Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 548 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Syrian refugee Ayman Al Abood, 29, fishing in the port of Lakki.
    39_160602_364.jpg
  • Kinaz looks at eight month pregnant Fadwa doing laundry in a bathroom at PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    33_160602_068.jpg
  • Refugees outside the main entrance of the PIKPA building. The refuge was opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors. The building has about 20 rooms accommodating 102 people.
    27_160602_306.jpg
  • 12 year old Ayat, from Al-Zabadani a city in the southwestern Syria, at PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    29_160603_102.jpg
  • Diar, a 13 year old Syrian Kurd, stands in the ruins of the abandoned Lepida psychiatric hospital. <br />
<br />
Originally constructed, in 1930 by fascist Italy, as barracks for Italian soldiers serving in the aeronautical base of Portolago, it was then, for a short period after WWII, a re-education camp for the children of Greek Communists. In 1958, it was converted into the biggest psychiatric hospital in the country. The conditions for the patients were horrific and it was shut down in the late 1980s and the patients moved into smaller buildings in the grounds and elsewhere on the island.
    24_160601_330.jpg
  • Abdulbaki Yunis, a Syrian Kurd refugee from Damascus in the First Reception Centre (Hot-Spot) of Leros, Greece. <br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    21_160826_044.jpg
  • A barbed wired gate that separates the different communities of migrants and refugees into sections at the First Reception Centre (Hot-Spot) of Leros, Greece. <br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    20_160826_004.jpg
  • A 15 year old Syrian refugee girl from Hama, who recently attempted suicide, lying on a hospital bed with her sister. She took 30 of her grandmother's pills resulting in her having her stomach pumped. She arrived in Greece in March 2016 after the borders had closed and has since been detained on the island, together with 600 other people at the Lepida 'Hotspot', an EU-run migrant's reception centre camp
    15_160825_001.jpg
  • A boarded up door and graffiti at the closed down refugee camp at the Port of Lakki. <br />
<br />
The camp was opened by volunteers in the summer of 2015 and later that year UNHCR and MSF expanded it and provided additional tents, toilets and other facilities. The camp was closed soon after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016.
    06_160601_071.jpg
  • Syrian refugee Ayman Al Abood, 29, fishing in the port of Lakki.
    69_160602_364.jpg
  • Syrian refugee women and children looking out to sea at Gourna Beach. It is the first time they have been back to the sea since they were rescued by the coast guard after crossing from Turkey.
    65_160602_188.jpg
  • Matina Katsiveli (62), often called Mamma Matina, the founder and director of PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    63_160826_234.jpg
  • Syrian refugee children gather around a man repairing a fishing rod in the gounds of PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    62_160602_089.jpg
  • Najah from Syria with her 11 month infant daughter Amenah in their room in PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors. Amenah was born the day after her father fled to Germany, so she has never seen him.
    59_160603_148.jpg
  • Kinaz looks at eight month pregnant Fadwa doing laundry in a bathroom at PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    58_160602_068.jpg
  • Bunkbeds and a child's cot at PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    52_160602_019.jpg
  • A Syrian refugee boy checking his smartphone at PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    51_160603_044.jpg
  • Refugees Diar, 13, Rebas, 9, Youssef, 14, Naswan, 5, and Kosh, 48, sitting in a room in the abandoned Lepida psychiatric hospital in whose grounds the Leros ‘Hot spot’ (an EU-run migrant’s reception centre)  has been built. <br />
<br />
Originally constructed, in 1930 by fascist Italy, as barracks for Italian soldiers serving in the aeronautical base of Portolago, it was then, for a short period after WWII, a re-education camp for the children of Greek Communists. In 1958, it was converted into the biggest psychiatric hospital in the country. The conditions for the patients were horrific and it was shut down in the late 1980s and the patients moved into smaller buildings in the grounds and elsewhere on the island.
    44_160601_305.jpg
  • Shirin, Levent, Jamila, Wafa, Aya, Rania (L-R) refugees from Aleppo and Al Hasakah outside their hut in the First Reception Centre (Hot-Spot) of Leros, Greece. <br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    34_160826_016.jpg
  • The remains of the abandoned Lepida psychiatric hospital, in whose grounds the Leros ‘Hot spot’ (an EU-run migrant’s reception centre) has been built. <br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    31_160826_010.jpg
  • A barbed wired gate that separates the different communities of migrants and refugees into sections at the First Reception Centre (Hot-Spot) of Leros, Greece. <br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    33_160826_004.jpg
  • Three refugee children, Youssef, 14, Rebas, 9, and Diar, 13, looking over the Leros 'Hotspot', an EU-run migrant's reception centre opened in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital. <br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    30_160601_277.jpg
  • Yazidi Hazim Elias Khadeda, 22, looking at the Leros 'Hotspot', an EU-run migrant's reception centre opened in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital (from which the view is taken).<br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    29_160825_459.jpg
  • Bed frames in the medical tent at Villa Artemis, a shelter for 30 refugee women and their children in the grounds of Leros Hospital. <br />
<br />
Opened in September 2015, the shelter was run by the Leros Solidarity Network. However, Villa Artemis was closed down shortly after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016. The medical tent was opened just three days before the villa was abandoned.
    26_160601_219.jpg
  • A toddlers play mat on the floor at Villa Artemis, a shelter for 30 refugee women and their children in the grounds of Leros Hospital. <br />
<br />
Opened in September 2015, the shelter was run by the Leros Solidarity Network. However, Villa Artemis was closed down shortly after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016.
    21_160601_150.jpg
  • A paper chain drawn by children, hangs in a corridor in Villa Artemis, a shelter for 30 refugee women and their children in the grounds of Leros Hospital. <br />
<br />
Opened in September 2015, the shelter was run by the Leros Solidarity Network. However, Villa Artemis was closed down shortly after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016.
    17_160601_134.jpg
  • A child's cot and toys in Villa Artemis, a shelter for 30 refugee women and their children in the grounds of Leros Hospital.<br />
<br />
Opened in September 2015, the shelter was run by the Leros Solidarity Network. However, Villa Artemis was closed down shortly after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016.
    18_160601_128.jpg
  • Children's drawings on a wall in the kitchen of Villa Artemis, a shelter for 30 refugee women and their children in the grounds of Leros Hospital. <br />
<br />
Opened in September 2015, the shelter was run by the Leros Solidarity Network. However, Villa Artemis was closed down shortly after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016.
    16_160601_116.jpg
  • A UNHCR shelter in the closed down refugee camp at the Port of Lakki. 

The camp was opened by volunteers in the summer of 2015 and later that year UNHCR and MSF expanded it and provided additional tents, toilets and other facilities. The camp was closed soon after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016.
    13_160601_097.jpg
  • A painting on a wall in the closed down refugee camp at the Port of Lakki. <br />
<br />
The camp was opened by volunteers in the summer of 2015 and later that year UNHCR and MSF expanded it and provided additional tents, toilets and other facilities. The camp was closed soon after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016
    14_160601_048.jpg
  • A rain coat and copies of the Quran in a building in the closed down refugee camp at the Port of Lakki. <br />
<br />
The camp was opened by volunteers in the summer of 2015 and later that year UNHCR and MSF expanded it and provided additional tents, toilets and other facilities. The camp was closed soon after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016
    08_160601_063.jpg
  • A towel, left forgotten, on a clothes line at the former refugee camp in the port of Lakki.<br />
<br />
The camp was opened by volunteers in the summer of 2015 and later that year UNHCR and MSF expanded it and provided additional tents, toilets and other facilities. The camp was closed soon after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016.
    06_160603_189.jpg
  • A Greek coast guard boat approaching the port of Lakki. It is a boat like that, that transports the refugees and migrants from Farmakonisi to Leros
    02_160602_375.jpg
  • Afternoon, Wednesday 16th of September 2015. Zinkenwirt Gmerk, Berchtesgaden, Bavaria. Aysha and her daughters are now in Germany. The landscape remind me of the movie “The Sound of Music”  They walked few meters to a bus station where they were planning to take the bus to the nearest train station and fro there to continue to Munich. Few minutes after this picture was taken a van of the Bavarian State Police came and pic them up. They were taken to a refugee first welcome centre where I would meet them few hours later. Then we took the train to Munich where the were taken to the refugee centre. I wouldn’t meet them for 5 months.
    150916_306.jpg
  • Afternoon, Tuesday 15th of September 2015. After waiting in the Vienna central station for hours to buy a next day train ticket to Munich, Aysha finally rents an apartment for the night. They didn’t have a shower or sleep in a bed since they left Thessaloniki 3 days ago.
    150915_312.jpg
  • Afternoon, Wednesday 16th of September 2015. Aysha and her girls walk up the steep hill about a kilometre away from the German border.
    150916_240.jpg
  • Morning, Tuesday 15th of September 2015. Vienna central station. After days of travelling without access to electricity or internet the refugees and migrants who arrive at the station charge their phones so they can contact their relatives and friends and tell them that they are safe and get information about the rest of the journey.
    150915_222.jpg
  • Morning, Tuesday 15th of September 2015. After 3 days without internet finally Aysha connects with her husband in Syria and tells him the news, that they arrived safely in Austria.
    150915_189.jpg
  • Morning, Tuesday 15th of September 2015. At the central station of Vienna there is a huge queue of refugees and migrants waiting to buy a ticket to Germany. Their families and friends are sleeping everywhere at the station. Hundreds of exhausted people.
    150915_186.jpg
  • Morning, Tuesday 15th of September 2015. Aysha and her kids arrive at the back of Vienna central station were a temporary welcome centre has been set up. There are volunteers who give information, food and psychological support.  There are hundreds of people there, reuniting, reorganising and using the free wifi to contact their families and friends.
    150915_151.jpg
  • Afternoon, Monday 14th of September 2015. Aysha just crossed into Hungary and she has a little rest under the trees before going to a field where buses are waiting to take the refugees to the Austrian border. A Syrian teenager who was carrying Sham during the long march on the rail line, is giving her 2 cans of condensed milk that was given to him in Greece by volunteers.
    150914_532.jpg
  • Noon, Monday 14th of September 2015. The bus from Belgrade to Kanjiža is full of refugees and migrants heading to border. One of them is a man from Daraa with a broken leg. Few hours later I see him walking with crutches on the disused rail line, it must have taken him few hours.
    150914_162.jpg
  • Morning, Monday 14th of September 2015. Belgrade central train station. The bus from Preshevo left us outside the central bus station of Belgrade next to the train station. Aysha bought a ticket to the bus to Kanisha and the went to exchange her dollars to Euros. She was stressed that we won’t make it in time to Hungarian border. There where rumours that the border will close at noon and rumours that it will close at midnight.
    150914_075.jpg
  • Early morning, Monday 14th of September 2015. We arrived at Belgrade and hit the rush hour traffic. Bisan woke up and start crying.
    150914_055.jpg
  • Night, Sunday 13th of September 2015. After an hour waiting in the queue with the girls Aysha came back from the hospital. Because of her condition she got the registration papers without waiting. The doctors told her that there is nothing to worry about but she needed rest. She is worried that the Hungarian border will close tomorrow so she decided to carry on. While we were waiting outside the camp entrance locals were asking us if we need a lift to Belgrade, they looked dodgy and we refused. Later on the trip we met a Syrian who went with one of those “taxis” and he got robbed.
    150913_569A.jpg
  • Sunday 13th of September 2015, afternoon. Aysha is carrying Bisan through a field meters away from the Macedonian - Serbian border. About an hour ago a train full of immigrants and refugees arrived at the border village of Slanishte after 4 hrs of travelling across the Republic of Macedonia. A group of Danish volunteers gave Aysha a pram to carry her daughters. The path is uneven and it will take her more than an hour to walk to the Serbian town of Preshevo.
    150913_467.jpg
  • Afternoon, Sunday 13th of September 2015. Aysha is looking at me after she crossed into Serbian territory. We said goodbye to each other since we don’t know if we will meet on the other side of the border. The sun is getting down and it’s getting cold.
    150913_473.jpg
  • Sunday 13th of September 2015. A migrant boy looks out of the train window as the train of refugees and migrants passes through the Republic of Macedonia.
    150913_363.jpg
  • Noon, Sunday 13th of September 2015. Sham looks at me, few minutes ago she was crying.  They are on a special train just for refugees and immigrants from Gevgelija to Slanishte , across the Republic of Macedonia. It’s overcrowded, hot and there are no lights, so everytime we pass through a tunnel is pitch black and the girls are scared.
    150913_244.jpg
  • Morning, Saturday 11th of September 2015. On the back seat of a taxi on the way to the Port of Mytilini where they will take the boat to Kavala, a town in Northern Greece.
    150912_097.jpg
  • Afternoon, Saturday, 12 September 2015. Aysha with her two daughters Bisan 2 ½ (L) and Sham 3 ½ (R) on the deck of F/B Nissos Rodos that took them from Lesbos island to mainland Greece.
    150912_200.jpg
  • Thursday 10 September 2015 at 18:51 a boat carrying around 50 Syrians, men, women and children is approaching the beach of Kagia near Skala Sikaminias at the northern shores of Lesbos island.  <br />
Aysha is at the rear of the dinghy sobbing. She left 5 days ago Aleppo.
    150910_222.jpg
  • February 2016, Dianalund, Denmark. <br />
Aysha walks her two daughters Sham and Bisan, while carrying a pram with her newborn baby, Julie . It’s the first time she goes out of the Asylum Centre since she gave birth to her daughter.
    160210_056.jpg
  • ActionAid's translator Moustafa hand food to a mother and her child who just arrived at Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece.
    151008_461.jpg
  • Constantina Strikou, programme coordinator of ActionAid Hellas, helps aSyrian girls to change her wet clothes at the beach of Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece.
    151008_737.jpg
  • A girls rucksack  at the beach of Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece.
    151008_781.jpg
  • A dinghy with refugees is landing at e beach of Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece.
    151008_627.jpg
  • ActionAid's translator Moustafa  holds Shiraz while his father Ali from Deir ez-Zor Syria is thanking god for making the trip at Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece.
    151008_811.jpg
  • ActionAid provisions
    151008_925.jpg
  • ActionAid’s team in Lesvos Moustafa, Abbas, Amar,  Constantina  and Hamid infront of food and clothes given to newly arrived refugees and migrants. Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece
    151008_890.jpg
  • ActionAid’s team in LesvosAbbas, Amar, Constantina, Hamid and Moustafa infront of food and clothes given to newly arrived refugees and migrants. Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece
    151008_883.jpg
  • ActionAid's translator Moustafa helps the daughter of an older lady to communicate with n independent volunteer doctor at  the fishing harbour of Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece.
    151008_536.jpg
  • At  the fishing harbour of Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece, minutes after the Portuguese  coast guards towed a boat with around 50 refugees.
    151008_466.jpg
  • At  the fishing harbour of Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece, minutes after the Portuguese  coast guards towed a boat with around 50 refugees.
    151008_445.jpg
  • Moustafa, ARabic translator of ActionAid Hellas, helps a child to get off the Portuguese coast guard boat at  the fishing harbour of Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece.
    151008_428.jpg
  • Hamid, cultural mediator of ctionAid Hellas, helps a child to get off the Portuguese coast guard boat at  the fishing harbour of Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece.
    151008_433.jpg
  • An old lifeboat on the beach of Skala Sykamias on the northern shores of Lesvos, Greece. Th majority of refugees and migrants use inflatable dinghies but in some cases the smugglers force people to use old boats that are farm more dangerours than the inflatable ones.
    151008_281.jpg
  • A Portuguese coast guard vessel towing a dinghy with around 50 refugees at Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece
    151008_312.jpg
  • Discarded children’s clothes near Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece.
    151008_270.jpg
  • A discarded child’s lifejacket near Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece.
    151008_273.jpg
  • Maha’s father showing me what is inside his daughters’ bag in Kara Tepe camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151008_207.jpg
  • Hara Tasoglou, head of communications of ActionAid Hellas talking to kids from Iraq in Kara Tepe camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151008_077.jpg
  • Maha’s  bag in Kara Tepe camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151008_200.jpg
  • Hara Tasoglou, head of communications of ActionAid Hellas talking to kids from Iraq in Kara Tepe camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151008_059.jpg
  • Children’s drawings outside the ActionAid’s office container in Kara Tepe camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151007_711.jpg
  • A mother with her child waits outside Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_672.jpg
  • The ActionAid office container in Kara Tepe camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151007_697.jpg
  • An Afghan family at the olive grove next to Moria camp , Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_635.jpg
  • Children’s clothes hanging to dry on a chain-link fence  in Moria camp , Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_582.jpg
  • Refugees and migrants  waiting in a muddy field to get registered by the Greek authorities in in Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_531.jpg
  • Refugees and migrants  waiting in a muddy field to get registered by the Greek authorities in in Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_528.jpg
  • Afghan men queuing to be registered and receive a temporary document that allows them to travel to mainland Greece at Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece. Usually women and children wait at the tents while men are waiting under the sun to receive their documents.
    151007_498.jpg
  • Daniel 1 year and 8 months old from Teheran, Iran sleeps next to Mohadisha 9 years old at Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_379.jpg
  • Daniel 1 year and 8 months old from Teheran, Iran sleeps at Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_409.jpg
  • Mahdi 8 months old from Herat Afghanistan in Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151007_291.jpg
  • Abulfaz 11 years old, from Teheran, Iran, outside his tent at Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_373.jpg
  • Nazime 46 years old from Herat Afghanistan holding her 8 month old grandson Mahdi in Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151007_308.jpg
  • Daniel 1 year and 8 months old from Teheran, Iran sleeps at Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_350.jpg
  • Mohammed 1 year old from Afghanistan lying on a piece of cardboard in in Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151007_176.jpg
  • Nasrullah 6 years old  and his cousin Mohammed 1 year old from Afghanistan lying on a piece of cardboard in in Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151007_156.jpg
  • Bashir 29 holding his daughter Zaahra 2 ½ years old and his wife  Shefqe 24 years old holding her 7 months old girl Hamid from Chardere district of Afghanistan in Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151007_078.jpg
  • Hara Tasoglou, head of communications of ActionAid Hellas with Bashir 29 holding his daughter Zaahra 2 ½ years old and his wife  Shefqe 24 years old holding her 7 months old girl Hamid from Chardere district of Afghanistan in Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151007_070.jpg
  • Afghan men queuing to be registered and receive a temporary document that allows them to travel to mainland Greece at Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece. Usually women and children wait at the tents while men are waiting under the sun to receive their documents.
    151007_007.jpg
  • Bashir 29 holding his daughter Zaahra 2 ½ years old, from Chardere district of Afghanistan in Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151007_011.jpg
  • Hammam 10 years old from Iraq in Kara Tepe camp in Lesvos, Greece
    151008_098.jpg
  • Maha 10 years old from Iraq in Kara Tepe camp in Lesvos, Greece
    151008_084.jpg
  • Elyamama 7 years old from Iraq in Kara Tepe camp in Lesvos, Greece
    151008_115.jpg
  • Maha 10 years old from Iraq in Kara Tepe camp in Lesvos, Greece
    151008_186.jpg
  • Maran 7 years old from Iraq in Kara Tepe camp in Lesvos, Greece
    151008_166.jpg
  • Maran 7 years old from Iraq in Kara Tepe camp in Lesvos, Greece
    151008_164.jpg
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

georgios makkas

  • archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • multimedia
  • tear sheets
  • about
  • tear-sheets-2
  • contact