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Afghan villagers struggle years after US dropped ‘mother of all bombs’

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Health   来源:Stocks  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Net migration could fuel a rise in the UK population to 72.5 million by 2032, figures suggest.

Net migration could fuel a rise in the UK population to 72.5 million by 2032, figures suggest.

"There's a part of me that says it was 15 years I wasted when I could have been shooting pictures," said Hurn."But I have to admit this to myself, there’s a really large group of young people who spent their lives having a very pleasant life being photographers who almost certainly wouldn't have if it hadn't been for me… it is actually probably more important than my pictures."

Afghan villagers struggle years after US dropped ‘mother of all bombs’

Hurn, who will turn 90 in July, is still busy working, with two more books in the pipeline.He has also begun inviting students into his home in Tintern, Monmouthshire, offering them coffee and a chat about photography in exchange for them working on his overgrown garden."So I'm setting up a slave labour department," he joked.

Afghan villagers struggle years after US dropped ‘mother of all bombs’

What work he is proudest of? A very difficult question to answer, he said."I've become the village photographer, so I cover little Johnny's birthday party and this and that and I do it very seriously, as though I was working for Life magazine, and I love doing that."

Afghan villagers struggle years after US dropped ‘mother of all bombs’

It turns out his emotional reaction to a photograph almost seven decades ago would be the catalyst for a full and much celebrated career.

"I've had a blissful, blissful, blissful life," he said.The teenagers assaulted four different victims in four separate incidents between 2 and 4 March at Brynteg Comprehensive School, Bridgend College, Pyle Railway Station and another location in Bridgend.

The court heard that one of their victims was pushed to the floor and kicked "multiple times", including in the head.In another incident, the two girls told their victim to kiss their shoes or they would be beaten up - they filmed this on a phone and told the victim to pay them £60 or they would share the video.

The court was shown mobile phone footage of three separate attacks, including one of them forcing someone to kiss their feet before repeatedly hitting her in the head.Another showed a victim being assaulted in a school corridor, kicked and punched repeatedly.

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