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Sanjit Das Photography

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  • India's current Home Minister and former Finance Minister, P. Chidambaram, in his office at North Block in New Delhi, India.
    sdas180707-chidambaram_delhi0011.jpg
  • India's current Home Minister and former Finance Minister, P. Chidambaram, in his office at North Block in New Delhi, India.
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  • Mathumita during the field visits in Punaineeravi village in Kilinochchi in Northern Sri Lanka. Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • Mathumita (right) speaks with Sugandhini (30) and her 9 month daughter, Rutsika during the field visits in Punaineeravi village in Kilinochchi in Northern Sri Lanka. Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • Mathumita (right) fills up the CHDR (Child Health Development Record) for Sugandhini (30) and her 9 month daughter, Rutsika during the field visits in Punaineeravi village in Kilinochchi in Northern Sri Lanka. Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • Mathumita (right) fills up the CHDR (Child Health Development Record) for Sugandhini (30) and her 9 month daughter, Rutsika during the field visits in Punaineeravi village in Kilinochchi in Northern Sri Lanka. Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • Mathumita inspects Tuvarny before she leaves for the hospital as part of the pre-natal programme during the field visits in Punaineeravi village in Kilinochchi in Northern Sri Lanka. Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • Mathumita fills up the CHDR (Child Health Development Record) for Tuvarny, the 10 month pregnant expecting woman before she leaves for the hospital as part of the pre-natal programme during the field visits in Punaineeravi village in Kilinochchi in Northern Sri Lanka. Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • Mathumita (right) seen with Tuvarny, the 10 month pregnant expecting woman before she leaves for the hospital as part of the pre-natal programme during the field visits in Punaineeravi village in Kilinochchi in Northern Sri Lanka. Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • Mathumita (right) prepares the basket for Tuvarny, the 10 month pregnant expecting woman before she leaves for the hospital as part of the pre-natal programme during the field visits in Punaineeravi village in Kilinochchi in Northern Sri Lanka. Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • Mathumita (right) shares the various information with Tuvarny, 10 month pregnant expecting woman as part of the pre-natal programme during the field visits in Punaineeravi village in Kilinochchi in Northern Sri Lanka. Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • A wall in the room of a young expecting woman in Punaineeravi village in Kilinochchi in Northern Sri Lanka. Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • An expecting woman is shown pamphlets on breast feeding during a field visit in Punaineeravi village in Kilinochchi in Northern Sri Lanka. Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • (Left to right) Satyaraj, Daruka and Dicky are seen with the surfboard with the pun on the title, Home Sweet Home in the their own verison of Om Sweet Om at the Kaliya Mardana Krishna Ashram in the coastal town of Mulki, just north of Mangalore, Karnataka, India.  ..Krishna devotees in the Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition of Hinduism, they are known collectively as the "surfing swamis." The "surfing ashram" is growing in popularity and surfing here is a form of meditation, a spiritual practice leading to heightened states of awareness.
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  • (Left to right) Satyaraj, Daruka, Kirtan Ananda and Dicky are seen with the surfboard with the pun on the title, Home Sweet Home in the their own verison of Om Sweet Om at the Kaliya Mardana Krishna Ashram in the coastal town of Mulki, just north of Mangalore, Karnataka, India.  ..Krishna devotees in the Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition of Hinduism, they are known collectively as the "surfing swamis." The "surfing ashram" is growing in popularity and surfing here is a form of meditation, a spiritual practice leading to heightened states of awareness.
    200905surfing_swamis_mangalore0005.JPG
  • (Left to right) Satyaraj, Daruka and Dicky are seen with the surfboard with the pun on the title, Home Sweet Home in the their own verison of Om Sweet Om at the Kaliya Mardana Krishna Ashram in the coastal town of Mulki, just north of Mangalore, Karnataka, India.  ..Krishna devotees in the Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition of Hinduism, they are known collectively as the "surfing swamis." The "surfing ashram" is growing in popularity and surfing here is a form of meditation, a spiritual practice leading to heightened states of awareness.
    200905surfing_swamis_mangalore0004.JPG
  • Women return back home after working at the Gobra Ki Nari Mein site near the Khori Bijasan Devi Temple in Karauli district of Rajasthan, India. The National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA) that has created a source of additional income for families living below the poverty line by providing a minimum 100 days of employment assured under the Act. Photo by Sanjit Das
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  • Dabbawallas (lunch box men) are seen distributing lunch boxes in Mumbai, India. It is a 125 year old trade formed by a unique and incredible network of 5,000 men with the complex task of delivering 200,000 home made lunches each day from suburban homes to downtown offices in the city of Mumbai... all within a period of approximately 3 hours. Photograph: Sanjit Das
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  • Award winning Photojournalist, Lynsey Addario poses for a portrait with her journalist husband, Paul de Bendern in their home in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Award winning Photojournalist, Lynsey Addario poses for a portrait with her journalist husband, Paul de Bendern in their home in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Award winning Photojournalist, Lynsey Addario poses for a portrait in her home office in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Award winning Photojournalist, Lynsey Addario poses for a portrait in her home office in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Magnus Oskarsson and his wife Cecilia Oskarsson pose with their two daughters, Iris and Siri in their home in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Magnus Oskarsson and his wife Cecilia Oskarsson seen walking around in their neighbourhood with their two daughters, Iris and Siri in their home in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Surrogate mother for first western couple, Rabina Mondal (31) poses for a photograph with her husband, Bishwadeep Mondal and her son, Sahil at her home in Anand, Gujarat, India.
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  • Award winning Photojournalist, Lynsey Addario poses for a portrait in her home office in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Award winning Photojournalist, Lynsey Addario poses for a portrait in her home office in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Award winning Photojournalist, Lynsey Addario poses for a portrait in her home office in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Award winning Photojournalist, Lynsey Addario poses for a portrait in her home office in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Award winning Photojournalist, Lynsey Addario poses for a portrait in her home office in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Award winning Photojournalist, Lynsey Addario poses for a portrait in her home office in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Award winning Photojournalist, Lynsey Addario share a light moment during the  portrait shoot in her home office in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Award winning Photojournalist, Lynsey Addario poses for a portrait in her home office in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Magnus Oskarsson and his wife Cecilia Oskarsson seen with their two daughters, Iris and Siri in a cafe next to their home in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Magnus Oskarsson and his wife Cecilia Oskarsson seen with their two daughters, Iris and Siri in a cafe next to their home in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
    20111031-swedish_family-delhi-0091.JPG
  • Magnus Oskarsson and his wife Cecilia Oskarsson seen with their two daughters, Iris and Siri in a cafe next to their home in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • A cycle amongst other things like suitcase, few clothes in a bundle and pots were the few belongings that the Kondh's brought with them when they were displaced from their land. The Government's agreement with Vedanta Alumina to allow mining of bauxite deposits in the Niyamgiri hills, the home of the Dongaria Kondha tribe, is an example of how corporate interests backed by state support are trampling on tribal livelihoods and threatening an ecologically rich and important region.
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  • A cycle amongst other things like suitcase, few clothes in a bundle and pots were the few belongings that the Kondh's brought with them when they were displaced from their land. The Government's agreement with Vedanta Alumina to allow mining of bauxite deposits in the Niyamgiri hills, the home of the Dongaria Kondha tribe, is an example of how corporate interests backed by state support are trampling on tribal livelihoods and threatening an ecologically rich and important region.
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  • Young children seen in their home in Bokapahari in Jharia, Jharkhand, India. Coal fires rage just below the surface of the ground, making it too hot to walk with naked feet, noxious gases spew up from fissures, making the environment toxic. Residents who live above the furnace make $2 a day collecting small chunks of coal they sell to illegal middlemen. One or two houses collapse annually into vast underground caverns left unfilled by abandoned mining operations. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • Surrogate mother for first western couple, Rabina Mondal (31) poses for a photograph with her son, Sahil at her home in Anand, Gujarat, India. The centre has become the most popular clinic for outsourcing pregnancies by western couples.
    sdas301007-surrogate_mothers-gujarat...jpg
  • An overiew of the state capital Kohima, Nagaland, India. Although originally an Angami Naga Homeland, Kohima is now home for all the Nagas because of its administrative status. Nagaland, among  the smallest and most isolated of India's northeast states, is a place of paradoxes - simultaneously Christian and pagan, traditional and cutting edge, dependent on largesse from New Delhi and yet craving for independence. ..Kohima hosts the annual Hornbill Festival, where the state's 16 tribes show off their traditional ceremonial dress, dances and cuisine for both gawking tourists and locals, some of whom are far more attuned to Western fashions than the Western visitors. The festival also features a national rock contest - a battle of the bands that attracts aspiring young musicians from throughout India. The contest has been promoted by the state government as a way to connect young Nagas with the rest of India and build a viable music industry. By providing fresh opportunities for talented Nagas, the state hopes to lessen the attraction of underground insurgent groups. These groups have waged war against the Indian government for more than 60 years - making it perhaps Asia's longest running insurgency. But lately the two main rebel factions - each of which has a ceasefire with the Indian government - have engaged in fraticidal killings and extortion, resulting in many deaths and scaring off desperately-needed outside investment. Photograph: Sanjit Das
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  • A cycle amongst other things like suitcase, few clothes in a bundle and pots were the few belongings that the Kondh's brought with them when they were displaced from their land. The Government's agreement with Vedanta Alumina to allow mining of bauxite deposits in the Niyamgiri hills, the home of the Dongaria Kondha tribe, is an example of how corporate interests backed by state support are trampling on tribal livelihoods and threatening an ecologically rich and important region.
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  • Award winning Photojournalist, Lynsey Addario poses for a portrait in her home office in New Delhi, India. Photo: Sanjit Das
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  • 31 year old Rubina Mondal (centre) poses for a photograph with the first time surrogate mothers she is mentoring at her home in Anand, Gujarat, India.
    sdas301007-surrogate_mothers-gujarat...jpg
  • A cycle amongst other things like suitcase, few clothes in a bundle and pots were the few belongings that the Kondh's brought with them when they were displaced from their land. The Government's agreement with Vedanta Alumina to allow mining of bauxite deposits in the Niyamgiri hills, the home of the Dongaria Kondha tribe, is an example of how corporate interests backed by state support are trampling on tribal livelihoods and threatening an ecologically rich and important region.
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  • A cyclist carries drinking water on his bicycle next to abandoned homes where smoke and methane gas billows out of the ground in Bokapahari village in Jharia, outside of Dhanbad in Jharkhand, India.   Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • A resident walks past abandoned homes where smoke and methane gas billows out of the ground in Bokapahari village in Jharia, outside of Dhanbad in Jharkhand, India.   Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • A cyclist carries drinking water on his bicycle next to abandoned homes where smoke and methane gas billows out of the ground in Bokapahari village in Jharia, outside of Dhanbad in Jharkhand, India.   Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
    sdas20121014-jharia-coal-india-500.JPG
  • A woman walks past abandoned homes as smoke billows out of the ground in Bokapahari village in Jharia, outside of Dhanbad in Jharkhand, India.  Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • A young girl washes her face next to the abandoned homes in Lantengunj in Jharia, outside of Dhanbad in Jharkhand, India.  Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • Children play around the abandoned homes in Bokapahari village in Jharia, outside of Dhanbad in Jharkhand, India.  Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • A resident carries drinking water next to abandoned homes where smoke and methane gas billows out of the ground in Bokapahari village in Jharia, outside of Dhanbad in Jharkhand, India.   Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
    sdas20121014-jharia-coal-india-496.JPG
  • Few of the remaining homes next to abandoned homes where smoke and methane gas billows out of the ground in Bokapahari village in Jharia, outside of Dhanbad in Jharkhand, India.   Photo: Sanjit Das/Panos
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  • Villagers whose land has been forcibly taken by them (for the factory construction) gather outside their homes. This village is few metres from the boundary wall of the refinery and causes obstruction of expansion as it falls inbetween the land that has already bought by Vedanta. The villagers are resisting and have decided not to sell the land to the company at any cost.
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