Suzanne Lee Photographer

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  • Men gather to buy and sell cattle at the weekly cattle market that happens in Birohi, a town close to the India-Bangladesh Border, in Nadia district, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. The larger cows, priced at almost INR 10,000 (USD 190) each are often smuggled across the porous borders by wading across the rivers to be sold at a profit in Bangladesh. Recently, a torture video of a captured cattle smuggler surfaced on the internet, provoking outrage at the high-handedness of the Indian Border Security Force. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Cattle-Marke...jpg
  • Men gather to buy and sell cattle at the weekly cattle market that happens in Birohi, a town close to the India-Bangladesh Border, in Nadia district, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. The larger cows, priced at almost INR 10,000 (USD 190) each are often smuggled across the porous borders by wading across the rivers to be sold at a profit in Bangladesh. Recently, a torture video of a captured cattle smuggler surfaced on the internet, provoking outrage at the high-handedness of the Indian Border Security Force. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Cattle-Marke...jpg
  • (NO BYLINE: PHOTOGRAPHED IN RESTRICTED AREAS WITHOUT GOVT. PERMISSION) The India-Bangladesh Border fence, in Nadia district, Ranaghat, North 24 Parganas, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. On the left of the fence, villagers live in the 'no mans zone'. People and products like cows are often smuggled across the porous borders by wading across the rivers and jumping the fences. Recently, a woman was shot dead by the Indian Border Security Force as she was climbing over a fence, and was left on the fence for 3 days.
    Suzanne20120119-Porous-Borders-0012.jpg
  • Overview of a river in the India-Bangladesh Border area, in Nadia district, Ranaghat, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. People and products like cows are often smuggled across the porous borders by wading across the rivers. Recently, a torture video of a captured cattle smuggler surfaced on the internet, provoking outrage at the high-handedness of the Indian Border Security Force. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Porous-Borders-0001.jpg
  • Men gather to buy and sell cattle at the weekly cattle market that happens in Birohi, a town close to the India-Bangladesh Border, in Nadia district, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. The larger cows, priced at almost INR 10,000 (USD 190) each are often smuggled across the porous borders by wading across the rivers to be sold at a profit in Bangladesh. Recently, a torture video of a captured cattle smuggler surfaced on the internet, provoking outrage at the high-handedness of the Indian Border Security Force. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Cattle-Marke...jpg
  • Amin Hussain (center with money in hand), discuss with other men who gather to buy and sell cattle at the weekly cattle market that happens in Birohi, a town close to the India-Bangladesh Border, in Nadia district, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. The larger cows, priced at almost INR 10,000 (USD 190) each are often smuggled across the porous borders by wading across the rivers to be sold at a profit in Bangladesh. Recently, a torture video of a captured cattle smuggler surfaced on the internet, provoking outrage at the high-handedness of the Indian Border Security Force. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Cattle-Marke...jpg
  • Men gather to buy and sell cattle at the weekly cattle market that happens in Birohi, a town close to the India-Bangladesh Border, in Nadia district, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. The larger cows, priced at almost INR 10,000 (USD 190) each are often smuggled across the porous borders by wading across the rivers to be sold at a profit in Bangladesh. Recently, a torture video of a captured cattle smuggler surfaced on the internet, provoking outrage at the high-handedness of the Indian Border Security Force. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Cattle-Marke...jpg
  • (NO BYLINE: PHOTOGRAPHED IN RESTRICTED AREAS WITHOUT GOVT. PERMISSION) A villager pushes his bicycle as he leaves his home in the 'no mans land' zone on the left of the fence of the India-Bangladesh Border fence, in Nadia district, Ranaghat, North 24 Parganas, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. On the left of the fence, villagers live in the 'no mans zone'. People and products like cows are often smuggled across the porous borders by wading across the rivers and jumping the fences. Recently, a woman was shot dead by the Indian Border Security Force as she was climbing over a fence, and was left on the fence for 3 days.
    Suzanne20120119-Porous-Borders-0011.jpg
  • Overview of a river in the India-Bangladesh Border area, in Nadia district, Ranaghat, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. People and products like cows are often smuggled across the porous borders by wading across the rivers. Recently, a torture video of a captured cattle smuggler surfaced on the internet, provoking outrage at the high-handedness of the Indian Border Security Force. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Porous-Borders-0006.jpg
  • Men load large cows onto a truck at the weekly cattle market that happens in Birohi, a town close to the India-Bangladesh Border, in Nadia district, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. The larger cows, priced at almost INR 10,000 (USD 190) each are often smuggled across the porous borders by wading across the rivers to be sold at a profit in Bangladesh. Recently, a torture video of a captured cattle smuggler surfaced on the internet, provoking outrage at the high-handedness of the Indian Border Security Force. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Cattle-Marke...jpg
  • Men gather to buy and sell cattle at the weekly cattle market that happens in Birohi, a town close to the India-Bangladesh Border, in Nadia district, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. The larger cows, priced at almost INR 10,000 (USD 190) each are often smuggled across the porous borders by wading across the rivers to be sold at a profit in Bangladesh. Recently, a torture video of a captured cattle smuggler surfaced on the internet, provoking outrage at the high-handedness of the Indian Border Security Force. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Cattle-Marke...jpg
  • Men gather to buy and sell cattle at the weekly cattle market that happens in Birohi, a town close to the India-Bangladesh Border, in Nadia district, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. The larger cows, priced at almost INR 10,000 (USD 190) each are often smuggled across the porous borders by wading across the rivers to be sold at a profit in Bangladesh. Recently, a torture video of a captured cattle smuggler surfaced on the internet, provoking outrage at the high-handedness of the Indian Border Security Force. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Cattle-Marke...jpg
  • Men gather to buy and sell cattle at the weekly cattle market that happens in Birohi, a town close to the India-Bangladesh Border, in Nadia district, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. The larger cows, priced at almost INR 10,000 (USD 190) each are often smuggled across the porous borders by wading across the rivers to be sold at a profit in Bangladesh. Recently, a torture video of a captured cattle smuggler surfaced on the internet, provoking outrage at the high-handedness of the Indian Border Security Force. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Cattle-Marke...jpg
  • Men gather to buy and sell cattle at the weekly cattle market that happens in Birohi, a town close to the India-Bangladesh Border, in Nadia district, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. The larger cows, priced at almost INR 10,000 (USD 190) each are often smuggled across the porous borders by wading across the rivers to be sold at a profit in Bangladesh. Recently, a torture video of a captured cattle smuggler surfaced on the internet, provoking outrage at the high-handedness of the Indian Border Security Force. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Cattle-Marke...jpg
  • Border Roads Organisation road workers sweep the highway against the backdrop scenery of Nubra Valley, Ladakh on 4th June 2009. The valley of Ladakh is located in the Indian Himalayas, in the northern state of Jammu and Kashmir. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    SLee20090604-Nubra_Valley-1774.jpg
  • Desert village women and girls fetching water in the Thar desert near Jaisalmer, Rajasthan, India. The Thar desert borders Pakistan and the Sam Sand Dunes is a popular tourist attraction..Photo by Suzanne Lee
    SLee20050928-Jaisalmer_Scenes-0091.JPG
  • Camels graze in the Thar desert near Jaisalmer, Rajasthan, India. The Thar desert borders Pakistan and the Sam Sand Dunes is a popular tourist attraction..Photo by Suzanne Lee
    SLee20050928-Jaisalmer_Scenes-0025.JPG
  • Desert village women and girls fetching water in the Thar desert near Jaisalmer, Rajasthan, India. The Thar desert borders Pakistan and the Sam Sand Dunes is a popular tourist attraction..Photo by Suzanne Lee
    SLee20050928-Jaisalmer_Scenes-0078.JPG
  • Camels and their owners in the Thar desert near Jaisalmer, Rajasthan, India. The Thar desert borders Pakistan and the Sam Sand Dunes is a popular tourist attraction..Photo by Suzanne Lee
    SLee20050928-Jaisalmer_Scenes-0074.JPG
  • Camels and their owners in the Thar desert near Jaisalmer, Rajasthan, India. The Thar desert borders Pakistan and the Sam Sand Dunes is a popular tourist attraction..Photo by Suzanne Lee
    SLee20050928-Jaisalmer_Scenes-0052.JPG
  • A desert village man takes a rest while his camel drinks at an oasis in the Thar desert near Jaisalmer, Rajasthan, India. The Thar desert borders Pakistan and the Sam Sand Dunes is a popular tourist attraction..Photo by Suzanne Lee
    SLee20050928-Jaisalmer_Scenes-0282.JPG
  • Camels and their owners in the Thar desert near Jaisalmer, Rajasthan, India. The Thar desert borders Pakistan and the Sam Sand Dunes is a popular tourist attraction..Photo by Suzanne Lee
    SLee20050928-Jaisalmer_Scenes-0053.JPG
  • A group of road workers sit down to eat against the backdrop scenery of Nubra Valley, Ladakh on 4th June 2009 while driving from Leh town to Hundar, Diskit, Sumur and Panamik. On the way, drive across the world's highest motorable pass, Khardung La, 5505m. The valley of Ladakh is located in the Indian Himalayas, in the northern state of Jammu and Kashmir. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    SLee20090604-Nubra_Valley-2260.jpg
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    Suzanne-Kashmir_05.jpg
  • (L-R: (blue) Saraswati Saha, 84; unnamed; and (white) Kamla Das, 90) Three elderly women who were the original refugees of The Partition recall being brought to Cooper's Camp on trains and trucks as they gather outside their homes in Cooper's Camp, Nadia district, Ranaghat, North 24 Parganas, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. "The government will neither eat us nor spit us out." says Kamla Das. "They dropped us off here (in 1947) and I'm still here!" Over 60 years after the bloody creation of Bangladesh in 1947, refugees who fled what was then known as West Pakistan to India still live as refugees, raising their children as refugees, and standing in line for government handouts..Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Coopers-Camp...jpg
  • (L-R: (blue) Saraswati Saha, 84; unnamed; and (white) Kamla Das, 90) Three elderly women who were the original refugees of The Partition recall being brought to Cooper's Camp on trains and trucks as they gather outside their homes in Cooper's Camp, Nadia district, Ranaghat, North 24 Parganas, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. "The government will neither eat us nor spit us out." says Kamla Das. "They dropped us off here (in 1947) and I'm still here!" Over 60 years after the bloody creation of Bangladesh in 1947, refugees who fled what was then known as West Pakistan to India still live as refugees, raising their children as refugees, and standing in line for government handouts..Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Coopers-Camp...jpg
  • (L-R: (blue) Saraswati Saha, 84; unnamed; and (white) Kamla Das, 90) Three elderly women who were the original refugees of The Partition recall being brought to Cooper's Camp on trains and trucks as they gather outside their homes in Cooper's Camp, Nadia district, Ranaghat, North 24 Parganas, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. "The government will neither eat us nor spit us out." says Kamla Das. "They dropped us off here (in 1947) and I'm still here!" Over 60 years after the bloody creation of Bangladesh in 1947, refugees who fled what was then known as West Pakistan to India still live as refugees, raising their children as refugees, and standing in line for government handouts..Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Coopers-Camp...jpg
  • (L-R: (blue) Saraswati Saha, 84; unnamed; (white) Kamla Das, 90; (green) Purnima Mandol, 36; and unnamed) Elderly women who were the original refugees of The Partition gather and discuss their unfortunate situation outside their homes in Cooper's Camp, Nadia district, Ranaghat, North 24 Parganas, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. "They dropped us off here (over six decades ago) and I'm still here!" says Kamla Das. "We would never want to go back to Bangladesh." Over 60 years after the bloody creation of Bangladesh in 1947, refugees who fled what was then known as West Pakistan to India still live as refugees, standing in line for government handouts..Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Coopers-Camp...jpg
  • (L-R: Purnima Mandol, 36, in green; Saraswati Saha, 84, blue shawl; and Kamla Das, 90, white sari) Refugees of The Partition gather and discuss their unfortunate situation outside their homes in Cooper's Camp, Nadia district, Ranaghat, North 24 Parganas, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. "I was born here, but I spent my entire life growing up as a refugee. I grew up standing in line for government handouts." says Purnima angrily. Over 60 years after the bloody creation of Bangladesh in 1947, refugees who fled what was then known as West Pakistan to India still live as refugees. .Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Coopers-Camp...jpg
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    SLee20090508-kashmir-1534.jpg
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    SLee20090507-kashmir-1392.JPG
  • Photos of the Drukpa Lineage Head Lama of Hemis and Ladakh on the Pad Yatra, arriving in Shyang for the final night of camping on 30th June 2009 before concluding the one and a half month long trek to Hemis from Manali. The trek was joined by over 600 people including nuns, monks, foreigners and other buddhist followers..Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne-Himalayas-Drukpa-Padyatra_07.JPG
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    SLee20090608-Srinagar_Travel-0008.jpg
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    SLee20090610-Srinagar-0277.jpg
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    SLee20090508-kashmir-1507.jpg
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    SLee20090506-kashmir-0813.jpg
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    slee20090504-Pano-Srinagar.jpg
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    Suzanne-Kashmir_02.JPG
  • Saraswati Saha, 84, a refugee of The Partition discusses her situation with other elderly women in Cooper's Camp, Nadia district, Ranaghat, North 24 Parganas, West Bengal, India, on 19th January, 2012. She vividly remembers being brought to the refugee camp first by train and then truck. "My daughter has died and I'm still here," she says over and over again. Over 60 years after the bloody creation of Bangladesh in 1947, refugees who fled what was then known as West Pakistan to India still live as refugees, standing in line for government handouts..Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120119-Borders-Coopers-Camp...jpg
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    SLee20090506-kashmir-0974.jpg
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    SLee20090610-Srinagar-0237.jpg
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    SLee20090610-Srinagar-0226.jpg
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    SLee20090506-kashmir-0842.jpg
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    SLee20090506-kashmir-0556.jpg
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    Suzanne-Kashmir_03.jpg
  • A quick glimpse of the extended conflict between the Indian administration and the separatists of Kashmir (India).
    Suzanne-Kashmir_04.jpg
  • The resident caretaker monk is seen doing his morning chores in the main prayer room of the Chambra Buddhist monastery located at the 'forbidden' bridge near the border of Pakistan, in Hundar, Nubra Valley, Ladakh on 5th June 2009. The valley of Ladakh is located in the Indian Himalayas, in the northern state of Jammu and Kashmir. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    SLee20090605-Nubra_Valley-2887.jpg
  • Food vendors sell an array of Indian and imported snacks, through the grilled windows of the sleeper class coach to train passengers of the Himsagar Express 6318 as it stops for 5 minutes at Coimbatore Junction stn. at the border of Tamil Nadu on 9th July 2009.. .6318 / Himsagar Express, India's longest single train journey, spanning 3720 kms, going from the mountains (Hima) to the seas (Sagar), from Jammu and Kashmir state of the Indian Himalayas to Kanyakumari, which is the southern most tip of India...Photo by Suzanne Lee / for The National
    SLee20090709-Jammu-Cape-1507.jpg
  • Train passengers on the Himsagar Express 6318 as it passes through the border of Madhya Pradesh to Maharashtra on 8th July 2009.. .6318 / Himsagar Express, India's longest single train journey, spanning 3720 kms, going from the mountains (Hima) to the seas (Sagar), from Jammu and Kashmir state of the Indian Himalayas to Kanyakumari, which is the southern most tip of India...Photo by Suzanne Lee / for The National
    SLee20090708-Jammu-Cape-0866.jpg
  • A woman walks along the elevated path bordering the coastline and the village in Gosaba island, Sundarban, West Bengal, India, on 18th January, 2012. Tigers have been known to swim, sometimes underwater, from the sanctuary (as seen on the horizon) to the village to hunt humans. A successful Royal Bengal tiger breeding program has increased their numbers but decreased the number of husbands. There are now an estimated 3,000 widows in the villages where their husbands, have been killed by tigers. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120118-Tiger-Widows-Sundarb...jpg
  • Honey-gatherers walk along a path bordering the coastline and the water-logged farmlands in Gosaba island, Sundarban, West Bengal, India, on 18th January, 2012. After Cyclone Aila struck the Sundarbans in 2009, locals still struggle with logged salt water that renders fertile farming land almost unusable. Due to this loss of livelihood, many have had to turn to fishing or wild honey gathering in the forest reserve, exposing themselves to becoming prey for the sanctuary's booming tiger population. A successful Royal Bengal tiger breeding program has increased their numbers but decreased the number of husbands. There are now an estimated 3,000 widows in the villages where their husbands, have been killed by tigers. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120118-Tiger-Widows-Sundarb...jpg
  • Honey-gatherers walk along a path bordering the coastline and the water-logged farmlands in Gosaba island, Sundarban, West Bengal, India, on 18th January, 2012. After Cyclone Aila struck the Sundarbans in 2009, locals still struggle with logged salt water that renders fertile farming land almost unusable. Due to this loss of livelihood, many have had to turn to fishing or wild honey gathering in the forest reserve, exposing themselves to becoming prey for the sanctuary's booming tiger population. A successful Royal Bengal tiger breeding program has increased their numbers but decreased the number of husbands. There are now an estimated 3,000 widows in the villages where their husbands, have been killed by tigers. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The National (online byline: Photo by Szu for The National)
    Suzanne20120118-Tiger-Widows-Sundarb...jpg
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