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  • South Africa - Cape Town - 10 October 2020 - Police officers on the hunt for suspects following cash van robbery and shootout in Cash Transit, Attempted Cash Heist in Robert Sobukwe Road the  Road was closed in both directions, between Valhalla Drive and Borchards Quarry. A stolen vehicle was also discovered on the scene. Photogrpher Ayanda Ndamane/African News Agency(ANA)
    cash-van-robbery-_8398.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_001.jpg
  • This is the Nevada prison former NFL star O.J. Simpson is hoping he will be released from on parole from after languishing there for nine years on armed robbery and kidnapping felonies. The 70-year-old felon, a sports icon of his day, has been serving a 33 year sentence at Lovelock Correctional Center since 2008, but is now eligible for parole. On Thursday (July 20) the Nevada Board Of Parole will convene to consider the case and if the hearing goes to plan Simpson could be released as early as October 1. These photos show the typical quarters Simpson is living in at the 1,680-inmate facility, which first opened in 1995 and has a staff of more than 200 corrections officers. Other facilities include an indoor basketball court — providing an opportunity for “The Juice” to show off some of his sporting prowess to fellow inmates. Simpson entered Lovelock in 2008 after being convicted for the 2007 robbery of sport memorabilia dealers in Las Vegas. In 2016 former corrections officer Jeffrey Felix released a book about his relationship with Simpson at Lovelock, titled “Guarding The Juice.” In the book he recalled a saga of an illicit cookie shortly after Simpson arrived, in which an inmate working in the kitchens stole cookies and brought them back to the unit where Simpson was. According to Felix, Simpson ate the cookie in plain view and was written up over the incident. However, Felix says he managed to convince the female guard to tear up the report, saying she would forever been known as “the cookie monster”. This decision could ultimately help Simpson at this parole review this week, Felix has surmised. Earlier in 1995, Simpson was acquitted of the double murder of his ex-wife Nicole Brown and her friend Ron Goldman during length legal proceedings that were dubbed “the trial of the Century.” Simpson was found liable for the killings two years later in a 1997 civil case. 18 Jul 2017 Pictured: O.J. Simpson's prison - Lovelock Correctional Center, Nevad
    MEGA56662_001.jpg
  • This is the Nevada prison former NFL star O.J. Simpson is hoping he will be released from on parole from after languishing there for nine years on armed robbery and kidnapping felonies. The 70-year-old felon, a sports icon of his day, has been serving a 33 year sentence at Lovelock Correctional Center since 2008, but is now eligible for parole. On Thursday (July 20) the Nevada Board Of Parole will convene to consider the case and if the hearing goes to plan Simpson could be released as early as October 1. These photos show the typical quarters Simpson is living in at the 1,680-inmate facility, which first opened in 1995 and has a staff of more than 200 corrections officers. Other facilities include an indoor basketball court — providing an opportunity for “The Juice” to show off some of his sporting prowess to fellow inmates. Simpson entered Lovelock in 2008 after being convicted for the 2007 robbery of sport memorabilia dealers in Las Vegas. In 2016 former corrections officer Jeffrey Felix released a book about his relationship with Simpson at Lovelock, titled “Guarding The Juice.” In the book he recalled a saga of an illicit cookie shortly after Simpson arrived, in which an inmate working in the kitchens stole cookies and brought them back to the unit where Simpson was. According to Felix, Simpson ate the cookie in plain view and was written up over the incident. However, Felix says he managed to convince the female guard to tear up the report, saying she would forever been known as “the cookie monster”. This decision could ultimately help Simpson at this parole review this week, Felix has surmised. Earlier in 1995, Simpson was acquitted of the double murder of his ex-wife Nicole Brown and her friend Ron Goldman during length legal proceedings that were dubbed “the trial of the Century.” Simpson was found liable for the killings two years later in a 1997 civil case. 18 Jul 2017 Pictured: O.J. Simpson's prison - Lovelock Correctional Center, Nevad
    MEGA56662_007.jpg
  • This is the Nevada prison former NFL star O.J. Simpson is hoping he will be released from on parole from after languishing there for nine years on armed robbery and kidnapping felonies. The 70-year-old felon, a sports icon of his day, has been serving a 33 year sentence at Lovelock Correctional Center since 2008, but is now eligible for parole. On Thursday (July 20) the Nevada Board Of Parole will convene to consider the case and if the hearing goes to plan Simpson could be released as early as October 1. These photos show the typical quarters Simpson is living in at the 1,680-inmate facility, which first opened in 1995 and has a staff of more than 200 corrections officers. Other facilities include an indoor basketball court — providing an opportunity for “The Juice” to show off some of his sporting prowess to fellow inmates. Simpson entered Lovelock in 2008 after being convicted for the 2007 robbery of sport memorabilia dealers in Las Vegas. In 2016 former corrections officer Jeffrey Felix released a book about his relationship with Simpson at Lovelock, titled “Guarding The Juice.” In the book he recalled a saga of an illicit cookie shortly after Simpson arrived, in which an inmate working in the kitchens stole cookies and brought them back to the unit where Simpson was. According to Felix, Simpson ate the cookie in plain view and was written up over the incident. However, Felix says he managed to convince the female guard to tear up the report, saying she would forever been known as “the cookie monster”. This decision could ultimately help Simpson at this parole review this week, Felix has surmised. Earlier in 1995, Simpson was acquitted of the double murder of his ex-wife Nicole Brown and her friend Ron Goldman during length legal proceedings that were dubbed “the trial of the Century.” Simpson was found liable for the killings two years later in a 1997 civil case. 18 Jul 2017 Pictured: O.J. Simpson's prison - Lovelock Correctional Center, Nevad
    MEGA56662_008.jpg
  • This is the Nevada prison former NFL star O.J. Simpson is hoping he will be released from on parole from after languishing there for nine years on armed robbery and kidnapping felonies. The 70-year-old felon, a sports icon of his day, has been serving a 33 year sentence at Lovelock Correctional Center since 2008, but is now eligible for parole. On Thursday (July 20) the Nevada Board Of Parole will convene to consider the case and if the hearing goes to plan Simpson could be released as early as October 1. These photos show the typical quarters Simpson is living in at the 1,680-inmate facility, which first opened in 1995 and has a staff of more than 200 corrections officers. Other facilities include an indoor basketball court — providing an opportunity for “The Juice” to show off some of his sporting prowess to fellow inmates. Simpson entered Lovelock in 2008 after being convicted for the 2007 robbery of sport memorabilia dealers in Las Vegas. In 2016 former corrections officer Jeffrey Felix released a book about his relationship with Simpson at Lovelock, titled “Guarding The Juice.” In the book he recalled a saga of an illicit cookie shortly after Simpson arrived, in which an inmate working in the kitchens stole cookies and brought them back to the unit where Simpson was. According to Felix, Simpson ate the cookie in plain view and was written up over the incident. However, Felix says he managed to convince the female guard to tear up the report, saying she would forever been known as “the cookie monster”. This decision could ultimately help Simpson at this parole review this week, Felix has surmised. Earlier in 1995, Simpson was acquitted of the double murder of his ex-wife Nicole Brown and her friend Ron Goldman during length legal proceedings that were dubbed “the trial of the Century.” Simpson was found liable for the killings two years later in a 1997 civil case. 18 Jul 2017 Pictured: O.J. Simpson's prison - Lovelock Correctional Center, Nevad
    MEGA56662_009.jpg
  • This is the Nevada prison former NFL star O.J. Simpson is hoping he will be released from on parole from after languishing there for nine years on armed robbery and kidnapping felonies. The 70-year-old felon, a sports icon of his day, has been serving a 33 year sentence at Lovelock Correctional Center since 2008, but is now eligible for parole. On Thursday (July 20) the Nevada Board Of Parole will convene to consider the case and if the hearing goes to plan Simpson could be released as early as October 1. These photos show the typical quarters Simpson is living in at the 1,680-inmate facility, which first opened in 1995 and has a staff of more than 200 corrections officers. Other facilities include an indoor basketball court — providing an opportunity for “The Juice” to show off some of his sporting prowess to fellow inmates. Simpson entered Lovelock in 2008 after being convicted for the 2007 robbery of sport memorabilia dealers in Las Vegas. In 2016 former corrections officer Jeffrey Felix released a book about his relationship with Simpson at Lovelock, titled “Guarding The Juice.” In the book he recalled a saga of an illicit cookie shortly after Simpson arrived, in which an inmate working in the kitchens stole cookies and brought them back to the unit where Simpson was. According to Felix, Simpson ate the cookie in plain view and was written up over the incident. However, Felix says he managed to convince the female guard to tear up the report, saying she would forever been known as “the cookie monster”. This decision could ultimately help Simpson at this parole review this week, Felix has surmised. Earlier in 1995, Simpson was acquitted of the double murder of his ex-wife Nicole Brown and her friend Ron Goldman during length legal proceedings that were dubbed “the trial of the Century.” Simpson was found liable for the killings two years later in a 1997 civil case. 18 Jul 2017 Pictured: O.J. Simpson's prison - Lovelock Correctional Center, Nevad
    MEGA56662_003.jpg
  • This is the Nevada prison former NFL star O.J. Simpson is hoping he will be released from on parole from after languishing there for nine years on armed robbery and kidnapping felonies. The 70-year-old felon, a sports icon of his day, has been serving a 33 year sentence at Lovelock Correctional Center since 2008, but is now eligible for parole. On Thursday (July 20) the Nevada Board Of Parole will convene to consider the case and if the hearing goes to plan Simpson could be released as early as October 1. These photos show the typical quarters Simpson is living in at the 1,680-inmate facility, which first opened in 1995 and has a staff of more than 200 corrections officers. Other facilities include an indoor basketball court — providing an opportunity for “The Juice” to show off some of his sporting prowess to fellow inmates. Simpson entered Lovelock in 2008 after being convicted for the 2007 robbery of sport memorabilia dealers in Las Vegas. In 2016 former corrections officer Jeffrey Felix released a book about his relationship with Simpson at Lovelock, titled “Guarding The Juice.” In the book he recalled a saga of an illicit cookie shortly after Simpson arrived, in which an inmate working in the kitchens stole cookies and brought them back to the unit where Simpson was. According to Felix, Simpson ate the cookie in plain view and was written up over the incident. However, Felix says he managed to convince the female guard to tear up the report, saying she would forever been known as “the cookie monster”. This decision could ultimately help Simpson at this parole review this week, Felix has surmised. Earlier in 1995, Simpson was acquitted of the double murder of his ex-wife Nicole Brown and her friend Ron Goldman during length legal proceedings that were dubbed “the trial of the Century.” Simpson was found liable for the killings two years later in a 1997 civil case. 18 Jul 2017 Pictured: O.J. Simpson's prison - Lovelock Correctional Center, Nevad
    MEGA56662_002.jpg
  • This is the Nevada prison former NFL star O.J. Simpson is hoping he will be released from on parole from after languishing there for nine years on armed robbery and kidnapping felonies. The 70-year-old felon, a sports icon of his day, has been serving a 33 year sentence at Lovelock Correctional Center since 2008, but is now eligible for parole. On Thursday (July 20) the Nevada Board Of Parole will convene to consider the case and if the hearing goes to plan Simpson could be released as early as October 1. These photos show the typical quarters Simpson is living in at the 1,680-inmate facility, which first opened in 1995 and has a staff of more than 200 corrections officers. Other facilities include an indoor basketball court — providing an opportunity for “The Juice” to show off some of his sporting prowess to fellow inmates. Simpson entered Lovelock in 2008 after being convicted for the 2007 robbery of sport memorabilia dealers in Las Vegas. In 2016 former corrections officer Jeffrey Felix released a book about his relationship with Simpson at Lovelock, titled “Guarding The Juice.” In the book he recalled a saga of an illicit cookie shortly after Simpson arrived, in which an inmate working in the kitchens stole cookies and brought them back to the unit where Simpson was. According to Felix, Simpson ate the cookie in plain view and was written up over the incident. However, Felix says he managed to convince the female guard to tear up the report, saying she would forever been known as “the cookie monster”. This decision could ultimately help Simpson at this parole review this week, Felix has surmised. Earlier in 1995, Simpson was acquitted of the double murder of his ex-wife Nicole Brown and her friend Ron Goldman during length legal proceedings that were dubbed “the trial of the Century.” Simpson was found liable for the killings two years later in a 1997 civil case. 18 Jul 2017 Pictured: O.J. Simpson's prison - Lovelock Correctional Center, Nevad
    MEGA56662_006.jpg
  • This is the Nevada prison former NFL star O.J. Simpson is hoping he will be released from on parole from after languishing there for nine years on armed robbery and kidnapping felonies. The 70-year-old felon, a sports icon of his day, has been serving a 33 year sentence at Lovelock Correctional Center since 2008, but is now eligible for parole. On Thursday (July 20) the Nevada Board Of Parole will convene to consider the case and if the hearing goes to plan Simpson could be released as early as October 1. These photos show the typical quarters Simpson is living in at the 1,680-inmate facility, which first opened in 1995 and has a staff of more than 200 corrections officers. Other facilities include an indoor basketball court — providing an opportunity for “The Juice” to show off some of his sporting prowess to fellow inmates. Simpson entered Lovelock in 2008 after being convicted for the 2007 robbery of sport memorabilia dealers in Las Vegas. In 2016 former corrections officer Jeffrey Felix released a book about his relationship with Simpson at Lovelock, titled “Guarding The Juice.” In the book he recalled a saga of an illicit cookie shortly after Simpson arrived, in which an inmate working in the kitchens stole cookies and brought them back to the unit where Simpson was. According to Felix, Simpson ate the cookie in plain view and was written up over the incident. However, Felix says he managed to convince the female guard to tear up the report, saying she would forever been known as “the cookie monster”. This decision could ultimately help Simpson at this parole review this week, Felix has surmised. Earlier in 1995, Simpson was acquitted of the double murder of his ex-wife Nicole Brown and her friend Ron Goldman during length legal proceedings that were dubbed “the trial of the Century.” Simpson was found liable for the killings two years later in a 1997 civil case. 18 Jul 2017 Pictured: O.J. Simpson's prison - Lovelock Correctional Center, Nevad
    MEGA56662_005.jpg
  • This is the Nevada prison former NFL star O.J. Simpson is hoping he will be released from on parole from after languishing there for nine years on armed robbery and kidnapping felonies. The 70-year-old felon, a sports icon of his day, has been serving a 33 year sentence at Lovelock Correctional Center since 2008, but is now eligible for parole. On Thursday (July 20) the Nevada Board Of Parole will convene to consider the case and if the hearing goes to plan Simpson could be released as early as October 1. These photos show the typical quarters Simpson is living in at the 1,680-inmate facility, which first opened in 1995 and has a staff of more than 200 corrections officers. Other facilities include an indoor basketball court — providing an opportunity for “The Juice” to show off some of his sporting prowess to fellow inmates. Simpson entered Lovelock in 2008 after being convicted for the 2007 robbery of sport memorabilia dealers in Las Vegas. In 2016 former corrections officer Jeffrey Felix released a book about his relationship with Simpson at Lovelock, titled “Guarding The Juice.” In the book he recalled a saga of an illicit cookie shortly after Simpson arrived, in which an inmate working in the kitchens stole cookies and brought them back to the unit where Simpson was. According to Felix, Simpson ate the cookie in plain view and was written up over the incident. However, Felix says he managed to convince the female guard to tear up the report, saying she would forever been known as “the cookie monster”. This decision could ultimately help Simpson at this parole review this week, Felix has surmised. Earlier in 1995, Simpson was acquitted of the double murder of his ex-wife Nicole Brown and her friend Ron Goldman during length legal proceedings that were dubbed “the trial of the Century.” Simpson was found liable for the killings two years later in a 1997 civil case. 18 Jul 2017 Pictured: O.J. Simpson's prison - Lovelock Correctional Center, Nevad
    MEGA56662_004.jpg
  • Police bar entry to the Dome after a raid on  350 million of diamonds on show at the Millennium Dome in SE London. Six people were arrested, including four in the Money zone vault, and two by the River Thames, where the robbers had a powerboat waiting.  *... to speed them from the scene. In scenes reminiscent of the James Bond film The World is Not Enough, the raiders used a bulldozer to break into the Dome. Had it been successful, it would have been the world's largest ever robbery.
    RTIPA-1362268.jpg
  • October 3, 2017 - Sao Paulo, Brazil - Brazilian police discovered a 500-meter-long tunnel that would link a residence to a Banco do Brasil branch in the south of Sao Paulo. .Inside the house was found large amount of food, tools and clothes used in the excavation of the tunnel..Before they could get into the bank, the 16 thieves were arrested and according to police the gang's goal was to reach the bank's safe and steal 1 billion reais (about 318 million dollars), which would be considered the biggest robbery of the history of Brazil. (Credit Image: © Paulo Lopes via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20171003_zaf_l146_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
    MEGA146278_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey/Newslions A gunshot in the head is sure shot death sentence. But a 23-year-old Indian man who was shot in the face from close range by bike-borne robbers and lived five days with a 3-cm-long bullet lodged inside his face, has miraculously survived to tell his tale. Thanks to the talented surgeons pulled out the bullet through his nostrils at state-run JJ Hospital in Mumbai . Tanveer Ahmed Ansari, a small-time businessman from Gorakhpur in north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, was shot in the forehead by the robbers as he refused to let go of his bag that had Rs 150,000 ($2,350). The bullet pierced through his forehead and got lodged in his left nose, miraculously missing his brains. According to the doctor, if the bullet had gone straight, he would died on the spot. The incident happened in the broad daylight in Gorakhpur town on December 7. Ansari’s family took him to several doctors, but they won’t take him in. Though he blinded in the left eye, Ansari never gave up on hope. He endured all the pain with the 3-cm-long bullet lodged hoping that doctors in Mumbai, around 1575km from the crime scene. Finally, the surgeons in Mumbai agreed to remove the bullet and they did so though nasal cavity of the patient. They made a small incision on the patient’s face. Pictures and video of before and after the operation show Ansari serious wound and the procedure though which the doctors at JJ Hospital extracted the bullets. The X-ray scans released by the hospital shows the exact place where the bullet was stuck in his face. It was because of the positioning of the bullet, the doctors decided not to make any incision and extract the bullet through his nostrils. The procedure is called modified endoscopy where surgical instruments are attached to an inspection tube that inserted inside the body. Ansari has now recovered and has been released from the hospital. He was admitted to the hospital on December 12 and the same day the doctors decided t
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  • Jul. 25, 2012 - Money on table in interview room (Credit Image: å© Image Source/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • October 3, 2017 - Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil - Oct, 2017 - Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil - The 16 prisoners responsible for the excavation of the 500-meter-long tunnel that led to a Banco do Brasil safe in the city of Sao Paulo and which purported to rob 1 billion reais (approximately US $ 317 million) were detention ordered by the Brazilian courts this Tuesday (3) (Credit Image: © Marcelo Chello/CJPress via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20171003_zap_c168_005.jpg
  • An excavator at the scene after a raid on  350 million of diamonds on show at the Millennium Dome in SE London.  Six people were arrested, including four in the Money zone vault, and two by the River Thames, where the robbers had a powerboat.  *... waiting to speed them from the scene. In scenes reminiscent of the James Bond film The World is Not Enough, the raiders used a bulldozer to break into the Dome. Had it been successful, it would have been the world's largest ever robbery.   18/02/02 Four men were found guilty at the Old Bailey in London of plotting to carry out the robbery.  21/01/04: Three appeal judges were hearing legal challenges by three of the men found guilty of plotting to carry out what would have been the biggest robbery in UK history, the planned snatch of  200 million worth of diamonds from the Millennium Dome.   23/03/04: The JCB digger used in the infamous attempt to steal diamonds worth  200 million from the Millennium Dome was being sold at auction.  Brisk bidding is expected for the 1992 3CX Sitemaster Backhoe Loader - which still bears the "scars" of the doomed heist - when it goes under the hammer at JCB's headquarters in Rocester, Staffordshire.
    RTIPA-1362244.jpg
  • An excavator at the scene after a raid on  350 million of diamonds on show at the Millennium Dome in SE London.  Six people were arrested, including four in the Money zone vault, and two by the River Thames, where the robbers had a powerboat.  *... waiting to speed them from the scene. In scenes reminiscent of the James Bond film The World is Not Enough, the raiders used a bulldozer to break into the Dome. Had it been successful, it would have been the world's largest ever robbery.    * 08/11/2001: Police foiled the "robbery" of the jewels when they caught raiders red handed as they smashed their way in using a mechanical digger, an Old Bailey court heard, at the opening of the trial of six men accused of plotting to rob the De Beers Millennium Diamond Exhibition with others unknown.
    RTIPA-1362246.jpg
  • May 13, 2019 - SãO Paulo, Brazil - SÃO PAULO, SP - 13.05.2019: AUMENTA CASOS DE ROUBOS DE CELULAR EM SP - The center of São Paulo is the region of the city with the highest number of cases of cell phone robberies. Praça da República appears in the first position with 466 cases, followed by Rua Augusta with 412 and Rua da Consolação with 395. Even with the large number of cell phone thefts, the Bureau of Public Security (SSP) said that robbery records generally dropped 10 percent in the capital last year. (Credit Image: © Aloisio Mauricio/Fotoarena via ZUMA Press)
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  • File photo taken on September 29, 2016 in Paris, France, of Kourtney Kardashian drived by a man who could be involved in Kim Kardashian robbery. French police investigating the theft of nearly $10 million in jewels from Kim Kardashian arrested 17 people on Monday, including a chauffeur who drove the American reality television star around Paris in the days before the robbery. Many of those arrested in coordinated police raids in several different parts of France were known underworld figures aged around 50 and at least three were women, police and judicial sources said. Photo by Julien Reynaud/APS-Medias/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • File photo taken on September 29, 2016 in Paris, France, of Kourtney Kardashian drived by a man who could be involved in Kim Kardashian robbery. French police investigating the theft of nearly $10 million in jewels from Kim Kardashian arrested 17 people on Monday, including a chauffeur who drove the American reality television star around Paris in the days before the robbery. Many of those arrested in coordinated police raids in several different parts of France were known underworld figures aged around 50 and at least three were women, police and judicial sources said. Photo by Julien Reynaud/APS-Medias/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • June 22, 2017 - USA - Richard Anthony Jones, seated next to his girlfriend, Nayisha Duncan, talks about being released from prison after serving 17 years for a crime he did not commit. In 1999, a self-described crackhead pointed at a photo and fingered Jones as the perpetrator of a robbery three months earlier, setting in motion what would become a 17-year nightmare for Jones - and a textbook example of the now well known dangerous unreliability of eyewitness testimony and flawed police photo lineups. (Credit Image: © Toriano Porter/TNS via ZUMA Wire)
    20170622_zaf_m67_001.jpg
  • The shattered case containing the Millennium Star diamond after the raid on the Millennium Dome November 2000.  The actual diamond had been substituted for a replica ahead of the attack.  Four men were found guilty at the Old Bailey in London of plotting to carry out the robbery.   21/01/04: The Court of Appeal was today hearing legal challenges by three of the men found guilty of plotting to carry out what would have been the biggest robbery in UK history, the planned snatch of  200 million worth of diamonds from the Millennium Dome.
    RTIPA-1538300.jpg
  • Oct. 27, 2015 - Los Angeles, California, U.S - Comedian Katt Williams appears in court for his arraignment on robbery charges, Tuesday, October 27, 2015 in Los Angeles. Charges were filed against Williams and former rap mogul Marion ''Suge'' Knight after a celebrity photographer accused them of taking her camera last year. Both pleaded not guilty in the September, 2014 incident in Beverly Hills. (Credit Image: © Prensa Internacional via ZUMA Wire)
    20151027_zaa_p124_007.jpg
  • An armoured van being loaded by police, after a foiled raid on a diamond display in The Millennium Dome at Greenwich.  Six people were arrested, including four in the Money zone vault, and two by the River Thames, where the robbers had a powerboat waiting to escape from the scene.   *... The raiders used a bulldozer to break into the Dome, and had it been successful, it would have been the world's largest ever robbery.    * 08/11/2001: Police foiled the "robbery" of the jewels when they caught raiders red handed as they smashed their way in using a mechanical digger, an Old Bailey court heard, at the opening of the trial of six men accused of plotting to rob the De Beers Millennium Diamond Exhibition with others unknown.
    RTIPA-1362350.jpg
  • The Money Zone after a raid on  350 million of diamonds on show at the Millennium Dome in SE London. Six people were arrested, including four in the Money zone vault, and two by the River Thames, where the robbers had a powerboat waiting to speed them from the scene.   *... In scenes reminiscent of the James Bond film The World is Not Enough, the raiders used a bulldozer to break into the Dome. Had it been successful, it would have been the world's largest ever robbery.
    RTIPA-1362245.jpg
  • Nov 08, 2007 - Las Vegas, NV, USA - O.J. SIMPSON arrives at the Clark County Regional Justice Center for his preliminary hearing on charges that include assault, kidnapping, and burglary. A judge will formally rule on whether there is sufficient evidence for Simpson and his co-defendants to go on trial for a string of offences including robbery, kidnapping and assault with a deadly weapon. (Credit Image: © Mike Valdez/ZUMA Press)
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  • Mar 4, 2016 - Police are examining what's been described as a knife said to have been found at the Los Angeles-area estate once owned by former football star O.J. Simpson, Los Angeles police Capt. Andy Neiman said Friday. Police learned within the last month that a former Los Angeles police officer received the item from a construction worker who found it, possibly when Simpson's former estate in Brentwood was being demolished, Neiman said. It is being examined for forensics. It's not known when the object was discovered or whether it is related to the 1994 deaths of Simpson's ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman, according to Los Angeles police spokeswoman Norma Eisenman. O.J. Simpson was acquitted in those killings. The weapon used in the two stabbing deaths was described as a long, serrated knife. It was never found. Flanked by his all-star legal team, Simpson was found not guilty in the two killings on October 3, 1995. Pictured: Sep 19, 2007 - Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. - O. J. SIMPSON in court with his attorney Gaabriel Grasso (L) and Yale Galanter (R) in Las Vegas where he was given 25,000 bail and read 11 charges against Simpson stemming from a robbery in a Las Vegas hotel. (Credit Image: © Court POOL/ZUMA Press)
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  • File photo: Kim's driver Gary Madar (suspected in Kim's 2016 robbery) and pregnant Kim Kardashian arrive at Roissy-Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris, France on January 10, 2013. Drivers Mickael Madar and his brother Gary Madar are the main suspects three months after the Kim Kardashian’ robbery in a mansion in Paris during Fashion Week, the police conducted an extensive dragnet. 16 people aged 23-73 years arrested at 6am this morning in Paris and suburb. Photo by ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • November 1, 2018 - Chicago, IL, USA - A memorial honoring Maria Coronel stands on the edge of Blackhawk Park on Thursday, Nov. 1, 2018, following the shooting death of the 21-year-old during a robbery on Wednesday night in Chicago. (Credit Image: © Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune/TNS via ZUMA Wire)
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  • July 4, 2018 - London, London, UK - London, UK. A street art mural depicting Spanish tennis Rafael Nadal being robbed of his £550,000 Richard Mille RM27-03 wrist watch by a moped gang is on a wall in Southfields, near Wimbledon All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club during the tennis championships. The mural is signed #Fussy Human. (Credit Image: © Ray Tang/London News Pictures via ZUMA Wire)
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  • Image from CCTV on the attack by on the Millennium Star diamond at the Millennium Dome 7 November 2000. Four men were found guilty at the Old Bailey in London of plotting to carry out the robbery.   * 22/12/02: Image from CCTV on the attack by on the Millennium Star diamond at the Millennium Dome 7 November 2000, which came 10th in a Top 10 list of arrests by British police. The Millennium Dome Robbery, the final entry in the Top 10, would have been the biggest heist of all time, had officers from the Met s Flying Squad not foiled the plan. A gang of four had plotted to steal priceless diamonds from the Dome s Money Zone, but officers were on their trail - knowing of the scheme they replaced the diamonds with fakes. More than 100 officers were at the Dome to greet the gang when they smashed in using a JCB.  The Top 10 list, released to coincide with the 110th birthday of Police Review, was compiled by Jan Berry, chairman of the Police Federation, Rick Naylor, vice president of the Superintendents  Association, and Police Review staff.
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  • The scene inside the Millennium Dome in SE London after the foiled raid by thieves on a display of diamonds worth  350 million. It would have been the world's largest robbery. More than 100 police officers were waiting for the robbers.  *... who had broken in using a mechanical excavator and planned to escape using a powerboat on the Thames, and arrested six men. Police had been on standby for the raid at least 24 times, and had replaced the diamond with fakes.
    RTIPA-1362566.jpg
  • July 15,2015 - Tarzana, California, U.S. - Chris Brown's Los Angeles home was invaded early Wednesday morning by three armed men in masks who ransacked the property of valuables. The singer was not in the residence at the time of the robbery, but the suspects locked Brown's aunt in a closet. An unknown amount of cash, electronics and personal items were stolen. It's unclear whether Brown was targeted in the theft or if his house was selected at random. (Credit Image: © Gene Blevins/ZUMA Wire)
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  • O.J. Simpson reacts in court during  his arraignment on 11 felony charges in Las Vegas. Simpson's charges range from assault with a deadly weapon to robbery and kidnapping. (Credit Image:
    20170720_sho_i88_008.jpg
  • June 24, 2017 - Athens, Greece - Thousands march in support of imprisoned anarchist Tasos Theofilou as his trial in the court of appeals is coming to an end. Theofilou was initially sentenced to 25 years for participating in an armed bank robbery during which a citizen who tried to stop the robbers was killed, but has been denying all charges from the start, provided an alibi, was not identified by any witnesses and the prosecutor failed to present any hard evidence. (Credit Image: © Nikolas Georgiou via ZUMA Wire)
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  • File photo: Kim's driver Gary Madar (suspected in Kim's 2016 robbery) and pregnant Kim Kardashian arrive at Roissy-Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris, France on January 10, 2013. Drivers Mickael Madar and his brother Gary Madar are the main suspects three months after the Kim Kardashian’ robbery in a mansion in Paris during Fashion Week, the police conducted an extensive dragnet. 16 people aged 23-73 years arrested at 6am this morning in Paris and suburb. Photo by ABACAPRESS.COM
    577623_001.JPG
  • Jul 20, 2017 - Lovelock, Nevada, U.S. - O.J. SIMPSON attends a parole hearing at Lovelock Correctional Center. Simpson is serving a nine to 33 year prison term for a 2007 armed robbery and kidnapping conviction. (Credit Image: © Jason Bean-POOL via ZUMA Wire)
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  • August 14, 2006 - New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S - French Quarter street performer Johnie Miller, 60, better known as 'Uncle Louie' poses for a photo at Cafe Du Monde in New Orleans, Louisiana, on August 14, 2006. Miller was arrested by New Orleans police on Tuesday on a warrant from Jacksonville, Florida, SheriffÕs Office on a cold case involving the armed robbery and death of a Jacksonville store owner in 1974. Photo by James Edward Bates. (Credit Image: © James Edward Bates via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170520_sha_b46_219.jpg
  • File photo: Kim's driver Gary Madar (suspected in Kim's 2016 robbery) and pregnant Kim Kardashian arrive at Roissy-Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris, France on January 10, 2013. Drivers Mickael Madar and his brother Gary Madar are the main suspects three months after the Kim Kardashian’ robbery in a mansion in Paris during Fashion Week, the police conducted an extensive dragnet. 16 people aged 23-73 years arrested at 6am this morning in Paris and suburb. Photo by ABACAPRESS.COM
    577623_001.JPG
  • File photo - Morgan Freeman attends the movie junket for The Transcendence in Los Angeles, CA, USA on April 5, 2014. US film star Morgan Freeman has apologised following allegations of sexual misconduct made by eight women and several other people. One production assistant accused Freeman of harassing her for months during filming of bank robbery comedy Going in Style, CNN reported. She said the 80-year-old touched her repeatedly, tried to lift her skirt and asked if she was wearing underwear. Photo by HT/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • File photo - Actor Morgan Freeman answers questions at the junket for 'Dolphin Tale' directed by Charles Martin Smith in Clearwater, FL, USA on September 15, 2011. US film star Morgan Freeman has apologised following allegations of sexual misconduct made by eight women and several other people. One production assistant accused Freeman of harassing her for months during filming of bank robbery comedy Going in Style, CNN reported. She said the 80-year-old touched her repeatedly, tried to lift her skirt and asked if she was wearing underwear. Photo by HT/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Luisa, a 48-year-old housewife says 'This wall is a waste of money. Other people think we're all thugs and criminals, and they don't want to have anything to do with us. I wish the wall did not exist, I would like to be free to see the other side, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Maria, a 44-year-old housewife feels 'discriminated and forgotten by the country. I'm curious to know what people think about the other side of the wall. I'd like to know why they wanted to put us apart. I'd like them to come and see our livinge conditions. We are all alike' she said, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
    623155_012.jpg
  • File photo - Morgan Freeman attends the premiere of London Has Fallen at the Arclight Cinemas in Los Angeles, CA, USA, on March 1, 2016. US film star Morgan Freeman has apologised following allegations of sexual misconduct made by eight women and several other people. One production assistant accused Freeman of harassing her for months during filming of bank robbery comedy Going in Style, CNN reported. She said the 80-year-old touched her repeatedly, tried to lift her skirt and asked if she was wearing underwear. Photo by Lionel Hahn/ABACAPRESS.COM
    536904_028.jpg
  • File photo - Morgan Freeman attends the movie junket for The Transcendence in Los Angeles, CA, USA on April 5, 2014. US film star Morgan Freeman has apologised following allegations of sexual misconduct made by eight women and several other people. One production assistant accused Freeman of harassing her for months during filming of bank robbery comedy Going in Style, CNN reported. She said the 80-year-old touched her repeatedly, tried to lift her skirt and asked if she was wearing underwear. Photo by HT/ABACAPRESS.COM
    442287_021.jpg
  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Andrea, a 26-year-old contractor of a construction company says: I think the wall is a bit discriminatory. When I have time, I work as a volunteer, but sometimes I live on purpose in indifference in order to not feel bad', in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
    623155_025.jpg
  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Carlos, a 56-year-old security guard feels 'discriminated, due to some delinquents we all put up. I think they built the wall to prevent that the delinquency expands to the other side' he said, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
    623155_013.jpg
  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) A football field, the only recreational space for children of asientamento humano 'Nadin Heredia', where the 'Wall of shame' (Muro de la Verguenza) divides the Districts of Santiago de Surco and San Juan de Miraflores, in the city of Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
    623155_010.jpg
  • File photo - Morgan Freeman attends the premiere of London Has Fallen at the Arclight Cinemas in Los Angeles, CA, USA, on March 1, 2016. US film star Morgan Freeman has apologised following allegations of sexual misconduct made by eight women and several other people. One production assistant accused Freeman of harassing her for months during filming of bank robbery comedy Going in Style, CNN reported. She said the 80-year-old touched her repeatedly, tried to lift her skirt and asked if she was wearing underwear. Photo by Lionel Hahn/ABACAPRESS.COM
    536904_032.jpg
  • File photo - Morgan Freeman attends the premiere of London Has Fallen at the Arclight Cinemas in Los Angeles, CA, USA, on March 1, 2016. US film star Morgan Freeman has apologised following allegations of sexual misconduct made by eight women and several other people. One production assistant accused Freeman of harassing her for months during filming of bank robbery comedy Going in Style, CNN reported. She said the 80-year-old touched her repeatedly, tried to lift her skirt and asked if she was wearing underwear. Photo by Lionel Hahn/ABACAPRESS.COM
    536904_025.jpg
  • File photo - Morgan Freeman attends the premiere of Warner Bros. Pictures Transcendence at Regency Village Theatre in Los Angeles, CA, USA, on April 10, 2014. US film star Morgan Freeman has apologised following allegations of sexual misconduct made by eight women and several other people. One production assistant accused Freeman of harassing her for months during filming of bank robbery comedy Going in Style, CNN reported. She said the 80-year-old touched her repeatedly, tried to lift her skirt and asked if she was wearing underwear. Photo by Lionel Hahn/ABACAPRESS.COM
    442726_048.jpg
  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) A mother and her daughter riding her new tricycle in one of the parks of Las Casuarinas Sur, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
    623155_038.jpg
  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Father and son are seen playing with ducks nearby an artificial lake next to the luxury urbanization, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Dolores, a 45-year-old designer, says: 'I live here for security issues. I only feel safe with constant vigilance. I'm afraid of getting robbed on the street', in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Roberto, a 47-year-old director of photography for television programs, says: 'The wall exists for security issues, to avoid assaults on rich people. It would be better to open an entry into the wall with the obligatory recognition of the ID for people working on the Surco side', in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Augustino, a 36-year-old architect says: 'I think we all have the same rights and that we cannot generalize. They have never robbed me, but obviously you have to be careful. Generally I feel safe', in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Laura, a 27-year-old pastry chef, says: 'The social difference is the government's fault that doesn't give the same opportunities to everyone. It doesn't facilitate studies and puts barriers difficult to overcome. I disagree with the definition Muro de la Verguenza, I would call it Muro de la Delinquencia (Wall of delinquency). It is not a matter of discrimination, but of security', in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) The 'Amistad Parque'located on the Surco side, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) The barbed wire installed above the wall which obstructs the free passage from Pamplona Alta and Las Casuarinas, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Carlos, a 34-year-old bricklayer says: 'On the one hand the construction of the wall is a good thing because it limits the invasions. I would like the State installing basic services like water and sewage. I have the constant fear that they could evict me and my family, so I would like to have a title of ownership, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Manuel, a 42-year-old bricklayer says: 'Instead of the wall, they should have built roads. Usually I have to wake up 3 hours earlier in order to reach my workplace. I would like that people visit the area and become aware of our daily problems, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Elisa, a 39-year-old professor feels 'marginalized by society. To go to work I must wake up at 5am. Be cause of the wall I need 2 hours to reach my workplace' she said, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Sandy, a 26-year-old housewife feels 'discriminated and marginalized by the society. They have taken away the opportunity to dream a different future for me and my children' she said, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) General view of the Asientamentos Humanos at the top of the hill in Pamplona Alta where the 'Wall of shame' (Muro de la Verguenza) divides the Districts of Santiago de Surco and San Juan de Miraflores, in the city of Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
    623155_007.jpg
  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Murals made by the population of Pamplona Alta against discrimination on the 'Wall of shame' (Muro de la Verguenza) which divides the Districts of Santiago de Surco and San Juan de Miraflores, in the city of Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
    623155_006.jpg
  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) General view of the 'Wall of shame' (Muro de la Verguenza) which divides the Districts of Santiago de Surco and San Juan de Miraflores in the city of Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
    623155_001.jpg
  • File photo - Morgan Freeman, recipient of the Life Achievement Award, poses in the press room during the 24th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards at The Shrine Auditorium on January 21, 2018 in Los Angeles, CA, USA. US film star Morgan Freeman has apologised following allegations of sexual misconduct made by eight women and several other people. One production assistant accused Freeman of harassing her for months during filming of bank robbery comedy Going in Style, CNN reported. She said the 80-year-old touched her repeatedly, tried to lift her skirt and asked if she was wearing underwear. Photo by Lionel Hahn/ABACAPRESS.com
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  • File photo - Morgan Freeman attends the premiere of Olympus Has Fallen held at the Arclights Cinemas Hollywood in Los Angeles, CA, USA, on March 18, 2013. US film star Morgan Freeman has apologised following allegations of sexual misconduct made by eight women and several other people. One production assistant accused Freeman of harassing her for months during filming of bank robbery comedy Going in Style, CNN reported. She said the 80-year-old touched her repeatedly, tried to lift her skirt and asked if she was wearing underwear. Photo by Lionel Hahn/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) A little girl asks a cupcake from her dad at the dessert desk in a supermarket of Las Casuarinas, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Three girls are pictured returning home after their lectures at the 'Colegio de la Immaculada', in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) The luxurious villas of the exclusive Las Casuarinas Alta, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
    623155_035.jpg
  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) A way of access to the terraced villas in the area of Monterrico, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Johanna, a 37-year-old real estate agent says: 'I've always lived in a bubble. Where I live is the only reality I know. They have built the wall for a matter of security. If you don't have money, it's because you don't want to work and you want just wait that other people helps you', in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Carla, a 34-year-old manager of a transport company says: 'I am aware of the difference between social classes, but we are all equal and money doesn't make a person. I think with the effort everything is possible. The wall was a waste of money, I don't think everyone is delinquent, but it can happen to be robbed', in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
    623155_027.jpg
  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) The exclusive urbanization of Las Casuarinas Sur, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) The 'comedor' of the asientamento humano 'Nadin Heredia', where the people of the community are used to sharing their food, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) The little shop of the asientamento humano 'Nadin Heredia', in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Victor, a 30-year-old marbler says: 'We are all alike. They wanted to build the wall for security issues. All this is discriminatory, I'd like to have roads and parks as in the other side. I would like people to visit this place and notice that there are also good and hospitable people living here. I'd like that they could help us building something for our children in order to let them grow up with healthy principles, because they are the future', in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) The water supply system in the Asientamento Humano 'Nadin Heredia' consists of tanks that are filled weekly by tank trucks, where the 'Wall of shame' (Muro de la Verguenza) divides the Districts of Santiago de Surco and San Juan de Miraflores, in the city of Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) General view of the districts of San Juan de Miraflores and Villa Maria del Triunfo seen from the hill on the border with Santiago de Surco where the 'Wall of shame' (Muro de la Verguenza) divides the Districts of Santiago de Surco and San Juan de Miraflores, in the city of Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) A child of the human settlement (asientamento humano) tries to have a look to the other part of the city through a slit in the 'Wall of shame' (Muro de la Verguenza) which divides the Districts of Santiago de Surco and San Juan de Miraflores, in the city of Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) General view - seen from the human settlement (asientamento humano) in Pamplona Alt - of the 'Wall of shame' (Muro de la Verguenza) which divides the Districts of Santiago de Surco and San Juan de Miraflores, in the city of Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
    623155_004.jpg
  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) General view of the 'Wall of shame' (Muro de la Verguenza) which divides the Districts of Santiago de Surco and San Juan de Miraflores in the city of Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) A little girl plays next to the 'Wall of shame' (Muro de la Verguenza) which divides the Districts of Santiago de Surco and San Juan de Miraflores in the city of Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
    623155_002.jpg
  • File photo - Morgan Freeman, recipient of the Life Achievement Award, poses in the press room during the 24th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards at The Shrine Auditorium on January 21, 2018 in Los Angeles, CA, USA. US film star Morgan Freeman has apologised following allegations of sexual misconduct made by eight women and several other people. One production assistant accused Freeman of harassing her for months during filming of bank robbery comedy Going in Style, CNN reported. She said the 80-year-old touched her repeatedly, tried to lift her skirt and asked if she was wearing underwear. Photo by Lionel Hahn/ABACAPRESS.com
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) A young boy plays on a playstation in his house in Las Casuarinas urbanization, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) One of the many private security checkpoints present at the entrance to the exclusive urbanizations of Santiago de Surco', in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) Carla, a 43-year-old advertiser says: 'I feel sad for poor people, unfortunately it is not only a Peruvian issue but a world one. I'd like that each person have the same opportunities. Money doesn't make happiness, I know rich and sad people. The wall shouldn't exist, it is only a discriminatory act', in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
    623155_030.jpg
  • NO WEB/NO APPS - (Text available) A check point where the security controls the urbanization of Las Casuarinas, in Lima, Peru in May 2017. In Peru’s capital Lima, a three-meter-high concrete wall topped with reels of razor wire separates two areas. The so-called ‘Wall of Shame’ - sometimes nicknamed 'Peru's Berlin Wall' - divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door. It was initially put up over fears that the inhabitants from the poor neighbourhood would steal from wealthy fellow citizens living nearby. On the rich side of the wall, the price for a square meter can exceed 2,000 dollars. To enter the area, you must show your ID to the guards watching the gate at the bottom of the hill. Former high-ranking politicians and bank directors live here. Their houses are surrounded by lush gardens and swimming pools despite the scarcity of water. Meanwhile, on the San Juan de Miraflores side, residents often fall victim to robbery and theft. They live in houses of barely 25m², made from scrap material, surrounded by the sand and earth characteristic of Lima’s desert landscape. Photo by Giacomo D’Orlando/ABACAPRESS.COM
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  • A gas mask recovered by police in the aftermath of the abortive raid on the Millennium Dome November 2000.  Four men were found guilty at the Old Bailey in London of plotting to carry out the robbery.
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  • Tools recovered by police in the aftermath of the abortive raid on the Millennium Dome November 2000. Four men were found guilty at the Old Bailey in London of plotting to carry out the robbery.
    RTIPA-1538305.jpg
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