Suzanne Lee Photographer

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  • Female drivers point out locations as a map reading class is held in Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0317.JPG
  • Ekta Yadav aged 28 on the streets of Delhi on 30th March 2010.<br />
These female drivers were part of a program by Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0109.JPG
  • Graduating female drivers sit for a theory test in Azad Foundation.<br />
<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0423.JPG
  • Female drivers point out locations as a map reading class is held in Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0368.JPG
  • Ekta aged 28 (left) and Mamta (right) aged 26 on the streets of Delhi on 30th March 2010.<br />
These female drivers were part of a program by Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0078.JPG
  • Ekta Yadav aged 28 on the streets of Delhi on 30th March 2010.<br />
These female drivers were part of a program by Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0047.JPG
  • Ekta Yadav aged 28 on the streets of Delhi on 30th March 2010.<br />
These female drivers were part of a program by Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0042.JPG
  • Ekta Yadav aged 28 (right) and Mamta aged 26 (left) pose for a photo on 30th March 2010 in Radiant Limousine compounds.<br />
These female drivers were part of a program by Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0040.JPG
  • Ekta Yadav aged 28 (left) and Mamta aged 26 pose for a photo on 30th March 2010 in Radiant Limousine compounds.<br />
These female drivers were part of a program by Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0035.JPG
  • Graduating female drivers sit for a theory test in Azad Foundation.<br />
<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0448.JPG
  • Graduating female drivers sit for a theory test in Azad Foundation.<br />
<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0418.JPG
  • Graduating female drivers sit for a theory test in Azad Foundation.<br />
<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0405.JPG
  • Female drivers point out locations as a map reading class is held in Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0329.JPG
  • Female drivers point out locations as a map reading class is held in Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0327.JPG
  • Ekta aged 28 (right) and Mamta (left) aged 26 on the streets of Delhi on 30th March 2010.<br />
These female drivers were part of a program by Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0135.JPG
  • Ekta aged 28 (leftt) and Mamta (right) aged 26 pose for a photo on 30th March 2010 with their driving licences and chaffeur cards.<br />
These female drivers were part of a program by Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0127.JPG
  • Ekta Yadav, aged 28, pose for a photo on 30th March 2010 with her driving licence, the only proof of identity she has.<br />
These female drivers were part of a program by Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0117.JPG
  • Ekta Yadav, aged 28, pose for a photo on 30th March 2010 with her driving licence, the only proof of identity she has.<br />
These female drivers were part of a program by Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0114.JPG
  • Mamta, aged 26 on the streets of Delhi on 30th March 2010.<br />
These female drivers were part of a program by Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0059.JPG
  • Ekta Yadav aged 28 on the streets of Delhi on 30th March 2010.<br />
These female drivers were part of a program by Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0053.JPG
  • Graduating female drivers sit for a theory test in Azad Foundation.<br />
<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0444.JPG
  • Graduating female drivers sit for a theory test in Azad Foundation.<br />
<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0433.JPG
  • Ekta Yadav, aged 28, pose for a photo on 30th March 2010 with her driving licence and chaffeur card.<br />
These female drivers were part of a program by Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0123.JPG
  • Mamta, aged 26 on the streets of Delhi on 30th March 2010.<br />
These female drivers were part of a program by Azad Foundation.<br />
Currently training their 4th batch of students, Azad Foundation was set up by Meenu Vadera (Executive Director) in New Delhi, India, to train Indian women in driving services. Upon completion, these women work as personal drivers for a period of time before they upgrade their driving licences to commercial licences, allowing them to drive taxis. With this program, Azad aims to empower Indian women including those previously abused or trafficked, while making Delhi a safer place for women travelling in public transport. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Panos London
    Suzanne20100330-Azad-Foundation-0089.JPG
  • Collection centre owner Ganesh Kumar Singh (in white shirt), 30, weighs and sorts out vegetables that other producer group farmers bring in to be sold to his collection centre in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Ganesh and his wife, Asha Devi, a producer group member, rent out a part of their house to be used as a collection centre for Producer Group farmers. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0829.jpg
  • Collection centre workers grade vegetables and pack them for sale in the collection centre in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0820.jpg
  • Women vegetable farmers, all members of a Farmer's Producer Group, harvest cauliflower vegetables in their fields in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0400.jpg
  • Vegetable farmer Kajal Devi, 20, a member of a Farmer's Producer Group, tends to her chilli plants in her farm in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 26th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161026-TNS-Bihar-0208.jpg
  • A sticker decorates the wall of the bed where Chinta (name changed), aged 18, sleeps for her temporary stay in Nirmal Bhavan, a rehabilitation home for trafficked and rescued girls run by Tearfund partner NGO Oasis India, in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India on 20 February 2014. Given away by her parents who were in a large amount of debt, Chinta was given to a woman who forced her to work in her house, and then forced her in to prostitution. Often she saw 10 customers a day, but if there was no work she was hung from a ceiling fan and beaten. Photo by Suzanne Lee/Tearfund
    20022014-tearfund-tamsingreig-0479.JPG
  • Tamsin Greig, an actress from the United Kingdom, speaks with Chinta (name changed), aged 18, about her past experiences as they sit in Nirmal Bhavan, a rehabilitation home for trafficked and rescued girls run by Tearfund partner NGO Oasis India, in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India on 20 February 2014. Given away by her parents who were in a large amount of debt, Chinta was given to a woman who forced her to work in her house, and then forced her in to prostitution. Often she saw 10 customers a day, but if there was no work she was hung from a ceiling fan and beaten. Photo by Suzanne Lee/Tearfund
    20022014-tearfund-tamsingreig-0359.JPG
  • Tamsin Greig, an actress from the United Kingdom, looks around the shelter home as she speaks with Oasis staff in Nirmal Bhavan, a rehabilitation home for trafficked and rescued girls run by Tearfund partner NGO Oasis India, in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India on 20 February 2014. Photo by Suzanne Lee/Tearfund
    20022014-tearfund-tamsingreig-0336.JPG
  • A child sits beside a baby's tomb in front of Rose Marie Ferrer's home, built over graves, in an inhabited cemetery in Paranaque City, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 18 January 2013. A candle, bought from Rose, burns on the tomb, after the deceased child's parents had come to remember the child on its birthday on 18 January 2004. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
    suzanne20130118-scuk-myleene-philipp...JPG
  • Irma Asoro, 29, holds her 4-month-old baby, Rashed James, who she has been feeding formula since he was 2 days old, in her rented home in an urban slum in Paranaque, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. She thinks that formula is better for her baby even though the cost of formula and bottled water costs her more than double her rent, and she has to borrow from family and friends to pay for it. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
    suzanne20130119-scuk-myleene-philipp...JPG
  • Myleene Klass (left), a celebrity from the UK, meets single mother Josephine Savares, 18, as she holds her 1st child Jihan, aged 4 months, in her neighbourhood, in Paranaque City, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. After watching advertisements, Josephine had decided to feed her baby formula during her pregnancy and had no idea that her father had to pay such a high price for it. Her family goes without food some days, and her siblings have had to stop school in order to afford the formula. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
    suzanne20130119-scuk-myleene-philipp...JPG
  • Myleene Klass, a high profile UK celebrity, TV host, violinist and pianist, visits Arlene, 34, a new mother and Hans, her 1 day old baby, who has been breastfed since birth, in the Florencio V. Memorial Hospital in Paranaque city, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
    suzanne20130119-scuk-myleene-philipp...JPG
  • Patients wait around to see the doctors at the Akanksha Infertility Center in Anand, Gujarat, India on 12th December 2012.  Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie-Claire France
    suzanne20121209-mc-surrogacy-3224.JPG
  • Barbara, from Canada, wakes her baby as her surrogate, Idan, comes to breastfeed the baby in her hotel room near the Akanksha Clinic in Anand, Gujarat, India on 11th December 2012. Barbara, from Canada, had come to receive him at his birth from Idan, her surrogate, and is waiting for her husband to come and join her in Anand, while she continues to hire Idan to breastfeed her son so that he gets the best start in life. Idan's husband sends pumped breast milk to Barbara's hotel in the evenings when Idan cannot come personally. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie-Claire France
    suzanne20121209-mc-surrogacy-2218.JPG
  • Archana, an ex-surrogate, looks into her accounts, as she continues to work with Dr. Nayana Patel catering specially prepared tiffin meals to the surrogates and Akanksha IVF and Surrogacy clinic staff, which she prepares in her house with her family in Anand, Gujarat, India on 11th December 2012. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie-Claire France
    suzanne20121209-mc-surrogacy-1491.JPG
  • Kantibhai Solanki (center), 38, looks out to their farm and buffalo at their house, built using the money his wife, Sharda made from doing 2 surrogacies, in Anand, Gujarat, India on 9th December 2012. While Kantibhai works as a security guard earning 5000 rupees per month, Sharda, 36, had made hundreds of thousands with 2 surrogacies that she did with Akanksha Clinic, which she used to buy land, buffaloes, build washrooms in her house and extend the house. She had also saved a substantial amount to fund her 3 children's educations and make sure that her 2 daughters will find husbands to match their current status. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie-Claire France
    suzanne20121209-mc-surrogacy-0428.JPG
  • Mass protesters hold up placards and chant their demands for justice and better safety for women after a brutal sexual assault on a young medical student  sparked women, men and youth to take to the streets, fed up with government and police lack of interest in making Delhi a safer place for women, and swarming a long stretch all the way from India Gate to Raisina Hill, at the gates of the Parliament, in Delhi, India on 22nd December 2012. The assaulted medical student was gang raped in a moving bus on 16th December 2012 and violated with an iron rod, and her male chaperone brutally beaten with the same rod. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Marie Claire France
    suzanne20121222-mc-protest-gangrape-...JPG
  • Shanti Adivasi (in yellow saree), 52, sells a few copies of this week's newspapers to villagers in Manikpur, Chitrakoot, Uttar Pradesh, India on 6th December 2012. Shanti used to be a wood gatherer, working with her parents since she was 3, and later carrying up to 100 kg of wood walking 12km from the dry jungle hills to her home to repack the wood which sold for 3 rupees per kg. After learning to read and write in an 8 month welfare course, at age 32, she became a reporter, joining Khabar Lahariya newspaper since its establishment in 2002, and making about 9000 rupees per month, supporting her family of 14 as the sole breadwinner. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Marie Claire France.
    suzanne20121204-mc-rural-journos-192...JPG
  • Shanti Adivasi (in yellow saree), 52, speaks with a group of illiterate women, as they wait to attend a group reading of this week's newspapers in their village in Manikpur, Chitrakoot, Uttar Pradesh, India on 6th December 2012. Shanti used to be a wood gatherer, working with her parents since she was 3, and later carrying up to 100 kg of wood walking 12km from the dry jungle hills to her home to repack the wood which sold for 3 rupees per kg. After learning to read and write in an 8 month welfare course, at age 32, she became a reporter, joining Khabar Lahariya newspaper since its establishment in 2002, and making about 9000 rupees per month, supporting her family of 14 as the sole breadwinner. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Marie Claire France.
    suzanne20121204-mc-rural-journos-181...JPG
  • Chanda Devi, 30, the Director of a Producer Company with over 1900 members, poses for a portrait outside the company building in Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-1030.jpg
  • Chanda Devi, 30, the Director of a Producer Company with over 1900 members, poses for a portrait outside the company building in Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-1023.jpg
  • Jeevika Field Associate Jagganath Prasad (centre), reports after returning from the local markets with a top up of vegetables that is needed by the collection centre to be sold to their buyers in Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0941.jpg
  • A producer group farmer holds a handful of vegetables at the collection centre in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0907.jpg
  • A producer group farmer holds a handful of vegetables at the collection centre in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0902.jpg
  • Technoserve Market Linkage Manager Rajiv Shinde (in dark blue t-shirt) supervises as Jeevika Field Associate Raju Kumar (in pink shirt) keeps purchasing records and issues receipts to producer group farmers selling vegetables to the collection centre in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0699.jpg
  • Collection centre owner and farmer Asha Devi (in red blouse), 23, sorts through vegetables brought in by other producer group farmers to be sold to the collection centre in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Asha Devi and her husband Ganesh Kumar Singh, 30, rent out a part of their house to be used as a collection centre for Producer Group farmers. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0683.jpg
  • Fresh vegetables are packed into crates to be delivered to buyers from the collection centre in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0646.jpg
  • Collection centre owners and farmers Asha Devi, 23, and her husband Ganesh Kumar Singh, 30, sort through vegetables brought in by other producer group farmers to be sold to the collection centre in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. They rent out a part of their house to be used as a collection centre for Producer Group farmers. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161027-TNS-Bihar-0641.jpg
  • Collection centre owner and farmer Asha Devi (in red blouse), 23, sorts through vegetables brought in by other producer group farmers to be sold to the collection centre in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Asha Devi and her husband Ganesh Kumar Singh, 30, rent out a part of their house to be used as a collection centre for Producer Group farmers. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
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  • Vegetable farmer Geeta Devi (in orange), 45, a member of a Farmer's Producer Group, sells her harvested cauliflower vegetables at the collection centre in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
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  • Vegetable farmer Geeta Devi (in orange), 45, a member of a Farmer's Producer Group, sells her harvested cauliflower vegetables at the collection centre in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
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  • Vegetable farmer Geeta Devi (in orange), 45, a member of a Farmer's Producer Group, walks to the collection centre with her harvested cauliflower vegetables in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
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  • Vegetable farmer Geeta Devi (in orange), 45, a member of a Farmer's Producer Group, harvests cauliflower vegetables with her husband in her field in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 27th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
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  • Vegetable farmer Sawan Kumari, a member of a Farmer's Producer Group, tends to her brinjal (eggplant) plants in her farm in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 26th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
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  • Vegetable farmer Sawan Kumari, a member of a Farmer's Producer Group, poses for a portrait in her cauliflower farm in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 26th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
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  • Vegetable farmer Rangila Devi, 35, a member of a Farmer's Producer Group, tends to her cauliflower plants in her farm in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 26th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
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  • Vegetable farmers walk through wheat fields in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 26th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
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  • Vegetable farmer Kajal Devi, 20, a member of a Farmer's Producer Group, tends to her chilli plants in her farm in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 26th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
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  • Women vegetable farmers have a discussion during a Producer Group meeting in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 26th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161026-TNS-Bihar-0107.jpg
  • Jeevika's Field Associate, Jagganath Prasad (extreme left), listens as women vegetable farmers have a discussion during a Producer Group meeting in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 26th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161026-TNS-Bihar-0097.jpg
  • Technoserve's Manager of Market Linkage, Rajiv Shinde, interacts with vegetable farmers during a Producer Group meeting in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 26th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
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  • Technoserve's Manager of Market Linkage, Rajiv Shinde, interacts with vegetable farmers during a Producer Group meeting in Machahi village, Muzaffarpur, Bihar, India on October 26th, 2016. Non-profit organisation Technoserve works with women vegetable farmers in Muzaffarpur, providing technical support in forward linkage, streamlining their business models and linking them directly to an international market through Electronic Trading Platforms. Photograph by Suzanne Lee for Technoserve
    20161026-TNS-Bihar-0005.jpg
  • Idan, who just gave birth to Barbara's baby, holds his hand as she breastfeeds the baby in her hotel room near the Akanksha Clinic in Anand, Gujarat, India on 11th December 2012. Barbara, from Canada, had come to receive him at his birth from Idan, her surrogate, and is waiting for her husband to come and join her in Anand, while she continues to hire Idan to breastfeed her son so that he gets the best start in life. Idan's husband sends pumped breast milk to Barbara's hotel in the evenings when Idan cannot come personally. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie-Claire France
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  • Three surrogates (Bharti Utrekar in center) who are in their 7th month of pregnancy perform a Hindu prayer at their baby shower organised for them at the surrogate's house in Anand, Gujarat, India on 11th December 2012. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie-Claire France
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  • 9 months pregnant, Leela Mekwan (center), 34, waits for a doctor's checkup in preparation for her Caesarian section delivery today in the Akanksha Clinic in Anand, Gujarat, India on 12th December 2012. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie-Claire France
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  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod (right), 24, helps her sisters to prepare lunch as her sister Nayna (left), 27, combs her hair at home in Surendranagar, Gujarat, India on 14 December 2012. While Niru's sisters have become seamstresses or housewives, Niru, the 8th child in a family of 11 girls born to a Dalit construction worker, has been using videography for social change since 2006. She shoots and produces her own short documentaries and is a committed video activist, having conducted hundreds of village video screenings where she also speaks to thousands of men, shattering their ideas about what a woman and a Dalit can do while bringing massive changes to the communities she documents. Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie Claire France
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  • Tamsin Greig, an actress from the United Kingdom, speaks with Jasmine (name changed), aged 30, about her past experiences as they sit in Nirmal Bhavan, a rehabilitation home for trafficked and rescued girls run by Tearfund partner NGO Oasis India, in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India on 20 February 2014. Jasmine was ten when she was sold for 50,000 Indian Rupees by her family friends who were supposed to look after her. She was beaten, drugged and forced in to prostitution. Rescued from a brothel age 16, she came to live at Nirmal Bhavan and now works for Oasis. Photo by Suzanne Lee/Tearfund
    20022014-tearfund-tamsingreig-0001.JPG
  • Tamsin Greig, an actress from the United Kingdom, speaks with Jasmine (name changed), aged 30, about her past experiences as they sit in Nirmal Bhavan, a rehabilitation home for trafficked and rescued girls run by Tearfund partner NGO Oasis India, in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India on 20 February 2014. Jasmine was ten when she was sold for 50,000 Indian Rupees by her family friends who were supposed to look after her. She was beaten, drugged and forced in to prostitution. Rescued from a brothel age 16, she came to live at Nirmal Bhavan and now works for Oasis. Photo by Suzanne Lee/Tearfund
    20022014-tearfund-tamsingreig-0007.JPG
  • Tamsin Greig, an actress from the United Kingdom, visits a Tearfund program in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India on 20 February 2014. Tamsin Greig is a successful actress and a good friend of Tearfund. Tamsin is well known for her roles in TV series Episodes, Jackie Goodman in Friday Night Dinner for Channel 4, People Like Us, Black Books, and many more. Tamsin won a BAFTA nomination and received The Royal Television Award for Best Comedy performance for her performance as Dr Caroline Todd in Green Wing. Tamsin has visited Tearfund partners and projects in Democratic Republic Congo and Rwanda, and supports many of Tearfund initiatives. Photo by Suzanne Lee/Tearfund
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  • Tamsin Greig, an actress from the United Kingdom, visits a Tearfund program in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India on 20 February 2014. Tamsin Greig is a successful actress and a good friend of Tearfund. Tamsin is well known for her roles in TV series Episodes, Jackie Goodman in Friday Night Dinner for Channel 4, People Like Us, Black Books, and many more. Tamsin won a BAFTA nomination and received The Royal Television Award for Best Comedy performance for her performance as Dr Caroline Todd in Green Wing. Tamsin has visited Tearfund partners and projects in Democratic Republic Congo and Rwanda, and supports many of Tearfund initiatives. Photo by Suzanne Lee/Tearfund
    20022014-tearfund-tamsingreig-0516.JPG
  • Tamsin Greig, an actress from the United Kingdom, speaks with Chinta (name changed), aged 18, about her past experiences as they sit in Nirmal Bhavan, a rehabilitation home for trafficked and rescued girls run by Tearfund partner NGO Oasis India, in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India on 20 February 2014. Given away by her parents who were in a large amount of debt, Chinta was given to a woman who forced her to work in her house, and then forced her in to prostitution. Often she saw 10 customers a day, but if there was no work she was hung from a ceiling fan and beaten. Photo by Suzanne Lee/Tearfund
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  • Tamsin Greig, an actress from the United Kingdom, looks around the shelter home as she speaks with Oasis staff in Nirmal Bhavan, a rehabilitation home for trafficked and rescued girls run by Tearfund partner NGO Oasis India, in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India on 20 February 2014. Photo by Suzanne Lee/Tearfund
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  • Tamsin Greig, an actress from the United Kingdom, speaks with Anisha (name changed), aged 19, about her past experiences as they sit in Nirmal Bhavan, a rehabilitation home for trafficked and rescued girls run by Tearfund partner NGO Oasis India, in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India on 20 February 2014. Brought to Mumbai by a family friend, Anisha was forced to dance for customers at a Mujura, a sexually provocative men-only party. She was badly beaten when she refused to attend customers, and locked in a cupboard. She managed to flee and go to the Police, where her courageous testimony enabled the authorities to prosecute those responsible. Photo by Suzanne Lee/Tearfund
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  • Tamsin Greig, an actress from the United Kingdom, speaks with Anisha (name changed), aged 19, about her past experiences as they sit in Nirmal Bhavan, a rehabilitation home for trafficked and rescued girls run by Tearfund partner NGO Oasis India, in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India on 20 February 2014. Brought to Mumbai by a family friend, Anisha was forced to dance for customers at a Mujura, a sexually provocative men-only party. She was badly beaten when she refused to attend customers, and locked in a cupboard. She managed to flee and go to the Police, where her courageous testimony enabled the authorities to prosecute those responsible. Photo by Suzanne Lee/Tearfund
    20022014-tearfund-tamsingreig-0254.JPG
  • Tamsin Greig, an actress from the United Kingdom, speaks with Tearfund beneficiaries in Nirmal Bhavan, a rehabilitation home for trafficked and rescued girls run by Tearfund partner NGO Oasis India, in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India on 20 February 2014. Photo by Suzanne Lee/Tearfund
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  • Tamsin Greig, an actress from the United Kingdom, speaks with Tearfund beneficiaries in Nirmal Bhavan, a rehabilitation home for trafficked and rescued girls run by Tearfund partner NGO Oasis India, in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India on 20 February 2014. Photo by Suzanne Lee/Tearfund
    20022014-tearfund-tamsingreig-0125.JPG
  • Tamsin Greig, an actress from the United Kingdom, speaks with Jasmine (name changed), aged 30, about her past experiences as they sit in Nirmal Bhavan, a rehabilitation home for trafficked and rescued girls run by Tearfund partner NGO Oasis India, in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India on 20 February 2014. Jasmine was ten when she was sold for 50,000 Indian Rupees by her family friends who were supposed to look after her. She was beaten, drugged and forced in to prostitution. Rescued from a brothel age 16, she came to live at Nirmal Bhavan and now works for Oasis. Photo by Suzanne Lee/Tearfund
    20022014-tearfund-tamsingreig-0020.JPG
  • Cemetery inhabitants buy street food and go about their daily lives in an inhabited cemetery in Paranaque City, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 18 January 2013. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • UK celebrity Myleene Klass (left) poses for a portrait with health worker Girlie Mercado, 54, in an urban slum and inhabited cemetery in Paranaque City, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 18 January 2013. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • UK celebrity Myleene Klass poses for a group portrait with children who live in a cemetery in Paranaque City, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 18 January 2013. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • Children who live in a graveyard play and stand on the tombs as a man (left) waits for a candle he lit on a baby's grave to burn down in an inhabited cemetery in Paranaque City, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 18 January 2013. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • UK celebrity Myleene Klass stands over babie's grave headstones as she speaks with Rose Marie Ferrer, 33, at the entrance to Rose's house, where she lives with her large family, built over children's graves in an inhabited cemetery in Paranaque City, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 18 January 2013. Rose owns a shop in the cemetery where she sells funeral items. She supports her family with this, has breastfed all her 5 children, and is 9 months pregnant now. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • UK celebrity Myleene Klass poses for a portrait in a graveyard where she has come to meet underprivileged mothers and children who live in an inhabited cemetery in Paranaque City, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 18 January 2013. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • UK celebrity Myleene Klass weeps as she hugs Vilma Tacuyo, 20, while Vilma breastfeeds her youngest child, Ulderico (10 months), in their one room home in an urban slum in Paranaque City, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 18 January 2013. Vilma had raised her first 3 children on formula and had to cut down on food for her family to afford it. Both John Ashley, 4, and Justin, 3, are malnourished and stunted, and after losing one of her children, she now breastfeeds her youngest, Ulderico. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • Myleene Klass, a high profile UK celebrity, TV host, violinist and pianist, poses for a portrait with children in an urban slum where she had visited an under-privileged mother and her family in Paranaque, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • UK celebrity Myleene Klass (in black) plays a bit of basketball with the community after visiting underprivileged mothers in an urban slum in Paranaque City, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • UK celebrity Myleene Klass (in black) meets underprivileged mother Irma Asoro, 29, as she holds her 4-month-old baby, Rashed James, who she has been feeding formula since he was 2 days old, in her rented home in an urban slum in Paranaque, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. She thinks that formula is better for her baby even though the cost of formula and bottled water costs her more than double her rent, and she has to borrow from family and friends to pay for it. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • UK celebrity Myleene Klass (in black) meets underprivileged mother Irma Asoro, 29, as she holds her 4-month-old baby, Rashed James, who she has been feeding formula since he was 2 days old, in her rented home in an urban slum in Paranaque, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. She thinks that formula is better for her baby even though the cost of formula and bottled water costs her more than double her rent, and she has to borrow from family and friends to pay for it. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • Myleene Klass (right), a celebrity from the UK, meets single mother Josephine Savares, 18, as she holds her 1st child Jihan, aged 4 months, in her neighbourhood, in Paranaque City, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. After watching advertisements, Josephine had decided to feed her baby formula during her pregnancy and had no idea that her father had to pay such a high price for it. Her family goes without food some days, and her siblings have had to stop school in order to afford the formula. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • Myleene Klass (right), a celebrity from the UK, meets single mother Josephine Savares, 18, as she holds her 1st child Jihan, aged 4 months, in her neighbourhood, in Paranaque City, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. After watching advertisements, Josephine had decided to feed her baby formula during her pregnancy and had no idea that her father had to pay such a high price for it. Her family goes without food some days, and her siblings have had to stop school in order to afford the formula. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
    suzanne20130119-scuk-myleene-philipp...JPG
  • Myleene Klass (right), a celebrity from the UK, meets single mother Josephine Savares, 18, as she holds her 1st child Jihan, aged 4 months, in her neighbourhood, in Paranaque City, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. After watching advertisements, Josephine had decided to feed her baby formula during her pregnancy and had no idea that her father had to pay such a high price for it. Her family goes without food some days, and her siblings have had to stop school in order to afford the formula. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • Josephine Savares (unseen) prepares formula milk for her 4 month old baby Jihan, in their urban slum house in Paranaque, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. Josephine had decided to feed her baby formula during her pregnancy and had no idea that her father had to pay such a high price for it. Her family goes without food some days, and her siblings have had to stop school in order to afford the formula. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • Myleene Klass, a celebrity from the UK, meets single mother Josephine Savares, 18, as she holds her 1st child Jihan, aged 4 months, in her family house, in Paranaque, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. Josephine had decided to feed her baby formula during her pregnancy and had no idea that her father had to pay such a high price for it. Her family goes without food some days, and her siblings have had to stop school in order to afford the formula. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • Maricris Bobis, 24, holds her one-month-old son Mark Ravier, who has been breastfed and formula-fed alternately, in the Florencio V. Memorial Hospital in Paranaque city, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • Myleene Klass, a high profile UK celebrity, TV host, violinist and pianist, holds Hans, Arlene's 1 day old baby, who has been breastfed since birth, in the Florencio V. Memorial Hospital in Paranaque city, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • Myleene Klass, a high profile UK celebrity, TV host, violinist and pianist, uses the IF letters as a violin for the IF campaign, photographed in Paranaque, Metro Manila, The Philippines. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
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  • Nurse Sejal Parmar (center), 32, weighs and wraps a new born baby after a surrogate went into labor and gave birth unexpectedly in the Akanksha Infertility Center in Anand, Gujarat, India on 12th December 2012.  Photo by Suzanne Lee / Marie-Claire France
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