, Ill. Etter was looking from an apology after he was reportedly told to ''stick to the curriculum'' after he talked to students about being in a same-sex marriage. (Credit Image: © Nuccio Dinuzzo/TNS via ZUMA Wire)
    20180416_zaf_m67_013.jpg
  • September 7, 2017 - Jerusalem, Israel - Jews and Arabs meet at the Israel Museum to crack sunflower seeds and spit the shells as part of Seeds of Bliss, a project by artist Noam Edry. Inspired by Chinese artist Ai Weiwei's 2010 installation at London's Tate Museum with hundreds of tons of sculptured porcelain hand painted sunflower seeds, Edry aims to connect the people of the Middle East in cracking and eating 10 tons of real sunflower seeds and to return a mountain of shells for display in the Tate Museum. Events have already taken place in Aqaba, Eilat, Nablus, Haifa, Bethlehem, Umm El Fahm, Jenin and Afula. (Credit Image: © Nir Alon via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170907_zap_a126_001.jpg
  • September 6, 2017 - New York, NY, United States - Amin Awad, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees' (UNHCR) Regional Refugee Coordinator for Syria and Middle East and North African Bureau Director , spoke at UN Headquarters regarding the current status of the refugee situation in Syria and Iraq. (Credit Image: © Albin Lohr-Jones/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20170906_zaa_p133_109.jpg
  • August 28, 2017 - Jerusalem, Israel - United Nations Secretary General ANTONIO GUTERRES (C), gazes up at enlarged Pages of Testimony in the Hall of Names at Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum, where Pages of Testimony of more than 4,000,000 Jewish Holocaust victims are eternally preserved. Escorted by Israeli Ambassador to the UN, DANNY DANON (R), Guterres toured the Holocaust Museum, participated in a memorial ceremony in the Hall of Remembrance, visited the Children's Memorial and signed the museum guest book. This four-day visit to Israel and the Palestinian Authority is Guterres first trip to the Middle East since assuming his post on January 1st, 2017. (Credit Image: © Nir Alon via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170828_zap_a126_003.jpg
  • August 28, 2017 - Jerusalem, Israel - United Nations Secretary General ANTONIO GUTERRES rekindles the Eternal Flame and lays a wreath as he partakes in a memorial ceremony in the Hall of Remembrance. Guterres toured the Holocaust Museum, participated in a memorial ceremony, visited the Children’s Memorial and signed the museum guest book. This four-day visit to Israel and the Palestinian Authority is Guterres’ first trip to the Middle East since assuming his post on January 1st, 2017. (Credit Image: © Nir Alon via ZUMA Wire)
    20170828_zap_a126_001.jpg
  • June 5, 2017 - Qualiano, Campania, Italy - Second edition of the award for the illustrious character of Qualiano Nino Pelella. It was rewarded for middle and high school students who participated in the initiative promoted by Pro Loco di Qualiano. (Credit Image: © Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20170605_zaa_p133_079.jpg
  • June 3, 2017 - Qualiano, Campania, Italy - Second Prize Edition entitled to Qualiano Nino Pelella's illustrious character.It was awarded the prizes for middle and high school students who participated in the initiative promoted by Pro Loco di Qualiano (Credit Image: © Sonia Brandolone/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20170603_zaa_p133_097.jpg
  • August 7, 2017 - Ankara, Turkey - A man reads an educational book in Ankara, Turkey on August 07, 2017. The Turkish government takes a giant step in Turkey's education system with several critical changes. According to the new system, Charles Darwin's theory of evolution is no longer in the new curriculum. The concept of Islamic Jihad enters into the new curriculum at various levels. The steps of contemporary Turkey and the units of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, founder and the first president of the Republic of Turkey, are combined under a single unit. Economical, political and social representation; women's issues such as violence and gender discrimination are also emphasized in the new curriculum. The new curriculum includes new topics such as internet, technology and game addiction, obesity, and current social issues. Eurasia Tunnel, Maltepe Coastal Park, Osman Gazi Bridge, and Marmaray Project are used as an example for the use of natural habitat in the new geographical curriculum. The July 15 Democracy and National Unity Day is presented to middle school students under an active citizenship lesson. Some subjects in physics and chemistry courses are left to the upper level of the curriculum. The philosophy course starts to be processed from the 10th grade and the name of the physical education course is changed to physical education and sports. (Credit Image: © Altan Gocher/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170807_zaa_n230_394.jpg
  • SOUTH AFRICA - Durban - 02 July 2020 -  From L-R is Sboniso Mseleku, Kulekani Dlamini (young under 17 in middle) and Erasmu Nhasengu appears at the Umlazi magistrate court in accounts of murder and kidnapping  a uber taxi driver in mlazi.<br />
Picture: Motshwari Mofokeng/African News Agency (ANA)
    Umlazi-court-1.jpg
  • May 1, 2019 - Matochina, Bulgaria - A view of Bukelon fortress near the village of Matochina in Southeastern Bulgaria. Bukelon is the best-preserved fortress of the late Middle Ages in today's Bulgarian lands. The local population is trying to keep this unique fortress from the raids of people living in the nearby villages that break it down to build houses. Tens of years ago, many of the houses in the region were built with stones from the fortress, after which a program to preserve it began, and now many people have decided to take stones from there to build houses, fences and other buildings. Local residents also worry about the raids of refugees coming from Turkey because the fortress and the village are about 500 meters from the border. The height of the remains of the tower is about 18 meters and they represent a magnificent view, filling the panorama of the region. The tourist flow in the area has been drastically reduced due to their concerns about refugee entry and the danger of the collapse of the fortress as a result of its indiscriminate long-standing demolition. On April 14, 1205, the Adrianople battle took place in which Tsar Kaloyan's armies defeated the knights of the Fourth Crusade and captured the master of the Latin Empire Baldwin I Flanders. Photo by: /Impact Press Group/NurPhoto (Credit Image: © Impactpressgroup.Org/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20190501_zaa_n230_030.jpg
  • 10062018 (Durban) Annie in the middle making her way to the finnish line at the Mosses Mabhida stadium venue during the Comrades Marathon on Sunday as Bong’musa Mthembu and Ann Ashworth ensured that the coveted titles remained on these shores.<br />
Picture: Motshwari Mofokeng/African News Agency/ANA
    NM Finnishers comrades 138.jpg
  • 10062018 (Durban) Athletes helping Grant in the middle making his way to the finnish line at the Mosses Mabhida stadium venue during the Comrades Marathon on Sunday as Bong’musa Mthembu and Ann Ashworth ensured that the coveted titles remained on these shores.<br />
Picture: Motshwari Mofokeng/African News Agency/ANA
    NM Finnisher comrades 224.jpg
  • September 11, 2017 - Ankara, Turkey - The construction site of a new road project is pictured after cutting through the Middle East Technical University's (METU) forested campus in Ankara, Turkey on September 11, 2017. The university's rector Prof. Dr. Mustafa Versan Kok recently announced that the rectorship and the Ankara Metropolitan Municipality signed a protocol on a new road project of 4.8 kilometres in length passing through the university with the destruction around 24 hectares of the forest land. In the late evening hours of September 09, approximately 500 trucks and construction equipments with hundreds of police officers escorting them unexpectedly started to cut down the trees in the land a day after the signing the protocol. (Credit Image: © Altan Gocher/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170911_zaa_n230_302.jpg
  • MILLINGTON, Tenn. (May 8, 2017) Musician 2nd Class Daniel Oren, assigned to the U.S. Fleet Forces Band, Four Star Edition, plays keyboards during a performance at Millington Middle School in Millington, Tenn., during Memphis Navy Week. Memphis is one of select regions to host a Navy Week, which is dedicated to raise U.S. Navy awareness in through local outreach, community service and exhibitions. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Brian T. Glunt/Released) 170510-N-RN782-019<br />
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    20131127_sha_z03_492.jpg
  • Halsey takes cover from tear gas and rubber bullets with at protest turned riot with Yungblud at a police brutality protest in Santa Monica, Calif. on Sunday. Halsey and Yungblud sat on the front line of the protest in the middle of the street where they took incoming tear gas and rubber bullets because they refused to leave. Cops warned them for two hours to leave the unlawful gathering of hundreds of angry demonstrators and rioters. After the tear gas, Halsey and Yungblud decide to leave. Peaceful protesters stayed at Palisades Park but other protesters got separated and caught up in a violent riot where many rioters through stones, bricks, M-80 explosives at the police and the police responded with tear gas and rubber bullets. The demonstrators tried to take over the Santa Monica Pier but were stopped by the police. Then there was a stand off which Halsey was a part of. 31 May 2020 Pictured: Halsey takes cover from tear gas and rubber bullets with at protest turned riot with Yungblud. Photo credit: GAC / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA675848_011.jpg
  • Meet the mother duck who every year gives birth to her chicks in a hospital before parading them down the hallways. Once a year, every year, the patients at the continuing care unit of the University of Rochester's Thompson Health hospital, in Canandaigua, New York, are treated to this adorable sight. The local duck returns every spring to the same courtyard in the middle of the hospital to lay her eggs. Amazingly, the cunning bird has even learned to knock on the doors to be allowed into the building to get to her favorite nesting spot. Then without fail, once her chicks have hatched, she marches them through the hospital back to the surrounding woodland. To the delight of the patients, the little ducks can be seen following their mom throughout the hospital’s hallways, out the door, and into a grassy area behind the facility. The duck follows the same path every year, and facility services staff use old signage to guide her and the ducklings through the halls gently. Amazingly, despite it being an annual occurrence, this is the first time staff has attempted to document the adorable "rite of spring". A statement released by care staff said: “Every year, without fail, a mama duck chooses one of the enclosed courtyards at our M.M. Ewing Continuing Care Center to lay her eggs and take care of her babies. She lets us know when she’s ready to go by tapping on the glass, and this morning, it was time for this annual rite of spring.”. 21 May 2019 Pictured: Adorable mother duckling walks her chicks through a New York hospital every year. Photo credit: Thompson Health / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA426994_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: I'm A Celebrity stars Declan Donnelly and Holly Willoughby host a team canoe challenge at a bushland lake near Byron Bay in Australia Contestants were in team canoes, competing in a race to the middle of the lake to obtain a flag. The team then had to try and get their team, with their canoe, to the shore. The yellow team struggled, capsizing early in the game. 17 Nov 2018 Pictured: I'm A Celebrity stars Declan Donnelly and Holly Willoughby. Photo credit: Media Mode/Splash News/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • July 21, 2019 - Person Pulling Carrots Out Of Garden (Credit Image: © Bilderbuch/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
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  • July 21, 2019 - Man Praying In Chapel, Holy Island, Bewick, England (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
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  • July 21, 2019 - Man Praying In Chapel, Holy Island, Bewick, England (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
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  • July 21, 2019 - Man Praying In Chapel, Holy Island, Bewick, England (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_246.jpg
  • Aug. 08, 2009 - People working at casual office. Model and Property Released (MR&PR) (Credit Image: © Cultura/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • Aug. 08, 2009 - People working on laptops in office. Model and Property Released (MR&PR) (Credit Image: © Cultura/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20090808_baf_cu5_092.jpg
  • Sep. 04, 2010 - Four business people using laptop. Model and Property Released (MR&PR) (Credit Image: © Cultura/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20100904_baf_cu5_118.jpg
  • Apr. 18, 2010 - Marking an ad for a flat. Model Released (MR) (Credit Image: © Cultura/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20100418_baf_cu5_011.jpg
  • Dec. 15, 2009 - Business man sitting on chair reading. Model and Property Released (MR&PR) (Credit Image: © Cultura/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20091215_baf_cu5_056.jpg
  • Jan. 16, 2009 - Two business women conduct an interview. Model and Property Released (MR&PR) (Credit Image: © Cultura/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20090116_baf_cu5_011.jpg
  • Jul. 26, 2008 - 2 businesswomen interviewing man. Model and Property Released (MR&PR) (Credit Image: © Cultura/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20080726_baf_cu5_044.jpg
  • Apr. 18, 2010 - Marking an ad for a flat. Model Released (MR) (Credit Image: © Cultura/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20100418_baf_cu5_011.jpg
  • Aug. 27, 2008 - Office meeting. Model and Property Released (MR&PR) (Credit Image: © Cultura/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20080827_baf_cu5_061.jpg
  • Apr 19, 2017 - Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - Defense Secretary JIM MATTIS meets with Saudi King SALMAN BIN ABDULAZIZ AL-SAUD in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, April 19, 2017. DoD photo by Air Force Tech. Sgt. Brigitte N. Brantley. (Credit Image: ? Brigitte N. Brantley/DoD via ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    RTI20170419_sdd_z03_676.jpg
  • Muscat, Oman - 10/24/2013 - Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque in Muscat, Oman(Photo by SharpShooters/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_20277671.jpg
  • Muscat, Oman - 10/24/2013 - Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque in Muscat, Oman(Photo by SharpShooters/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_20277674.jpg
  • Apr 20, 2017 - Cairo, Egypt - Cairo Honor Cordon. Defense Secretary JIM MATTIS walks with Egyptian Defense Minister SEDKI SOBHY, who hosted an enhanced honor cordon for Mattis at the Defense Ministry in Cairo, April 20, 2017. DoD photo by Air Force Tech. Sgt. Brigitte N. Brantley. (Credit Image: ? Brigitte N. Brantley/DoD via ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    RTI20170420_sdd_z03_680.jpg
  • May 3, 2019 - Gaza, gaza, Palestine - A Palestinian protester seen using a slingshot to hurl stones at Israeli troops during clashes..Palestinians clash with the Israeli forces during a protest calling for lifting the Israeli blockade on Gaza and demanding for the right to return to their homeland, at the Israel-Gaza border fence in the southern Gaza Strip. (Credit Image: © Yousef Masoud/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20190503_zaa_s197_109.jpg
  • March 30, 2019 - Gaza, khan younis, Palestine - A protester with a flag seen throwing back a tear gas can fired by Israeli forces during clashes..Palestinian protesters clashed with Israeli forces in the wake of a million-strong protest on the ground, demanding the right of return to their homeland on the border between Israel and Gaza in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip. The Health Ministry in the Hamas-run sector said three Palestinians were killed by Israeli fire during the clashes. (Credit Image: © Yousef Masoud/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20190330_zaa_s197_066.jpg
  • November 22, 2018 - Ankara, Turkey - Representatives are seen inside the booth of Nilson Electric on the opening day of the Second Smart Building Technologies Fair in Ankara, Turkey on November 22, 2018. Turkish and foreign global brands with leading companies in Turkey's construction sector participate in the exhibition to present their new electric system products within the smart building technologies. (Credit Image: © Altan Gocher/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20181122_zaa_n230_136.jpg
  • November 21, 2018 - Ankara, Turkey - Ukrainian and Turkish national flags are seen together during a celebration marking the Day of Dignity and Freedom in Ankara, Turkey on November 21, 2018. (Credit Image: © Altan Gocher/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20181121_zaa_n230_216.jpg
  • November 18, 2018 - Ankara, Turkey - A newly-wed couple pose for a photo in Ankara, Turkey on November 18, 2018. Reports suggest that winter weddings in Turkey are increasing recently due to economic difficulties as holding wedding ceremonies in winter are slightly cheaper than in summer. (Credit Image: © Altan Gocher/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20181118_zaa_n230_069.jpg
  • January 2, 2018 - Ankara, Turkey - A photo taken in Ankara, Turkey on January 2, 2018 shows Turkish pro-government daily newspapers reacting over protests against the Iranian government by blaming the U.S. and Israel. Iran has been facing numerous anti-government protests as thousands of demonstrators take to the streets in 29 provinces in the recent days, leaving at least 18 dead including a police officer shot with a shotgun, the Iranian media reported. (Credit Image: © Altan Gocher/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20180102_zaa_n230_071.jpg
  • December 21, 2017 - Jerusalem, Israel - An ultra Orthodox religious Jewish man passes Santa Claus, or 'Baba Noel' as he is called in Arabic, as he rides a camel substitute for rain deer near Jerusalem's Old City Jaffa Gate. The Jerusalem Municipality and the Jewish National Fund distributed specially grown Arizona Cypress Christmas trees to the Christian population at the Jaffa Gate. (Credit Image: © Nir Alon via ZUMA Wire)
    20171221_zap_a126_013.jpg
  • December 21, 2017 - Jerusalem, Israel - Santa Claus, or 'Baba Noel' as he is called in Arabic, rides a camel substitute for rain deer near Jerusalem's Old City Jaffa Gate. The Jerusalem Municipality and the Jewish National Fund distributed specially grown Arizona Cypress Christmas trees to the Christian population at the Jaffa Gate. (Credit Image: © Nir Alon via ZUMA Wire)
    20171221_zap_a126_003.jpg
  • July 27, 2017 - Ankara, Turkey - Workers are seen at the construction site of Turkey's biggest retractable-roof shopping mall, which will be opened in September, in Ankara, Turkey on July 27, 2017. Turkey has one of the largest construction industries in the world with more than 180,000 companies, and more than 1,8 million people currently employed by this sector. Turkish companies have been active particularly in Algeria, Azerbaijan, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Libya, Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkmenistan, and other nearby countries. In 2015, Turkey were ranked second after China in the 'Top 250 International Contractors' list. (Credit Image: © Altan Gocher/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170727_zaa_n230_053.jpg
  • , Oman - 10/26/2013 - Breakfast in the desert, Wahiba Sands desert, Oman(Photo by SharpShooters/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_20277672.jpg
  • , Oman - 10/26/2013 - Wahiba Sands desert, Oman(Photo by SharpShooters/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_20277679.jpg
  • , Oman - 10/26/2013 - Khaluf desert, Oman.(Photo by SharpShooters/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_20277656.jpg
  • , Oman - 10/30/2013 - Wadi Tiwi, Oman.(Photo by SharpShooters/VWPics) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field ***
    RTIsipausa_20277669.jpg
  • May 24, 2019 - Gaza, khan younis, Palestine - A Palestinian demonstrator seen throwing stones using a  slingshot during the clashes..Palestinians clashed with Israeli forces during a major demonstration on the Gaza border, calling for an end to the Israeli siege on Gaza and the right to return to their homes at the border fence between Israel and Gaza in the southern Gaza Strip. (Credit Image: © Yousef Masoud/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20190524_zaa_s197_174.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - A Woman Standing On A Wooden Pier, Lake Derwent, Cumbria, England (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 30, 2019 - Paris, Ile-de-France (region, France - The President of the French Republic, Emmanuel Macron, received the King of Bahrain, Hamed ben Issa Al Khalifa at the Elysee Palace on April 30, 2019, (Credit Image: © Julien Mattia/Le Pictorium Agency via ZUMA Press)
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  • CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA, FEBRUARY 22, 2019. Ebrahim Matthews, Managing Director of Pearson,smiles as he looks up from reading a book in a library. (Picture: JULIAN GOLDSWAIN)
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  • October 5, 2010 - Caucasian business woman discussing paperwork in a meeting. (Credit Image: © Mint Images via ZUMA Wire)
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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_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_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_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_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_003.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
  • August 11, 2016 - Lesvos, Greece - Piles of lifejackets in Lesvos island, about 10m high on 11 August 2016. Cheap and crappy lifejackets were sold in Turkey. About 500.000 lifejackets are gathered here near Molivos in Lesvos island from the 2015 arrivals. Also the Chinese Ai Weiwei artist took many of them in Berlin and exhibited them in a public building. Thousands of people drawned between Greece and Turkey as the dinghies were in bad condition and the lifejackets didn't work. In 2015 there were days that there were more than 5000 refugee arrivals daily. (Credit Image: © Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
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  • Jennifer Aniston arriving at WE Day California in Los Angeles, California - April 19, 2018 - Photo: Runway Manhattan
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  • Jennifer Aniston arriving at the 4th Annual InStyle Awards in Los Angeles, California - Oct 22, 2018 - Photo: Runway Manhattan
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  • Jennifer Aniston arriving at the premiere of Dumplin in Hollywood, California - Dec 6, 2018 - Photo: Runway Manhattan
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  • Jennifer Aniston arriving at the premiere of Dumplin in Hollywood, California - Dec 6, 2018 - Photo: Runway Manhattan
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  • Naomi Scott and Mena Massoud attending the Aladdin European Premiere held at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, London.
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  • Naomi Scott and Mena Massoud attending the Aladdin European Premiere held at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, London.
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  • Mena Massoud and Naomi Scott attending the Aladdin European Premiere held at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, London.
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  • Mena Massoud and Naomi Scott attending the Aladdin European Premiere held at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, London.
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  • Mena Massoud and Naomi Scott attending the Aladdin European Premiere held at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, London.
    42766936.jpg
  • Mena Massoud and Naomi Scott attending the Aladdin European Premiere held at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, London.
    42766464.jpg
  • Naomi Scott attending the Aladdin European Premiere held at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, London.
    42766385.jpg
  • Naomi Scott attending the Aladdin European Premiere held at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, London.
    42766383.jpg
  • Naomi Scott attending the Aladdin European Premiere held at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, London.
    42766282.jpg
  • Naomi Scott attending the Aladdin European Premiere held at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, London.
    42766219.jpg
  • Naomi Scott attending the Aladdin European Premiere held at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, London.
    42766215.jpg
  • Naomi Scott attending the Aladdin European Premiere held at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, London.
    42766214.jpg
  • Naomi Scott attending the Aladdin European Premiere held at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, London.
    42766206.jpg
  • Naomi Scott attending the Aladdin European Premiere held at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, London.
    42766126.jpg
  • Naomi Scott attending the Aladdin European Premiere held at the Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, London.
    42766080.jpg
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