•  
Explosion in the Ãlemiste shopping center

Explosion in the Ãlemiste shopping center

20.12.2025, Tallinn. A trash can exploded in the Ãlemiste shopping center in Tallinn on Saturday evening, prompting emergency services to evacuate the building. One person was hospitalized as a result and a 60-year-old man has been detained following the incident. Photo Mihkel Maripuu, Postimees

  •  
Explosion in the Ãlemiste shopping center

Explosion in the Ãlemiste shopping center

20.12.2025, Tallinn. A trash can exploded in the Ãlemiste shopping center in Tallinn on Saturday evening, prompting emergency services to evacuate the building. One person was hospitalized as a result and a 60-year-old man has been detained following the incident. Photo Mihkel Maripuu, Postimees

  •  
Explosion in the Ãlemiste shopping center

Explosion in the Ãlemiste shopping center

20.12.2025, Tallinn. A trash can exploded in the Ãlemiste shopping center in Tallinn on Saturday evening, prompting emergency services to evacuate the building. One person was hospitalized as a result and a 60-year-old man has been detained following the incident. Photo Mihkel Maripuu, Postimees

  •  
Explosion in the Ãlemiste shopping center

Explosion in the Ãlemiste shopping center

20.12.2025, Tallinn. A trash can exploded in the Ãlemiste shopping center in Tallinn on Saturday evening, prompting emergency services to evacuate the building. One person was hospitalized as a result and a 60-year-old man has been detained following the incident. Photo Mihkel Maripuu, Postimees

  •  
Floodwaters in Abbotsford - Canada

Floodwaters in Abbotsford - Canada

Trash bins are caught in a field after flooding in Abbotsford, B.C., Friday, Dec. 12, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ethan Cairns

  •  
Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

Two girls look toward a flock of grazing sheep and goats scattered across a trash-covered area at a waste dump in Khan Yunis, Gaza Strip, on November 30, 2025. The area surrounding the waste dump in Khan Yunis faces difficult humanitarian conditions, with shepherds forced to graze their livestock near the site due to the lack of suitable pastures and children collecting paper and firewood from the garbage to support their families’ daily needs. Photo by Doaa Albaz/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

Two children stand on a trash-strewn field near a waste dump on the outskirts of Khan Yunis, Gaza Strip, on November 30, 2025. The area surrounding the waste dump in Khan Yunis faces difficult humanitarian conditions, with shepherds forced to graze their livestock near the site due to the lack of suitable pastures and children collecting paper and firewood from the garbage to support their families’ daily needs. Photo by Doaa Albaz/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

A shepherd stands among his flock as they graze on a trash-strewn field in Khan Yunis, Gaza Strip, on November 30, 2025. The area surrounding the waste dump in Khan Yunis faces difficult humanitarian conditions, with shepherds forced to graze their livestock near the site due to the lack of suitable pastures and children collecting paper and firewood from the garbage to support their families’ daily needs. Photo by Doaa Albaz/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

Two girls look toward a flock of grazing sheep and goats scattered across a trash-covered area at a waste dump in Khan Yunis, Gaza Strip, on November 30, 2025. The area surrounding the waste dump in Khan Yunis faces difficult humanitarian conditions, with shepherds forced to graze their livestock near the site due to the lack of suitable pastures and children collecting paper and firewood from the garbage to support their families’ daily needs. Photo by Doaa Albaz/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

Two girls look toward a flock of grazing sheep and goats scattered across a trash-covered area at a waste dump in Khan Yunis, Gaza Strip, on November 30, 2025. The area surrounding the waste dump in Khan Yunis faces difficult humanitarian conditions, with shepherds forced to graze their livestock near the site due to the lack of suitable pastures and children collecting paper and firewood from the garbage to support their families’ daily needs. Photo by Doaa Albaz/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

A young shepherd leads his flock across a trash-strewn area at a waste dump in Khan Yunis, Gaza Strip, on November 30, 2025. The area surrounding the waste dump in Khan Yunis faces difficult humanitarian conditions, with shepherds forced to graze their livestock near the site due to the lack of suitable pastures and children collecting paper and firewood from the garbage to support their families’ daily needs. Photo by Doaa Albaz/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

A child shepherd walks among grazing sheep on a trash-strewn field at a waste dump in Khan Yunis, Gaza Strip, on November 30, 2025. The area surrounding the waste dump in Khan Yunis faces difficult humanitarian conditions, with shepherds forced to graze their livestock near the site due to the lack of suitable pastures and children collecting paper and firewood from the garbage to support their families’ daily needs. Photo by Doaa Albaz/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

A child shepherd walks among grazing sheep on a trash-strewn field at a waste dump in Khan Yunis, Gaza Strip, on November 30, 2025. The area surrounding the waste dump in Khan Yunis faces difficult humanitarian conditions, with shepherds forced to graze their livestock near the site due to the lack of suitable pastures and children collecting paper and firewood from the garbage to support their families’ daily needs. Photo by Doaa Albaz/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

A young shepherd leads his flock across a trash-strewn area at a waste dump in Khan Yunis, Gaza Strip, on November 30, 2025. The area surrounding the waste dump in Khan Yunis faces difficult humanitarian conditions, with shepherds forced to graze their livestock near the site due to the lack of suitable pastures and children collecting paper and firewood from the garbage to support their families’ daily needs. Photo by Doaa Albaz/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

A child stands near grazing goats on a trash-covered field at a waste dump in Khan Yunis, Gaza Strip, on November 30, 2025. The area surrounding the waste dump in Khan Yunis faces difficult humanitarian conditions, with shepherds forced to graze their livestock near the site due to the lack of suitable pastures and children collecting paper and firewood from the garbage to support their families’ daily needs. Photo by Doaa Albaz/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

Difficult Humanitarian Conditions Near the Khan Yunis Landfill - Palestine

A young shepherd leads his flock across a trash-strewn area at a waste dump in Khan Yunis, Gaza Strip, on November 30, 2025. The area surrounding the waste dump in Khan Yunis faces difficult humanitarian conditions, with shepherds forced to graze their livestock near the site due to the lack of suitable pastures and children collecting paper and firewood from the garbage to support their families’ daily needs. Photo by Doaa Albaz/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Trump in Japan

Trump in Japan

Trash boxes are closed for security reasons at Haneda airport in Tokyo on Oct. 27, 2025, before U.S. President Donald Trump arrives in the capital for a three-day trip to Japan.

  •  
Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

October 02, 2025, Dhaka, Bangladesh: The rivers and canals around Dhaka were once vital sanctuaries of biodiversity. Countless fish swam in their waters, serving as the main food source for fish-eating birds. But now that scene belongs to the past. What was once clear water is now occupied by heaps of garbage. Plastic, polythene, industrial waste, and household trash have severely polluted the water. Faced with a food crisis, fish-eating egrets are being forced to search for food in these piles of waste. Their natural food—fish—is no longer easily available, compelling them to look for alternatives. In Bangladesh, the filling up of rivers and wetlands, illegal encroachment, and plastic pollution together are pushing aquatic ecosystems towards destruction. These wetlands once provided shelter to thousands of native and migratory birds. But in recent years, their numbers have sharply declined. From the haors to Dhaka’s Turag and Balu rivers and other wetlands, the picture is the same: encroachment, landfilling,

  •  
Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

October 02, 2025, Dhaka, Bangladesh: The rivers and canals around Dhaka were once vital sanctuaries of biodiversity. Countless fish swam in their waters, serving as the main food source for fish-eating birds. But now that scene belongs to the past. What was once clear water is now occupied by heaps of garbage. Plastic, polythene, industrial waste, and household trash have severely polluted the water. Faced with a food crisis, fish-eating egrets are being forced to search for food in these piles of waste. Their natural food—fish—is no longer easily available, compelling them to look for alternatives. In Bangladesh, the filling up of rivers and wetlands, illegal encroachment, and plastic pollution together are pushing aquatic ecosystems towards destruction. These wetlands once provided shelter to thousands of native and migratory birds. But in recent years, their numbers have sharply declined. From the haors to Dhaka’s Turag and Balu rivers and other wetlands, the picture is the same: encroachment, landfilling,

  •  
Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

October 02, 2025, Dhaka, Bangladesh: The rivers and canals around Dhaka were once vital sanctuaries of biodiversity. Countless fish swam in their waters, serving as the main food source for fish-eating birds. But now that scene belongs to the past. What was once clear water is now occupied by heaps of garbage. Plastic, polythene, industrial waste, and household trash have severely polluted the water. Faced with a food crisis, fish-eating egrets are being forced to search for food in these piles of waste. Their natural food—fish—is no longer easily available, compelling them to look for alternatives. In Bangladesh, the filling up of rivers and wetlands, illegal encroachment, and plastic pollution together are pushing aquatic ecosystems towards destruction. These wetlands once provided shelter to thousands of native and migratory birds. But in recent years, their numbers have sharply declined. From the haors to Dhaka’s Turag and Balu rivers and other wetlands, the picture is the same: encroachment, landfilling,

  •  
Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

October 02, 2025, Dhaka, Bangladesh: The rivers and canals around Dhaka were once vital sanctuaries of biodiversity. Countless fish swam in their waters, serving as the main food source for fish-eating birds. But now that scene belongs to the past. What was once clear water is now occupied by heaps of garbage. Plastic, polythene, industrial waste, and household trash have severely polluted the water. Faced with a food crisis, fish-eating egrets are being forced to search for food in these piles of waste. Their natural food—fish—is no longer easily available, compelling them to look for alternatives. In Bangladesh, the filling up of rivers and wetlands, illegal encroachment, and plastic pollution together are pushing aquatic ecosystems towards destruction. These wetlands once provided shelter to thousands of native and migratory birds. But in recent years, their numbers have sharply declined. From the haors to Dhaka’s Turag and Balu rivers and other wetlands, the picture is the same: encroachment, landfilling,

  •  
Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

October 02, 2025, Dhaka, Bangladesh: The rivers and canals around Dhaka were once vital sanctuaries of biodiversity. Countless fish swam in their waters, serving as the main food source for fish-eating birds. But now that scene belongs to the past. What was once clear water is now occupied by heaps of garbage. Plastic, polythene, industrial waste, and household trash have severely polluted the water. Faced with a food crisis, fish-eating egrets are being forced to search for food in these piles of waste. Their natural food—fish—is no longer easily available, compelling them to look for alternatives. In Bangladesh, the filling up of rivers and wetlands, illegal encroachment, and plastic pollution together are pushing aquatic ecosystems towards destruction. These wetlands once provided shelter to thousands of native and migratory birds. But in recent years, their numbers have sharply declined. From the haors to Dhaka’s Turag and Balu rivers and other wetlands, the picture is the same: encroachment, landfilling,

  •  
Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

October 02, 2025, Dhaka, Bangladesh: The rivers and canals around Dhaka were once vital sanctuaries of biodiversity. Countless fish swam in their waters, serving as the main food source for fish-eating birds. But now that scene belongs to the past. What was once clear water is now occupied by heaps of garbage. Plastic, polythene, industrial waste, and household trash have severely polluted the water. Faced with a food crisis, fish-eating egrets are being forced to search for food in these piles of waste. Their natural food—fish—is no longer easily available, compelling them to look for alternatives. In Bangladesh, the filling up of rivers and wetlands, illegal encroachment, and plastic pollution together are pushing aquatic ecosystems towards destruction. These wetlands once provided shelter to thousands of native and migratory birds. But in recent years, their numbers have sharply declined. From the haors to Dhaka’s Turag and Balu rivers and other wetlands, the picture is the same: encroachment, landfilling,

  •  
Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

October 02, 2025, Dhaka, Bangladesh: The rivers and canals around Dhaka were once vital sanctuaries of biodiversity. Countless fish swam in their waters, serving as the main food source for fish-eating birds. But now that scene belongs to the past. What was once clear water is now occupied by heaps of garbage. Plastic, polythene, industrial waste, and household trash have severely polluted the water. Faced with a food crisis, fish-eating egrets are being forced to search for food in these piles of waste. Their natural food—fish—is no longer easily available, compelling them to look for alternatives. In Bangladesh, the filling up of rivers and wetlands, illegal encroachment, and plastic pollution together are pushing aquatic ecosystems towards destruction. These wetlands once provided shelter to thousands of native and migratory birds. But in recent years, their numbers have sharply declined. From the haors to Dhaka’s Turag and Balu rivers and other wetlands, the picture is the same: encroachment, landfilling,

  •  
Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

October 02, 2025, Dhaka, Bangladesh: The rivers and canals around Dhaka were once vital sanctuaries of biodiversity. Countless fish swam in their waters, serving as the main food source for fish-eating birds. But now that scene belongs to the past. What was once clear water is now occupied by heaps of garbage. Plastic, polythene, industrial waste, and household trash have severely polluted the water. Faced with a food crisis, fish-eating egrets are being forced to search for food in these piles of waste. Their natural food—fish—is no longer easily available, compelling them to look for alternatives. In Bangladesh, the filling up of rivers and wetlands, illegal encroachment, and plastic pollution together are pushing aquatic ecosystems towards destruction. These wetlands once provided shelter to thousands of native and migratory birds. But in recent years, their numbers have sharply declined. From the haors to Dhaka’s Turag and Balu rivers and other wetlands, the picture is the same: encroachment, landfilling,

  •  
Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

October 02, 2025, Dhaka, Bangladesh: The rivers and canals around Dhaka were once vital sanctuaries of biodiversity. Countless fish swam in their waters, serving as the main food source for fish-eating birds. But now that scene belongs to the past. What was once clear water is now occupied by heaps of garbage. Plastic, polythene, industrial waste, and household trash have severely polluted the water. Faced with a food crisis, fish-eating egrets are being forced to search for food in these piles of waste. Their natural food—fish—is no longer easily available, compelling them to look for alternatives. In Bangladesh, the filling up of rivers and wetlands, illegal encroachment, and plastic pollution together are pushing aquatic ecosystems towards destruction. These wetlands once provided shelter to thousands of native and migratory birds. But in recent years, their numbers have sharply declined. From the haors to Dhaka’s Turag and Balu rivers and other wetlands, the picture is the same: encroachment, landfilling,

  •  
Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

October 02, 2025, Dhaka, Bangladesh: The rivers and canals around Dhaka were once vital sanctuaries of biodiversity. Countless fish swam in their waters, serving as the main food source for fish-eating birds. But now that scene belongs to the past. What was once clear water is now occupied by heaps of garbage. Plastic, polythene, industrial waste, and household trash have severely polluted the water. Faced with a food crisis, fish-eating egrets are being forced to search for food in these piles of waste. Their natural food—fish—is no longer easily available, compelling them to look for alternatives. In Bangladesh, the filling up of rivers and wetlands, illegal encroachment, and plastic pollution together are pushing aquatic ecosystems towards destruction. These wetlands once provided shelter to thousands of native and migratory birds. But in recent years, their numbers have sharply declined. From the haors to Dhaka’s Turag and Balu rivers and other wetlands, the picture is the same: encroachment, landfilling,

  •  
Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

Environmental Pollution In Bangladesh

October 02, 2025, Dhaka, Bangladesh: The rivers and canals around Dhaka were once vital sanctuaries of biodiversity. Countless fish swam in their waters, serving as the main food source for fish-eating birds. But now that scene belongs to the past. What was once clear water is now occupied by heaps of garbage. Plastic, polythene, industrial waste, and household trash have severely polluted the water. Faced with a food crisis, fish-eating egrets are being forced to search for food in these piles of waste. Their natural food—fish—is no longer easily available, compelling them to look for alternatives. In Bangladesh, the filling up of rivers and wetlands, illegal encroachment, and plastic pollution together are pushing aquatic ecosystems towards destruction. These wetlands once provided shelter to thousands of native and migratory birds. But in recent years, their numbers have sharply declined. From the haors to Dhaka’s Turag and Balu rivers and other wetlands, the picture is the same: encroachment, landfilling,

  •  
Southern China Prepares for Typhoon Ragasa

Southern China Prepares for Typhoon Ragasa

A staff member of a hotel transfers trash bins on the seaside of the Hailing Island in Yangjiang City, south China's Guangdong Province, September 23, 2025. South China's Guangdong Province raised its wind emergency response to the highest level at 10 a.m. Tuesday, as Typhoon Ragasa is forecast to make landfall along the central or western coastal areas of the province as a strong or super strong typhoon within 24 hours. The provincial flood, drought and wind control headquarters have urged all localities and departments to act with the highest standards, strictest requirements and most concrete measures, and have ordered major affected areas to suspend classes, work, production, public transportation and business operations. Cities including Zhuhai, Shenzhen and Jiangmen have implemented these suspensions. Photo by Xinhua/Deng Hua/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
World Cleanup Day - Rio de Janeiro

World Cleanup Day - Rio de Janeiro

Volunteers place collected trash together at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, September 20, 2025. World Cleanup Day is an annual global event that is marked every third Saturday in September with the aim of combating the global solid waste problem. Photo by Wang Tiancong/Xinhua/ABACAPRESS/COM

  •  
World Cleanup Day - Rio de Janeiro

World Cleanup Day - Rio de Janeiro

Volunteers pick up trash at Copacabana Beach, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, September 20, 2025. World Cleanup Day is an annual global event that is marked every third Saturday in September with the aim of combating the global solid waste problem. Photo by Wang Tiancong/Xinhua/ABACAPRESS/COM

  •  
World Cleanup Day - Rio de Janeiro

World Cleanup Day - Rio de Janeiro

A volunteer picks up trash at Copacabana Beach, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, September 20, 2025. World Cleanup Day is an annual global event that is marked every third Saturday in September with the aim of combating the global solid waste problem. Photo by Wang Tiancong/Xinhua/ABACAPRESS/COM

  •  
World Cleanup Day - Rio de Janeiro

World Cleanup Day - Rio de Janeiro

A volunteer shows picked up trash at Copacabana Beach, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, September 20, 2025. World Cleanup Day is an annual global event that is marked every third Saturday in September with the aim of combating the global solid waste problem. Photo by Wang Tiancong/Xinhua/ABACAPRESS/COM

  •  

France: Police Forces Intervene to End High School Protest in Caen

On Thursday early morning, September 18, police used tear gas to disperse a group of approximately 70 high school students who were blocking the entrance to Malherbe high school in Caen, France. The students had used trash cans to create a barrier. Following the dispersal, a 39-year-old man was arrested.

  •  
Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

A protester with a placard reading, Recycle your trash, don t turn it into ministers. Jean-Jaures demonstration in St Cyprien, with Toulouse students, the CGT and FSU unions, architects, cultural figures, and many others in the procession. As everywhere else in France, a gathering in Toulouse as part of the Block Everything Against Austerity movement. France, Toulouse, September 10, 2025. Photo by Patricia Huchot-Boissier/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

A protester with a placard reading, Recycle your trash, don t turn it into ministers. Jean-Jaures demonstration in St Cyprien, with Toulouse students, the CGT and FSU unions, architects, cultural figures, and many others in the procession. As everywhere else in France, a gathering in Toulouse as part of the Block Everything Against Austerity movement. France, Toulouse, September 10, 2025. Photo by Patricia Huchot-Boissier/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Trash Fire during Bloquons Tout (Block Everything) protest against French Government and new Prime Minister, September 10, 2025, Toulouse. Photo by Nathan Barange/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Trash and Car Fire during Bloquons Tout (Block Everything) protest against French Government and new Prime Minister, September 10, 2025, Toulouse. Photo by Nathan Barange/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Trash Fire during at Bloquons Tout (Block Everything) protest against French Government and new Prime Minister, September 10, 2025, Toulouse. Photo by Nathan Barange/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Trash and Car Fire during Bloquons Tout (Block Everything) protest against French Government and new Prime Minister, September 10, 2025, Toulouse. Photo by Nathan Barange/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Trash and Car Fire during Bloquons Tout (Block Everything) protest against French Government and new Prime Minister, September 10, 2025, Toulouse. Photo by Nathan Barange/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Trash Fire during Bloquons Tout (Block Everything) protest against French Government and new Prime Minister, September 10, 2025, Toulouse. Photo by Nathan Barange/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Trash Fire during at Bloquons Tout (Block Everything) protest against French Government and new Prime Minister, September 10, 2025, Toulouse. Photo by Nathan Barange/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Bloquons Tout In Toulouse

Trash Fire during at Bloquons Tout (Block Everything) protest against French Government and new Prime Minister, September 10, 2025, Toulouse. Photo by Nathan Barange/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
LA Mayor Oversees Homeless Camp Sweep - Los Angeles

LA Mayor Oversees Homeless Camp Sweep - Los Angeles

A man hauls large trash bags of belongings alongside his bicycle during a sweep of the Compound encampment in Van Nuys on Thursday, July 31, 2025. As city departments carried out the Inside Safe operation, many unhoused residents struggled to gather what they could before being displaced. Photo by David Pashaee/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Homeless Gather to Demand Accommodation - Paris

Homeless Gather to Demand Accommodation - Paris

Women chant slogans and bang on trash cans to demand accommodation. Homeless families and single women gather in front of the 11th arrondissement town hall to demand accommodation, with the support of the Utopia 56 association, on june 12, 2025 in Paris. Photo by Christophe Michel/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Homeless Gather to Demand Accommodation - Paris

Homeless Gather to Demand Accommodation - Paris

Women chant slogans and bang on trash cans to demand accommodation. Homeless families and single women gather in front of the 11th arrondissement town hall to demand accommodation, with the support of the Utopia 56 association, on june 12, 2025 in Paris. Photo by Christophe Michel/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Homeless Gather to Demand Accommodation - Paris

Homeless Gather to Demand Accommodation - Paris

Women chant slogans and bang on trash cans to demand accommodation. Homeless families and single women gather in front of the 11th arrondissement town hall to demand accommodation, with the support of the Utopia 56 association, on june 12, 2025 in Paris. Photo by Christophe Michel/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Homeless Gather to Demand Accommodation - Paris

Homeless Gather to Demand Accommodation - Paris

Women chant slogans and bang on trash cans to demand accommodation. Homeless families and single women gather in front of the 11th arrondissement town hall to demand accommodation, with the support of the Utopia 56 association, on june 12, 2025 in Paris. Photo by Christophe Michel/ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
Guwahati Storks at Landfill - India

Guwahati Storks at Landfill - India

An excavator holds still over a pile of trash while ragpickers look for recyclable materials amid cows and greater adjutant storks at a disposal site ahead of the World Environment Day in Boragaon on the outskirts of Guwahati, India on June 2, 2025. Photo by Hafiz Ahmed/Middle East Images/ABACAPRESS.COM

  • Main
  • Top
  • Editorial
  • Creative
  • About Us
  • About ILG
  • Terms of use
  • Company
  • BEHIND
  • Price List
  • Single Plan
  • Monthly Plan
  • Services
  • Shooting
  • Rights Clearance
  • Support
  • FAQ
  • How To Buy
  • Contact Us
  • Become a Partner

© KYODO NEWS IMAGES INC

All Rights Reserved.

  • Editorial
  • Olympics
  • News
  • Sports
  • Japan
  • Tech
  • Royal
  • Disaster
  • NorthKorea
  • Old Japan
  • SNS
  • Creative
  • Food
  • Japan
  • Landscape
  • Animal
  • Popular
  • #Ukraine
  • #Thailand
  • #coronavirus
  • #N. Korea
  • #Russia
  • #China
  • #Ukraine
  • #Thailand
  • #coronavirus
  • #N. Korea
  • #Russia
  • #China
  • Food
  • Japan
  • Landscape
  • Animal
  • Olympics
  • News
  • Sports
  • Japan
  • Tech
  • Royal
  • Disaster
  • NorthKorea
  • Old Japan
  • SNS