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MARK KERRISON | Photojournalist

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  • London, UK. 30th March, 2019. Pro-Brexit activists from Yellow Vests UK block traffic outside Downing Street during an event billed as the Great British Betrayal Rally.
    Yellow-Vests-UK-010.jpg
  • London, UK. 30th March, 2019. Pro-Brexit activists from Yellow Vests UK march in Whitehall during an event billed as the Great British Betrayal Rally.
    Yellow-Vests-UK-011.jpg
  • London, UK. 30th March, 2019. Pro-Brexit activists from Yellow Vests UK block traffic outside Downing Street during an event billed as the Great British Betrayal Rally.
    Yellow-Vests-UK-013.jpg
  • London, UK. 30th March, 2019. Pro-Brexit activists from Yellow Vests UK block traffic outside Downing Street during an event billed as the Great British Betrayal Rally.
    Yellow-Vests-UK-012.jpg
  • London, UK. 30th March, 2019. A pro-Brexit activist from Yellow Vests UK draped in a Union Jack protests outside Downing Street during an event billed as the Great British Betrayal Rally.
    Yellow-Vests-UK-015.jpg
  • London, UK. 30th March, 2019. Pro-Brexit activists from Yellow Vests UK march in Whitehall during an event billed as the Great British Betrayal Rally.
    Yellow-Vests-UK-001.jpg
  • London, UK. 30th March, 2019. Pro-Brexit activists from Yellow Vests UK protest outside Downing Street during an event billed as the Great British Betrayal Rally.
    Yellow-Vests-UK-008.jpg
  • London, UK. 30th March, 2019. Pro-Brexit activists from Yellow Vests UK march in Whitehall during an event billed as the Great British Betrayal Rally.
    Yellow-Vests-UK-007.jpg
  • London, UK. 30th March, 2019. Pro-Brexit activists from Yellow Vests UK march in Whitehall during an event billed as the Great British Betrayal Rally.
    Yellow-Vests-UK-004.jpg
  • London, UK. 30th March, 2019. Pro-Brexit activists from Yellow Vests UK march in Whitehall during an event billed as the Great British Betrayal Rally.
    Yellow-Vests-UK-006.jpg
  • London, UK. 30th March, 2019. Pro-Brexit activists from Yellow Vests UK block traffic outside Downing Street during an event billed as the Great British Betrayal Rally.
    Yellow-Vests-UK-002.jpg
  • London, UK. 30th March, 2019. Pro-Brexit activists from Yellow Vests UK block traffic outside Downing Street during an event billed as the Great British Betrayal Rally.
    Yellow-Vests-UK-014.jpg
  • London, UK. 30th March, 2019. Pro-Brexit activists from Yellow Vests UK block traffic outside Downing Street during an event billed as the Great British Betrayal Rally.
    Yellow-Vests-UK-005.jpg
  • London, UK. 30th March, 2019. Pro-Brexit activists from Yellow Vests UK march in Whitehall during an event billed as the Great British Betrayal Rally.
    Yellow-Vests-UK-003.jpg
  • London, UK. 30th March, 2019. Pro-Brexit activists from Yellow Vests UK march in Whitehall during an event billed as the Great British Betrayal Rally.
    Yellow-Vests-UK-009.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 8th March, 2021. GMB members stand on a picket line outside the headquarters of Centrica, owners of British Gas. British Gas engineers and staff belonging to the GMB trade union began another in a series of ‘Stop The British Gas Fire’ strikes last week after overwhelmingly rejecting an offer by Centrica intended to resolve a dispute regarding rehiring on inferior terms and conditions. Centrica reported an operating profit of £901 million in 2019.
    Centrica-British-Gas-strike-007.jpg
  • GMB members stand on a picket line outside the headquarters of Centrica, owners of British Gas, on 8th March 2021 in Windsor, United Kingdom. British Gas engineers and staff belonging to the GMB trade union began another in a series of ‘Stop The British Gas Fire’ strikes last week after overwhelmingly rejecting an offer by Centrica intended to resolve a dispute regarding rehiring on inferior terms and conditions.
    Centrica-British-Gas-strike-001.jpg
  • GMB members stand on a picket line outside the headquarters of Centrica, owners of British Gas, on 8th March 2021 in Windsor, United Kingdom. British Gas engineers and staff belonging to the GMB trade union began another in a series of ‘Stop The British Gas Fire’ strikes last week after overwhelmingly rejecting an offer by Centrica intended to resolve a dispute regarding rehiring on inferior terms and conditions.
    Centrica-British-Gas-strike-003.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 8th March, 2021. GMB members stand on a picket line outside the headquarters of Centrica, owners of British Gas. British Gas engineers and staff belonging to the GMB trade union began another in a series of ‘Stop The British Gas Fire’ strikes last week after overwhelmingly rejecting an offer by Centrica intended to resolve a dispute regarding rehiring on inferior terms and conditions. Centrica reported an operating profit of £901 million in 2019.
    Centrica-British-Gas-strike-008.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 8th March, 2021. GMB members stand on a picket line outside the headquarters of Centrica, owners of British Gas. British Gas engineers and staff belonging to the GMB trade union began another in a series of ‘Stop The British Gas Fire’ strikes last week after overwhelmingly rejecting an offer by Centrica intended to resolve a dispute regarding rehiring on inferior terms and conditions. Centrica reported an operating profit of £901 million in 2019.
    Centrica-British-Gas-strike-006.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 8th March, 2021. GMB members stand on a picket line outside the headquarters of Centrica, owners of British Gas. British Gas engineers and staff belonging to the GMB trade union began another in a series of ‘Stop The British Gas Fire’ strikes last week after overwhelmingly rejecting an offer by Centrica intended to resolve a dispute regarding rehiring on inferior terms and conditions. Centrica reported an operating profit of £901 million in 2019.
    Centrica-British-Gas-strike-005.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 8th March, 2021. A GMB member stands on a picket line outside the headquarters of Centrica, owners of British Gas. British Gas engineers and staff belonging to the GMB trade union began another in a series of ‘Stop The British Gas Fire’ strikes last week after overwhelmingly rejecting an offer by Centrica intended to resolve a dispute regarding rehiring on inferior terms and conditions. Centrica reported an operating profit of £901 million in 2019.
    Centrica-British-Gas-strike-004.jpg
  • GMB members stand on a picket line outside the headquarters of Centrica, owners of British Gas, on 8th March 2021 in Windsor, United Kingdom. British Gas engineers and staff belonging to the GMB trade union began another in a series of ‘Stop The British Gas Fire’ strikes last week after overwhelmingly rejecting an offer by Centrica intended to resolve a dispute regarding rehiring on inferior terms and conditions.
    Centrica-British-Gas-strike-002.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. A campaigner from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network protests outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-002.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Samson Adeola and Daniel, former clients of the Project for the Registration of Children as British Citizens (PRCBC), join campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC outside the Home Office to hand in a letter calling on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-014.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Daniel (l) and Samson Adeola (c), former clients of the Project for the Registration of Children as British Citizens (PRCBC), join campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC outside the Home Office to hand in a letter calling on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-022.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Daniel, a former client of the Project for the Registration of Children as British Citizens (PRCBC), joins campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-016.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Samson Adeola, a former client of the Project for the Registration of Children as British Citizens (PRCBC), joins campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-019.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Samson Adeola, a former client of the Project for the Registration of Children as British Citizens (PRCBC), joins campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-011.jpg
  • London, UK. 29 January, 2020. Hong Kong residents protest opposite Parliament to call for the reopening and broadening of the British National Overseas (BNO) passport scheme to Hong Kong citizens. Around 169,000 Hong Kong residents hold active BNO passports under the scheme from the period 1987-1997. Tomorrow they will visit the Foreign and Commonwealth and Home Offices to deliver a petition.
    Hong-Kong-BNO-protest-UK-011.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Daniel (c) and Samson Adeola (r), former clients of the Project for the Registration of Children as British Citizens (PRCBC), join campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC outside the Home Office to hand in a letter calling on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-001.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Samson Adeola, a former client of the Project for the Registration of Children as British Citizens (PRCBC), joins campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-004.jpg
  • Brighton, UK. 6th August, 2022. Pride flags are pictured hanging inside and reflected upon the British Airways i360 viewing tower on the occasion of the 30th anniversary Brighton & Hove Pride LGBTQ+ Community Parade. Brighton & Hove Pride is intended to celebrate, and promote respect for, diversity and inclusion within the local community as well as to support local charities and causes through fundraising.
    Brighton-and-Hove-Pride-2022-09.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC protest outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-020.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC protest outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-015.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC protest outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-006.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC protest outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-025.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. A wall used by campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC protesting outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-018.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. A banner used by campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC protesting outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-024.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. A campaigner from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC outside the Home Office calls on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-009.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Steve Valdez-Symonds, Amnesty UK Refugee and Migrant Rights Programme Director, speaks outside the Home Office during a protest by campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-023.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Steve Valdez-Symonds, Amnesty UK Refugee and Migrant Rights Programme Director, speaks outside the Home Office during a protest by campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-008.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC protest outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-013.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. A campaigner from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network protests outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-003.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. A wall used by campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC protesting outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-007.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC protest outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-021.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. A campaigner from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network protests outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-012.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. Campaigners from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network and PRCBC protest outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-010.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. A campaigner from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network protests outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-017.jpg
  • Bluebells bloom in early morning sunlight in Sulham Woods on 23rd April 2021 in Sulham, United Kingdom. The UK is home to over half of the world’s population of bluebells, split between the native English or British bluebell (Hyacinthoides non-scripta), as seen in Sulham Woods, which is protected under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, and the fast spreading Spanish bluebell (Hyacinthoides hispanica).
    MK-2021 Selection-005.jpg
  • Tim Crosland, Director of Plan B.Earth, addresses climate activists outside the Royal Courts of Justice before an appeal on behalf of him, Plan B.Earth and three young British citizens (Marina Tricks, Adetola Onamade and Jerry Amokwandoh) with family in West Africa and the Americas who claim that their human rights are being breached by the UK government’s failure to act decisively on the climate crisis on 25th November 2021 in London, United Kingdom. The three students have asked for a judicial review of government actions to cut national carbon emissions and have argued that UK government action, or inaction, disregards their rights to life, family life and not be discriminated against under Arts 2, 8 and 14 of the Human Rights Act.
    Global-Majority-vs-UK-Gov-004.jpg
  • London, UK. 29 January, 2020. David Alton, Baron Alton of Liverpool, prepares to receive a petition from Hong Kong residents protesting opposite Parliament to call for the reopening and broadening of the British National Overseas (BNO) passport scheme to Hong Kong citizens. Around 169,000 Hong Kong residents hold active BNO passports under the scheme from the period 1987-1997. Tomorrow they will visit the Foreign and Commonwealth and Home Offices to deliver a petition.
    Hong-Kong-BNO-protest-UK-001.jpg
  • London, UK. 29 January, 2020. Hong Kong residents protest opposite Parliament to call for the reopening and broadening of the British National Overseas (BNO) passport scheme to Hong Kong citizens. Around 169,000 Hong Kong residents hold active BNO passports under the scheme from the period 1987-1997. Tomorrow they will visit the Foreign and Commonwealth and Home Offices to deliver a petition.
    Hong-Kong-BNO-protest-UK-005.jpg
  • London, UK. 29 January, 2020. Hong Kong residents protest opposite Parliament to call for the reopening and broadening of the British National Overseas (BNO) passport scheme to Hong Kong citizens. Around 169,000 Hong Kong residents hold active BNO passports under the scheme from the period 1987-1997. Tomorrow they will visit the Foreign and Commonwealth and Home Offices to deliver a petition.
    Hong-Kong-BNO-protest-UK-012.jpg
  • London, UK. 29 January, 2020. Hong Kong residents protest opposite Parliament to call for the reopening and broadening of the British National Overseas (BNO) passport scheme to Hong Kong citizens. Around 169,000 Hong Kong residents hold active BNO passports under the scheme from the period 1987-1997. Tomorrow they will visit the Foreign and Commonwealth and Home Offices to deliver a petition.
    Hong-Kong-BNO-protest-UK-008.jpg
  • London, UK. 25 November, 2019. A campaigner from Amnesty International UK's Children's Human Rights Network protests outside the Home Office to call on the British Government to stop selling children's rights. Currently, the Home Office charges £1,012 for citizenship applications, including for children living in poverty or local authority care, whilst the cost of processing an application is £372. Thousands of children with rights to British citizenship are prevented from claiming their rights due to excessive fees.
    Childrens-rights-not-for-sale-005.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 22nd February, 2019. Thames Valley Police deployed around 50 police officers, including mounted police officers, in preparation for a family-friendly protest by around 60 campaigners from Reclaim the Power and Fuel Poverty Action outside the headquarters of Centrica to call on the British multinational energy and services company to cease its support for fracking operations through its partnership with shale gas company Cuadrilla Resources.
    Reclaim-Centrica-fracking-rig-048.jpg
  • London, UK. 2nd February, 2019. Supporters of the Venezuelan government of Nicolás Maduro attend a protest organised by the Revolutionary Communist Group outside the BBC's Broadcasting House to highlight perceived British media bias in support of Juan Guaidó, the head of the National Venezuelan Assembly who had declared himself interim president of Venezuela the previous week.
    Pro-Maduro-Venezuela-BBC-010.jpg
  • London, UK. 2nd February, 2019. Supporters of the Venezuelan government of Nicolás Maduro attend a protest organised by the Revolutionary Communist Group outside the BBC's Broadcasting House to highlight perceived British media bias in support of Juan Guaidó, the head of the National Venezuelan Assembly who had declared himself interim president of Venezuela the previous week.
    Pro-Maduro-Venezuela-BBC-004.jpg
  • London, UK. 2nd February, 2019. Supporters of the Venezuelan government of Nicolas Máduro attend a protest organised by the Revolutionary Communist Group outside the BBC's Broadcasting House to highlight perceived British media bias in support of Juan Guaidó, the head of the National Venezuelan Assembly who had declared himself interim president of Venezuela the previous week.
    Pro-Maduro-Venezuela-BBC-003.jpg
  • London, UK. 15th January, 2019. Dr Tom Dolphin of the British Medical Association (BMA) addresses pro-EU activists attending a People's Vote rally in Parliament Square as MPs vote in the House of Commons on Prime Minister Theresa May's proposed final Brexit withdrawal agreement.
    Peoples-Vote-Meaningful-Vote-022.jpg
  • Eton, UK. 12th December, 2021. Christmas decorations are pictured in Eton High Street. According to the Office of National Statistics (ONS), British households are spending more on goods and less on services as the Omicron coronavirus variant spreads.
    Christmas-shopping-Eton-009.jpg
  • London, UK. 29 January, 2020. David Alton, Baron Alton of Liverpool, prepares to receive a petition from Hong Kong residents protesting opposite Parliament to call for the reopening and broadening of the British National Overseas (BNO) passport scheme to Hong Kong citizens. Around 169,000 Hong Kong residents hold active BNO passports under the scheme from the period 1987-1997. Tomorrow they will visit the Foreign and Commonwealth and Home Offices to deliver a petition.
    Hong-Kong-BNO-protest-UK-010.jpg
  • London, UK. 29 January, 2020. Hong Kong residents protest opposite Parliament to call for the reopening and broadening of the British National Overseas (BNO) passport scheme to Hong Kong citizens. Around 169,000 Hong Kong residents hold active BNO passports under the scheme from the period 1987-1997. Tomorrow they will visit the Foreign and Commonwealth and Home Offices to deliver a petition.
    Hong-Kong-BNO-protest-UK-009.jpg
  • London, UK. 29 January, 2020. Hong Kong residents protest opposite Parliament to call for the reopening and broadening of the British National Overseas (BNO) passport scheme to Hong Kong citizens. Around 169,000 Hong Kong residents hold active BNO passports under the scheme from the period 1987-1997. Tomorrow they will visit the Foreign and Commonwealth and Home Offices to deliver a petition.
    Hong-Kong-BNO-protest-UK-004.jpg
  • London, UK. 29 January, 2020. Hong Kong residents protest opposite Parliament to call for the reopening and broadening of the British National Overseas (BNO) passport scheme to Hong Kong citizens. Around 169,000 Hong Kong residents hold active BNO passports under the scheme from the period 1987-1997. Tomorrow they will visit the Foreign and Commonwealth and Home Offices to deliver a petition.
    Hong-Kong-BNO-protest-UK-007.jpg
  • London, UK. 29 January, 2020. Hong Kong residents protest opposite Parliament to call for the reopening and broadening of the British National Overseas (BNO) passport scheme to Hong Kong citizens. Around 169,000 Hong Kong residents hold active BNO passports under the scheme from the period 1987-1997. Tomorrow they will visit the Foreign and Commonwealth and Home Offices to deliver a petition.
    Hong-Kong-BNO-protest-UK-002.jpg
  • London, UK. 29 January, 2020. Hong Kong residents protest opposite Parliament to call for the reopening and broadening of the British National Overseas (BNO) passport scheme to Hong Kong citizens. Around 169,000 Hong Kong residents hold active BNO passports under the scheme from the period 1987-1997. Tomorrow they will visit the Foreign and Commonwealth and Home Offices to deliver a petition.
    Hong-Kong-BNO-protest-UK-006.jpg
  • London, UK. 29 January, 2020. Hong Kong residents protest opposite Parliament to call for the reopening and broadening of the British National Overseas (BNO) passport scheme to Hong Kong citizens. Around 169,000 Hong Kong residents hold active BNO passports under the scheme from the period 1987-1997. Tomorrow they will visit the Foreign and Commonwealth and Home Offices to deliver a petition.
    Hong-Kong-BNO-protest-UK-003.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 22nd February, 2019. Around 60 campaigners from Reclaim the Power and Fuel Poverty Action dismantle a mock fracking site during a family-friendly protest outside the headquarters of Centrica to call on the British multinational energy and services company to cease its support for fracking operations through its partnership with shale gas company Cuadrilla Resources.
    Reclaim-Centrica-fracking-rig-041.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 22nd February, 2019. Rob Noyes of Fuel Poverty Action addresses around 60 campaigners from Reclaim the Power and Fuel Poverty Action who set up a mock fracking site during a family-friendly protest outside the headquarters of Centrica to call on the British multinational energy and services company to cease its support for fracking operations through its partnership with shale gas company Cuadrilla Resources.
    Reclaim-Centrica-fracking-rig-039.jpg
  • London, UK. 2nd February, 2019. Supporters of the Venezuelan government of Nicolás Maduro attend a protest organised by the Revolutionary Communist Group outside the BBC's Broadcasting House to highlight perceived British media bias in support of Juan Guaidó, the head of the National Venezuelan Assembly who had declared himself interim president of Venezuela the previous week.
    Pro-Maduro-Venezuela-BBC-008.jpg
  • London, UK. 2nd February, 2019. Supporters of the Venezuelan government of Nicolás Maduro attend a protest organised by the Revolutionary Communist Group outside the BBC's Broadcasting House to highlight perceived British media bias in support of Juan Guaidó, the head of the National Venezuelan Assembly who had declared himself interim president of Venezuela the previous week.
    Pro-Maduro-Venezuela-BBC-002.jpg
  • London, UK. 2nd February, 2019. Supporters of the Venezuelan government of Nicolás Maduro attend a protest organised by the Revolutionary Communist Group outside the BBC's Broadcasting House to highlight perceived British media bias in support of Juan Guaidó, the head of the National Venezuelan Assembly who had declared himself interim president of Venezuela the previous week.
    Pro-Maduro-Venezuela-BBC-001.jpg
  • London, UK. 2nd February, 2019. Supporters of the Venezuelan government of Nicolás Maduro attend a protest organised by the Revolutionary Communist Group outside the BBC's Broadcasting House to highlight perceived British media bias in support of Juan Guaidó, the head of the National Venezuelan Assembly who had declared himself interim president of Venezuela the previous week.
    Pro-Maduro-Venezuela-BBC-011.jpg
  • London, UK. 2nd February, 2019. Supporters of the Venezuelan government of Nicolás Maduro attend a protest organised by the Revolutionary Communist Group outside the BBC's Broadcasting House to highlight perceived British media bias in support of Juan Guaidó, the head of the National Venezuelan Assembly who had declared himself interim president of Venezuela the previous week.
    Pro-Maduro-Venezuela-BBC-009.jpg
  • London, UK. 2nd February, 2019. Supporters of the Venezuelan government of Nicolás Maduro attend a protest organised by the Revolutionary Communist Group outside the BBC's Broadcasting House to highlight perceived British media bias in support of Juan Guaidó, the head of the National Venezuelan Assembly who had declared himself interim president of Venezuela the previous week.
    Pro-Maduro-Venezuela-BBC-006.jpg
  • London, UK. 2nd February, 2019. Supporters of the Venezuelan government of Nicolás Maduro attend a protest organised by the Revolutionary Communist Group outside the BBC's Broadcasting House to highlight perceived British media bias in support of Juan Guaidó, the head of the National Venezuelan Assembly who had declared himself interim president of Venezuela the previous week.
    Pro-Maduro-Venezuela-BBC-007.jpg
  • London, UK. 2nd February, 2019. Supporters of the Venezuelan government of Nicolás Maduro attend a protest organised by the Revolutionary Communist Group outside the BBC's Broadcasting House to highlight perceived British media bias in support of Juan Guaidó, the head of the National Venezuelan Assembly who had declared himself interim president of Venezuela the previous week.
    Pro-Maduro-Venezuela-BBC-005.jpg
  • Shoppers leave a department store decorated for Christmas on 12th December 2021 in Windsor, United Kingdom. According to the Office of National Statistics (ONS), British households are spending more on goods and less on services as the Omicron coronavirus variant spreads.
    Christmas-shopping-Windsor-005.jpg
  • London, UK. 25th November, 2021. Poet Zena Edwards addresses climate activists outside the Royal Courts of Justice before an appeal on behalf of Plan B.Earth, Tim Crosland and three young British citizens (Marina Tricks, Adetola Onamade and Jerry Amokwandoh) with family in West Africa and the Americas who claim that their human rights are being breached by the UK government’s failure to act decisively on the climate crisis. The three students have asked for a judicial review of government actions to cut national carbon emissions and have argued that UK government action, or inaction, disregards their rights to life, family life and not be discriminated against under Arts 2, 8 and 14 of the Human Rights Act.
    Global-Majority-vs-UK-Gov-033.jpg
  • London, UK. 25th November, 2021. Tim Crosland, Director of Plan B.Earth, addresses climate activists outside the Royal Courts of Justice before an appeal on behalf of him, Plan B.Earth and three young British citizens (Marina Tricks, Adetola Onamade and Jerry Amokwandoh) with family in West Africa and the Americas who claim that their human rights are being breached by the UK government’s failure to act decisively on the climate crisis. The three students have asked for a judicial review of government actions to cut national carbon emissions and have argued that UK government action, or inaction, disregards their rights to life, family life and not be discriminated against under Arts 2, 8 and 14 of the Human Rights Act.
    Global-Majority-vs-UK-Gov-041.jpg
  • London, UK. 25th November, 2021. Tim Crosland, Director of Plan B.Earth, addresses climate activists outside the Royal Courts of Justice before an appeal on behalf of him, Plan B.Earth and three young British citizens (Marina Tricks, Adetola Onamade and Jerry Amokwandoh) with family in West Africa and the Americas who claim that their human rights are being breached by the UK government’s failure to act decisively on the climate crisis. The three students have asked for a judicial review of government actions to cut national carbon emissions and have argued that UK government action, or inaction, disregards their rights to life, family life and not be discriminated against under Arts 2, 8 and 14 of the Human Rights Act.
    Global-Majority-vs-UK-Gov-036.jpg
  • London, UK. 25th November, 2021. Adetola Onamade addresses climate activists outside the Royal Courts of Justice before an appeal on behalf of Plan B.Earth, Tim Crosland and three young British citizens (Marina Tricks, Onamade and Jerry Amokwandoh) with family in West Africa and the Americas who claim that their human rights are being breached by the UK government’s failure to act decisively on the climate crisis. The three students have asked for a judicial review of government actions to cut national carbon emissions and have argued that UK government action, or inaction, disregards their rights to life, family life and not be discriminated against under Arts 2, 8 and 14 of the Human Rights Act.
    Global-Majority-vs-UK-Gov-024.jpg
  • London, UK. 25th November, 2021. Adetola Onamade addresses climate activists outside the Royal Courts of Justice before an appeal on behalf of Plan B.Earth, Tim Crosland and three young British citizens (Marina Tricks, Onamade and Jerry Amokwandoh) with family in West Africa and the Americas who claim that their human rights are being breached by the UK government’s failure to act decisively on the climate crisis. The three students have asked for a judicial review of government actions to cut national carbon emissions and have argued that UK government action, or inaction, disregards their rights to life, family life and not be discriminated against under Arts 2, 8 and 14 of the Human Rights Act.
    Global-Majority-vs-UK-Gov-035.jpg
  • London, UK. 25th November, 2021. A speaker addresses climate activists outside the Royal Courts of Justice before an appeal on behalf of Plan B.Earth, Tim Crosland and three young British citizens (Marina Tricks, Adetola Onamade and Jerry Amokwandoh) with family in West Africa and the Americas who claim that their human rights are being breached by the UK government’s failure to act decisively on the climate crisis. The three students have asked for a judicial review of government actions to cut national carbon emissions and have argued that UK government action, or inaction, disregards their rights to life, family life and not be discriminated against under Arts 2, 8 and 14 of the Human Rights Act.
    Global-Majority-vs-UK-Gov-018.jpg
  • London, UK. 25th November, 2021. A speaker addresses climate activists outside the Royal Courts of Justice before an appeal on behalf of Plan B.Earth, Tim Crosland and three young British citizens (Marina Tricks, Adetola Onamade and Jerry Amokwandoh) with family in West Africa and the Americas who claim that their human rights are being breached by the UK government’s failure to act decisively on the climate crisis. The three students have asked for a judicial review of government actions to cut national carbon emissions and have argued that UK government action, or inaction, disregards their rights to life, family life and not be discriminated against under Arts 2, 8 and 14 of the Human Rights Act.
    Global-Majority-vs-UK-Gov-037.jpg
  • London, UK. 25th November, 2021. Adetola Onamade, Jerry Amokwandoh and Tim Crosland (l-r) pose outside the Royal Courts of Justice before an appeal on behalf of Plan B.Earth, Crosland and three young British citizens (Marina Tricks, Onamade and Amokwandoh) with family in West Africa and the Americas who claim that their human rights are being breached by the UK government’s failure to act decisively on the climate crisis. The three students have asked for a judicial review of government actions to cut national carbon emissions and have argued that UK government action, or inaction, disregards their rights to life, family life and not be discriminated against under Arts 2, 8 and 14 of the Human Rights Act.
    Global-Majority-vs-UK-Gov-017.jpg
  • London, UK. 25th November, 2021. Adetola Onamade, Jerry Amokwandoh and Tim Crosland (l-r) pose outside the Royal Courts of Justice before an appeal on behalf of Plan B.Earth, Crosland and three young British citizens (Marina Tricks, Onamade and Amokwandoh) with family in West Africa and the Americas who claim that their human rights are being breached by the UK government’s failure to act decisively on the climate crisis. The three students have asked for a judicial review of government actions to cut national carbon emissions and have argued that UK government action, or inaction, disregards their rights to life, family life and not be discriminated against under Arts 2, 8 and 14 of the Human Rights Act.
    Global-Majority-vs-UK-Gov-039.jpg
  • Weyman Bennett of Stand Up To Racism addresses climate activists outside the Royal Courts of Justice before an appeal on behalf of Plan B.Earth, Tim Crosland and three young British citizens (Marina Tricks, Adetola Onamade and Jerry Amokwandoh) with family in West Africa and the Americas who claim that their human rights are being breached by the UK government’s failure to act decisively on the climate crisis on 25th November 2021 in London, United Kingdom. The three students have asked for a judicial review of government actions to cut national carbon emissions and have argued that UK government action, or inaction, disregards their rights to life, family life and not be discriminated against under Arts 2, 8 and 14 of the Human Rights Act.
    Global-Majority-vs-UK-Gov-025.jpg
  • Tim Crosland, Director of Plan B.Earth, addresses climate activists outside the Royal Courts of Justice before an appeal on behalf of him, Plan B.Earth and three young British citizens (Marina Tricks, Adetola Onamade and Jerry Amokwandoh) with family in West Africa and the Americas who claim that their human rights are being breached by the UK government’s failure to act decisively on the climate crisis on 25th November 2021 in London, United Kingdom. The three students have asked for a judicial review of government actions to cut national carbon emissions and have argued that UK government action, or inaction, disregards their rights to life, family life and not be discriminated against under Arts 2, 8 and 14 of the Human Rights Act.
    Global-Majority-vs-UK-Gov-010.jpg
  • Jerry Amokwandoh addresses climate activists outside the Royal Courts of Justice before an appeal on behalf of Plan B.Earth, Tim Crosland and three young British citizens (Marina Tricks, Adetola Onamade and Amokwandoh) with family in West Africa and the Americas who claim that their human rights are being breached by the UK government’s failure to act decisively on the climate crisis on 25th November 2021 in London, United Kingdom. The three students have asked for a judicial review of government actions to cut national carbon emissions and have argued that UK government action, or inaction, disregards their rights to life, family life and not be discriminated against under Arts 2, 8 and 14 of the Human Rights Act.
    Global-Majority-vs-UK-Gov-028.jpg
  • Sulham, UK. 21st April, 2021. Bluebells in bloom in Sulham Woods. The UK is home to over half of the world’s population of bluebells, split between the native English or British bluebell (Hyacinthoides non-scripta), as in Sulham Woods, which is protected under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, and the invasive Spanish bluebell (Hyacinthoides hispanica).
    English-bluebells-Sulham-006.jpg
  • London, UK. 23rd March, 2019. Dr Chaand Nagpaul, Chair of the British Medical Association (BMA), addresses a million people taking part in a People's Vote rally in Parliament Square following a march from Park Lane.
    Peoples-Vote-march-rally-045.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 22nd February, 2019. Around 60 campaigners from Reclaim the Power and Fuel Poverty Action dismantle a mock fracking site during a family-friendly protest outside the headquarters of Centrica to call on the British multinational energy and services company to cease its support for fracking operations through its partnership with shale gas company Cuadrilla Resources.
    Reclaim-Centrica-fracking-rig-043.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 22nd February, 2019. Around 60 campaigners from Reclaim the Power and Fuel Poverty Action set up a mock fracking site during a family-friendly protest outside the headquarters of Centrica to call on the British multinational energy and services company to cease its support for fracking operations through its partnership with shale gas company Cuadrilla Resources.
    Reclaim-Centrica-fracking-rig-030.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 22nd February, 2019. Hamish Haynes of the Preston New Road campaign urges around 60 campaigners from Reclaim the Power and Fuel Poverty Action to wave to Centrica employees during a family-friendly protest outside the headquarters of Centrica to call on the British multinational energy and services company to cease its support for fracking operations through its partnership with shale gas company Cuadrilla Resources.
    Reclaim-Centrica-fracking-rig-028.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 22nd February, 2019. Around 60 campaigners from Reclaim the Power and Fuel Poverty Action set up a mock fracking site during a family-friendly protest outside the headquarters of Centrica to call on the British multinational energy and services company to cease its support for fracking operations through its partnership with shale gas company Cuadrilla Resources.
    Reclaim-Centrica-fracking-rig-036.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 22nd February, 2019. Around 60 campaigners from Reclaim the Power and Fuel Poverty Action set up a mock fracking site during a family-friendly protest outside the headquarters of Centrica to call on the British multinational energy and services company to cease its support for fracking operations through its partnership with shale gas company Cuadrilla Resources. Security guards and around 50 Thames Valley Police officers were deployed around the Centrica headquarters.
    Reclaim-Centrica-fracking-rig-031.jpg
  • Windsor, UK. 22nd February, 2019. Around 60 campaigners from Reclaim the Power and Fuel Poverty Action set up a mock fracking site during a family-friendly protest outside the headquarters of Centrica to call on the British multinational energy and services company to cease its support for fracking operations through its partnership with shale gas company Cuadrilla Resources. Security guards and around 50 Thames Valley Police officers were deployed around the Centrica headquarters.
    Reclaim-Centrica-fracking-rig-016.jpg
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