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  • South Africa - Cape Town - 14 May  - 2020 -  Western Cape Human Settlements Minister Tertuis Simmers visited the construction site of the Forest Village Housing project in Eerste River, Cape Town.He went to there to ensure that contractors comply with all the health and safety protocols.He was accompanied by Mayco member of housing Malusi Booi.photographer Phando Jikelo/african News Agency(ANA)
    Construction-9914.jpg
  • South Africa - Cape Town - 14 May  - 2020 -  Western Cape Human Settlements Minister Tertuis Simmers visited the construction site of the Forest Village Housing project in Eerste River, Cape Town.He went to there to ensure that contractors comply with all the health and safety protocols.He was accompanied by Mayco member of housing Malusi Booi.photographer Phando Jikelo/african News Agency(ANA)
    Construction-996.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_021.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ARE YOU SWAY-ED BY THIS UNIQUE HOUSE FOR SALE - INCREDIBLE HOME INSIDE A 220-FOOT TOWER COULD BE YOURS FOR £10 By Magnus News Agency Buyers are being offered one last chance to own a unique 220-foot-high Victorian folly before it is offered as a prize in a competition for just £10 a ticket. Sway Tower, in Hampshire, sits resplendent above the village of the same name with commanding views of the English countryside and south coast. The 1880s intricately designed concrete monolith has been in the family of businessman and entrepreneur Paul Atlas and his family for the past 45 years. But now the property, which comes complete with a 60-foot swimming pool and telecommunications income of £35,000 plus a year, is on the market in a once-in-a-lifetime sale. Grandfather-of-four Paul has lived in the 14-floor tower since 1995 with Julie raising their two children. Since they bought it in 1973 for £2,600 the Atlas’s have been busy renovating the structure ensuring that what stands now will last for generations to come. In the mid-90s, with the backing of the local authority and heritage charities, Paul and a team of tradesmen renovated the structure after the storm of 1987 hit the south coast. Over the years the Atlas family has used the tower for a variety of uses; from a very elaborate ‘shed’ when it was first purchased, to a restaurant, hotel and finally to a one-of-a-kind multi-million-pound home. However, if a buyer cannot be found within 45 days, the owners will commence the process of offering the tower as prize with competition property experts WinThis.life Paul, 71, said the tower is anything but an ordinary home and nowadays he restricts climbing the 330 steps to the top to once a month. He said offering the chance for someone to own the tower for the price of a raffle ticket was an incredible opportunity as the place is ready to go needing no work by any new owner. Paul said: “In the early 1990s we were taking £585 a night in revenue from t
    MEGA179323_001.jpg
  • June 18, 2017 - Pampilhosa da Serra, Portugal - A wildfire creeps over a hill at night in Pampilhosa da Serra, a town in the Coimbra district, as a resident watches from the roof of the village chapel. A raging forest fire in central Portugal killed at least 62 people as they desperately tried to flee, charring cars and trucks as it swept over roads. The disaster is the worst tragedy Portugal has experienced in decades. (Credit Image: © Atlantico Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • June 18, 2017 - Figueira dos Vinhos, Portugal -  Some of the fire victims lay covered in the road at Pedrogao Grande municipality under military guard (GNR) near the village of Nodeirinho. At least 62 people were killed in the fire that hit Pedrógão Grande and two other municipalities in the district of Leiria since Saturday, according to the Secretary of State for Internal Affairs Portugal. (Credit Image: © Atlantico Press via ZUMA Wire)
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  • Family #roadtrip with @ChevroletSA #TrailBlazer into the #BaviaansRiver Conservancy, forests of #Hogsback and the #GraafReinet district of the #Karoo, while testing the new #Pentax #K3II Camera System, Eastern Cape, South Africa, RSA
    JM-PENTAX-20160709-0634.jpg
  • Family #roadtrip with @ChevroletSA #TrailBlazer into the #BaviaansRiver Conservancy, forests of #Hogsback and the #GraafReinet district of the #Karoo, while testing the new #Pentax #K3II Camera System, Eastern Cape, South Africa, RSA
    JM-PENTAX-20160709-0624.jpg
  • Family #roadtrip with @ChevroletSA #TrailBlazer into the #BaviaansRiver Conservancy, forests of #Hogsback and the #GraafReinet district of the #Karoo, while testing the new #Pentax #K3II Camera System, Eastern Cape, South Africa, RSA
    JM-PENTAX-20160709-0623.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Ironbridge Gorge, Coalbrookdale, Shropshire, England (Credit Image: © Bilderbuch/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
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  • Mar 27, 2016 - Chernobyl, Ukraine - The farmstead of one of those who returned after been evicted from the site in 1986 after the nuclear disaster. Ukraine marks the 30th anniversary of the Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster on April 26, 1986. (Credit Image: © Sergii Kharchenko via ZUMA Wire)
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  • Mar 27, 2016 - Chernobyl, Ukraine - The farmstead of one of those who returned after been evicted from the site in 1986 after the nuclear disaster. Ukraine marks the 30th anniversary of the Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster on April 26, 1986. (Credit Image: © Sergii Kharchenko via ZUMA Wire)
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  • April 25, 2018 - Pulwama, Jammu & Kashmir, India - (EDITORS NOTE: Image contains graphic content.) People carrying the body of Ishfaq Ahmed for burial after the Funeral procession of Ishfaq Ahmed at his residence Handura Village of Tral in south Kashmir's Pulwama District. Ishfaq Ahmed was a local militant who got killed along with his 3 Associates in a 12 hour Long Gunfight In Lam Forests Of Tral On Tuesday 26 April 2018. Reportedly Thousands of peoples including men, women, childrens attended the funeral procession of Ishfaq Ahmed on Wednesday in Tral Some 50 kms away from Srinagar summer capital of Indian Kashmir. Two security forces were also killed and two army men wounded in the gunfight. (Credit Image: © Abbas Idrees/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20180425_zaa_s197_025.jpg
  • August 14, 2017 - Nakla, Poland - Fallen trees in the forest are seen near the Nakla village , northern Poland on 14 August 2017  Storms which on Friday 11th, August night and Saturday morning swept roughie the country killed six people and damaged thousands of houses. Thirty thousand hectares of forest were also destroyed. (Credit Image: © Michal Fludra/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170814_zaa_n230_295.jpg
  • June 18, 2017 - Portugal - Pampilhosa da Serra, 06/18/17 - Report this afternoon at Aldeia do Pessegueiro, which I am partially surrounded by a Forest Fire Photo: Fire detail in Aldeia do Pessegueiro, view of the village chapel  (Credit Image: © Atlantico Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20170618_zaa_at2_019.jpg
  • April 25, 2018 - Pulwama, Jammu & Kashmir, India - Dead body of Ishfaq Ahmed during his Funeral procession at his residence Handura Village of Tral in south Kashmir's Pulwama District. Ishfaq Ahmed was a local militant who got killed along with his 3 Associates in a 12 hour Long Gunfight In Lam Forests Of Tral On Tuesday 26 April 2018. Reportedly Thousands of peoples including men, women, childrens attended the funeral procession of Ishfaq Ahmed on Wednesday in Tral Some 50 kms away from Srinagar summer capital of Indian Kashmir. Two security forces were also killed and two army men wounded in the gunfight. (Credit Image: © Abbas Idrees/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20180425_zaa_s197_028.jpg
  • April 25, 2018 - Pulwama, Jammu & Kashmir, India - (EDITORS NOTE: Image contains graphic content.) A Kashmiri woman tries to touch the body of Ishfaq Ahmed during his Funeral procession at his residence Handura Village of Tral in south Kashmir's Pulwama District. Ishfaq Ahmed was a local militant who got killed along with his 3 Associates in a 12 hour long gunfight. Thousands of people including men, women and children attended the funeral procession of Ishfaq Ahmed on Wednesday in Tral Some 50 kms away from Srinagar summer capital of Indian Kashmir. Two security forces were also killed and two army men wounded in the gunfight. (Credit Image: © Abbas Idrees/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20180425_zaa_s197_030.jpg
  • A goat searches food, into the plastic rubbish next to floating villages around Gaya Island, on August 5, 2019 near Kota Kinabalu city, State of Sabah, North of Borneo Island, Malaysia. Photo by Emy/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • Floating villages are pictured around the Gaya Island, on August 5, 2019 near Kota Kinabalu city, State of Sabah, North of Borneo Island, Malaysia. Photo by Emy/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • EXCLUSIVE: Prince Harry and Meghan Markle decide to withdraw from public life, at the same time, Prince Frederik and Mary of Denmark have also decided to take a break with their crown. Since Monday, January 6, they have chosen to settle and educate their 4 children at the Verbier International School and to live there together until the end of the school year. Far from protocol and official evenings, Frederik and Mary's life is punctuated by that of children and walks in the snow in the forest. Every day at 8 am, Frederik and Mary accompany their children to school, distant about fifteen minutes on foot from their chalet except Wednesday, the only day when the whole family goes to school by car because it is the day of the physical education course, in Verbier, it is compulsory skiing ... on Wednesday 8 January, Prince Frederic ordered a birthday cake from the village pastry shop. Set ID: 603176. 09 Jan 2020 Pictured: -EXCLUSIVE- Prince Harry and Meghan Markle decide to withdraw from public life, at the same time, Prince Frederik and Mary of Denmark have also decided to take a break with their crown. Since Monday, January 6, they have chosen to settle and educate their 4 children at the Verbier International School and to live there together until the end of the school year. Far from protocol and official evenings, Frederik and Mary's life is punctuated by that of children and walks in the snow in the forest. Every day at 8 am, Frederik and Mary accompany their children to school, distant about fifteen minutes on foot from their chalet except Wednesday, the only day when the whole family goes to school by car because it is the day of the physical education course, in Verbier, it is compulsory skiing ... on Wednesday 8 January, Prince Frederic ordered a birthday cake from the village pastry shop. Set ID: 603176. Photo credit: EliotPress / ELIOTPRESS / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA581438_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Prince Harry and Meghan Markle decide to withdraw from public life, at the same time, Prince Frederik and Mary of Denmark have also decided to take a break with their crown. Since Monday, January 6, they have chosen to settle and educate their 4 children at the Verbier International School and to live there together until the end of the school year. Far from protocol and official evenings, Frederik and Mary's life is punctuated by that of children and walks in the snow in the forest. Every day at 8 am, Frederik and Mary accompany their children to school, distant about fifteen minutes on foot from their chalet except Wednesday, the only day when the whole family goes to school by car because it is the day of the physical education course, in Verbier, it is compulsory skiing ... on Wednesday 8 January, Prince Frederic ordered a birthday cake from the village pastry shop. Set ID: 603176. 09 Jan 2020 Pictured: -EXCLUSIVE- Prince Harry and Meghan Markle decide to withdraw from public life, at the same time, Prince Frederik and Mary of Denmark have also decided to take a break with their crown. Since Monday, January 6, they have chosen to settle and educate their 4 children at the Verbier International School and to live there together until the end of the school year. Far from protocol and official evenings, Frederik and Mary's life is punctuated by that of children and walks in the snow in the forest. Every day at 8 am, Frederik and Mary accompany their children to school, distant about fifteen minutes on foot from their chalet except Wednesday, the only day when the whole family goes to school by car because it is the day of the physical education course, in Verbier, it is compulsory skiing ... on Wednesday 8 January, Prince Frederic ordered a birthday cake from the village pastry shop. Set ID: 603176. Photo credit: EliotPress / ELIOTPRESS / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA581438_070.jpg
  • November 22, 2018 - Toba Samosir Regency, North Sumatra, Indonesia - Pasal Manalu, 49, a farmer shows after peels the sap of the frankincense tree belonging to the community in the Industrial Plantation area by PT Toba Pulp Lestari in Toba Samosir Regency, North Sumatra on November 21, 2018. Residents in the village generally depend on Frankincense sap. it is sold at Rp. 200.000 ($13.71) per kilogram. Frankincense (Styrax benzoit) is a sap produced through the tapping process and as one of the forest products a which can be processed and used for various uses as raw material for medicines, cosmetics, and is often used in traditional ceremonies. (Credit Image: © Albert Ivan Damanik/ZUMA Wire)
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  • August 14, 2017 - Kalamos, Greece - Flames rise during a forest fire at Kalamos village, north of Athens. A total of 53 wildfires broke out in Greece Saturday and Sunday, including at the beach resort of Kalamos near Athens. (Credit Image: © Eurokinissi via ZUMA Wire)
    20170814_zaa_e114_003.jpg
  • August 14, 2017 - Kalamos, Greece - Flames rise during a forest fire at Kalamos village, north of Athens. A total of 53 wildfires broke out in Greece Saturday and more have done so Sunday, including at the beach resort of Kalamos near Athens. (Credit Image: © Eurokinissi via ZUMA Wire)
    20170814_zaa_e114_001.jpg
  • August 14, 2017 - Sylczno, Poland - Man looking at the fallen trees in the forest are seen near the Sylczno village , northern Poland on 14 August 2017  Storms which on Friday 11th, August night and Saturday morning swept roughie the country killed six people and damaged thousands of houses. Thirty thousand hectares of forest were also destroyed. (Credit Image: © Michal Fludra/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    RTI20170814_zaa_n230_245.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_084.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_082.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_081.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_080.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_083.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_072.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_071.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_075.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_077.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_079.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_076.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_070.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_074.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_069.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_066.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_068.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_065.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_064.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_059.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_055.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_060.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_063.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_062.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_057.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_056.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_058.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_051.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_053.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_054.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_049.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_050.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_048.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_042.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_045.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_043.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_046.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_039.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_041.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_038.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_047.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_044.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_040.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_036.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_034.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_035.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Spectators cheer participants as they past Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_033.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Spectators cheer participants as they past Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_023.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Spectators cheer participants as they past Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_027.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Spectators cheer participants as they past Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_029.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Spectators cheer participants as they past Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_030.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Spectators cheer participants as they past Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_031.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Spectators cheer participants as they past Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_025.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Spectators cheer participants as they past Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_024.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Spectators cheer participants as they past Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_028.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Spectators cheer participants as they past Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_026.jpg
  • November 11, 2018 - Athens, Greece - Participants run past a burnt area of Mati village, where 99 people died in a forest fire last summer, during the 2018 Athens Marathon. (Credit Image: © Aristidis VafeiadakisZUMA Wire)
    20181111_zaf_v62_032.jpg
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