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  • A family walk past a large billboard ad informing the public about domestic abuse during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown which has seen a dramatic rise in domestic abuse cases in the UK, at Elephant & Castle, on 3rd July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s largest domestic abuse charity, Refuge, has reported a 700% increase in calls to its helpline in a single day.
    coronavirus_walworth-04-03-07-2020.jpg
  • Sexual abuse victims stand outside Westminster Abbey to show pictures of themselves as young people during Pope Benedict XVI's papal tour of Britain 2010, the first visit by a pontiff since 1982. Taxpayers footed the £10m bill for non-religious elements, which largely angered a nation still reeling from the financial crisis. Pope Benedict XVI is the head of the biggest Christian denomination in the world, some one billion Roman Catholics, or one in six people. In Britain there are about five million Catholics but only a quarter of Catholics regularly attend Sunday Mass and some churches have closed owing to spending cuts.
    pope_visit48-17-09-2010.jpg
  • Sexual abuse victims stand outside Westminster Abbey to show pictures of themselves as young people during Pope Benedict XVI's papal tour of Britain 2010, the first visit by a pontiff since 1982. Young girl in the picture and whose nails hold the Comunion portrait is Therese Albrecht from Chicago who was raped as an 8 year-old. Taxpayers footed the £10m bill for non-religious elements, which largely angered a nation still reeling from the financial crisis. Pope Benedict XVI is the head of the biggest Christian denomination in the world, some one billion Roman Catholics, or one in six people. In Britain there are about five million Catholics but only a quarter of Catholics regularly attend Sunday Mass and some churches have closed owing to spending cuts.
    pope_visit50-17-09-2010.jpg
  • Sexual abuse victims stand outside Westminster Abbey to show pictures of themselves as young people during Pope Benedict XVI's papal tour of Britain 2010, the first visit by a pontiff since 1982. Taxpayers footed the £10m bill for non-religious elements, which largely angered a nation still reeling from the financial crisis. Pope Benedict XVI is the head of the biggest Christian denomination in the world, some one billion Roman Catholics, or one in six people. In Britain there are about five million Catholics but only a quarter of Catholics regularly attend Sunday Mass and some churches have closed owing to spending cuts.
    pope_visit49-17-09-2010.jpg
  • A cop of the Evening Standard with the headline about Kevin Spacey's alleged sexual abuse and announcement of being gay, lies on a bench, on 30th October 2017, in the City of London, England.
    spacey_headline-02-30-10-2017.jpg
  • A cop of the Evening Standard with the headline about Kevin Spacey's alleged sexual abuse and announcement of being gay, lies on a bench, on 30th October 2017, in the City of London, England.
    spacey_headline-01-30-10-2017.jpg
  • During the UK's Coronavirus pandemic lockdown and on the day when a further 255 deaths occurred, bringing the official covid deaths to 37,048, it is expected that many shops and retail businesses will open again on 15th June and an abusive message about Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been written on plyboard of a closed business near Leicester Square in the capital, on 26th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_west_end-12-26-05-2020.jpg
  • During the UK's Coronavirus pandemic lockdown and on the day when a further 255 deaths occurred, bringing the official covid deaths to 37,048, it is expected that many shops and retail businesses will open again on 15th June and an abusive message about Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been written on plyboard of a closed business near Leicester Square in the capital, on 26th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_west_end-11-26-05-2020.jpg
  • Protesters gather in Hyde Park to voice opposition to Catholic thinking during Pope Benedict XVI's papal tour of Britain 2010, the first visit by a pontiff since 1982. The man calls the Pope the head of a group of people responsible ox sex abusers and the face of Pope Ratzinger looking demonic is on his placard. Taxpayers footed the £10m bill for non-religious elements, which largely angered a nation still reeling from the financial crisis. Pope Benedict XVI is the head of the biggest Christian denomination in the world, some one billion Roman Catholics, or one in six people. In Britain there are about five million Catholics but only a quarter of Catholics regularly attend Sunday Mass and some churches have closed owing to spending cuts.
    pope_visit142-18-09-2010.jpg
  • As normal life continues a man under the influence of alcohol lies unconscious in Hollywood near a poster of Charlie Chaplin.
    chaplin_drunk01-20-08-1998.jpg
  • A smart suited businessman walks past an unfortunate homeless man holding his worldly possessions.
    homeless_man3-18-10-2011.jpg
  • Nitrous oxide Mosa cream charger canisters lie in the gutter of a surburban south London street, on 2nd September 2019, in London, England. Nitrous oxide is illegal under the 2016 Psychoactive Substances Act but laughing gas is now the fourth most used drug in the UK, according to the Global Drug Survey 2015.
    nitrous_oxides-05-02-09-2019.jpg
  • A poverty-stricken homeless man looks down at the pavement while a smartly-dressed professional puts a finger on his location on a steel map (and his own position in life) - a scene of wealth and prosperity and the downtrodden in society. They are both in a place known as Bank Triangle in what is called the Square Mile, London's oldest district of banking and finance businesses.
    homeless_tourist01-17-05-1998.jpg
  • Workmen from Southwark Council clear away piles of street rubbish (garbage) left below a Stella Artois alcohol billboard.
    street_rubbish3-10-10-2011.jpg
  • Nitrous oxide Mosa cream charger canisters lie in the gutter of a surburban south London street, on 2nd September 2019, in London, England. Nitrous oxide is illegal under the 2016 Psychoactive Substances Act but laughing gas is now the fourth most used drug in the UK, according to the Global Drug Survey 2015.
    nitrous_oxides-09-02-09-2019.jpg
  • Nitrous oxide Mosa cream charger canisters lie in the gutter of a surburban south London street, on 2nd September 2019, in London, England. Nitrous oxide is illegal under the 2016 Psychoactive Substances Act but laughing gas is now the fourth most used drug in the UK, according to the Global Drug Survey 2015.
    nitrous_oxides-08-02-09-2019.jpg
  • Nitrous oxide Mosa cream charger canisters lie in the gutter of a surburban south London street, on 2nd September 2019, in London, England. Nitrous oxide is illegal under the 2016 Psychoactive Substances Act but laughing gas is now the fourth most used drug in the UK, according to the Global Drug Survey 2015.
    nitrous_oxides-07-02-09-2019.jpg
  • Nitrous oxide Mosa cream charger canisters lie in the gutter of a surburban south London street, on 2nd September 2019, in London, England. Nitrous oxide is illegal under the 2016 Psychoactive Substances Act but laughing gas is now the fourth most used drug in the UK, according to the Global Drug Survey 2015.
    nitrous_oxides-04-02-09-2019.jpg
  • Nitrous oxide Mosa cream charger canisters lie in the gutter of a surburban south London street, on 2nd September 2019, in London, England. Nitrous oxide is illegal under the 2016 Psychoactive Substances Act but laughing gas is now the fourth most used drug in the UK, according to the Global Drug Survey 2015.
    nitrous_oxides-03-02-09-2019.jpg
  • Nitrous oxide Mosa cream charger canisters lie in the gutter of a surburban south London street, on 2nd September 2019, in London, England. Nitrous oxide is illegal under the 2016 Psychoactive Substances Act but laughing gas is now the fourth most used drug in the UK, according to the Global Drug Survey 2015.
    nitrous_oxides-02-02-09-2019.jpg
  • Nitrous oxide Mosa cream charger canisters lie in the gutter of a surburban south London street, on 2nd September 2019, in London, England. Nitrous oxide is illegal under the 2016 Psychoactive Substances Act but laughing gas is now the fourth most used drug in the UK, according to the Global Drug Survey 2015.
    nitrous_oxides-01-02-09-2019.jpg
  • An unwanted necktie lies still knotted in a central London street.
    abandoned_tie01-22-11-2012.jpg
  • Landscape in London street of street rubbish (garbage) left below a Stella Artois alcohol billboard.
    street_rubbish1-10-10-2011.jpg
  • Sale sign and poster for alcoholic drinks like bottles of beer and glass of wine in a London off-license window.
    alcohol_sale1-26-May-2011.jpg
  • A distressed-looking patient awaits treatment in the A&E department of the Royal London Hospital Whitechapel
    nhs_hospital09-07-06-1998.jpg
  • Nitrous oxide Mosa cream charger canisters lie in the gutter of a surburban south London street, on 2nd September 2019, in London, England. Nitrous oxide is illegal under the 2016 Psychoactive Substances Act but laughing gas is now the fourth most used drug in the UK, according to the Global Drug Survey 2015.
    nitrous_oxides-06-02-09-2019.jpg
  • Piles of rubbish is stacked beneath a threatre poster for a west end production, near a theatre box office.
    soho_rubbish1-20-10-2011.jpg
  • Paramedics assist a bloodied man under the influence of alcohol, picked up by Atlanta police after a street altercation.
    paramedic_help01-10-11-1995.jpg
  • English writer, Jeffrey Barnard drinks at lunchtime in his favoured Coach And Horses pub, in the summer of 1990 in Soho, London, England. Jeffrey Bernard (1932 – 1997) was a British journalist, best known for his weekly column "Low Life" in The Spectator magazine, and also notorious for a feckless and chaotic career and life of alcohol abuse. He became associated with the louche and bohemian atmosphere that existed in London's Soho district. He was later immortalised in the comical play Jeffrey Bernard Is Unwell by Keith Waterhouse.
    jeffrey_barnard-01-06-1990.jpg
  • A British army Parachute Regiment recruit is suffering from exhaustion on a rigorous assault course conducted over rough terrain and into water. He emerges dripping from the water jump and back into the forest accompanied by instructors who shout encouragement and abuse to get the candidate to a successful stage of this test. This forms part of the 14-week long Pegasus (P) Company selection programme that recruits wanting to join the British Army's elite Parachute Regiment, held regularly at Catterick army barracks in Yorkshire, need to pass (with other tests) before earning the right to wear the esteemed maroon beret.
    paras_course-30-07-1996.jpg
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