Suzanne Lee Photographer

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  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-1525.JPG
  • Sagarika Ghose hosting 'Indian of the Year' on CNN-IBN in Studio 1 on 6th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101206-CNN-IBN-0444.JPG
  • Karan Thapar hosting The Last Word on CNN-IBN in Studio 1 on 3rd December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101206-CNN-IBN-0037.JPG
  • Suhasini Haidar (left) and Anubha Bhonsle (right)anchoring on 8pm Prime on CNN-IBN in Studio 1 on 6th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101206-CNN-IBN-0182.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-3476.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-3419.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-1059.JPG
  • Sagarika Ghose hosting 'Indian of the Year' on CNN-IBN in Studio 1 on 6th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101206-CNN-IBN-0424.JPG
  • Sagarika Ghose hosting 'Indian of the Year' on CNN-IBN in Studio 1 on 6th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101206-CNN-IBN-0400.JPG
  • Karan Thapar hosting The Last Word on CNN-IBN in Studio 1 on 3rd December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101206-CNN-IBN-0020.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 9th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101209-CNN-IBN-4745.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-3239.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-3182.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-2754.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-2697.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-1155.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-0718.JPG
  • Rajdeep Sardesai anchoring his show, India at 9, on CNN-IBN in Studio 1 on 6th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101206-CNN-IBN-0303.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-3989.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-3863.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-3819.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-3399.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-2853.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-2675.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-2224.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-2052.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-1887.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-1748.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-1709.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-1203.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-1157.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-0875.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-0600.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-0529.JPG
  • Suhasini Haidar (left) and Anubha Bhonsle (right)anchoring on 8pm Prime on CNN-IBN in Studio 1 on 6th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101206-CNN-IBN-0185.JPG
  • Suhasini Haidar (left) and Anubha Bhonsle (right)anchoring on 8pm Prime on CNN-IBN in Studio 1 on 6th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101206-CNN-IBN-0179.JPG
  • Suhasini Haidar (left) and Anubha Bhonsle (right)anchoring on 8pm Prime on CNN-IBN in Studio 1 on 6th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101206-CNN-IBN-0125.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-3568.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-3107.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-3072.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-2782.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-2662.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-1106.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-0777.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-0695.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-0521.JPG
  • Rajdeep Sardesai anchoring his show, India at 9, on CNN-IBN in Studio 1 on 6th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101206-CNN-IBN-0348.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-1150.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-1022.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-0973.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-0818.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-0724.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 7th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101207-CNN-IBN-0477.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 9th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101209-CNN-IBN-4711.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-3279.JPG
  • CNN-IBN on 8th December 2010. Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20101208-CNN-IBN-3168.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
    20022014-tearfund-tamsingreig-0518.JPG
  • Photographs of Shardaben's pregnancy (right) and 2nd surrogacy baby are displayed atop the television set in her living room...Shardaben Kantiben, 31; Husband is Kantibhai Motibhai (37).3 children --- 2 girls -  Usha(15) and Lakshmi (18, in pink); 1 boy, Chintan (17).- Education costs for all three come to Rs. 15,000 per year.- Shardaben was a two-time surrogate. First time she gave birth to twin girls for a Taiwanese couple and the second time a boy for an Indian couple from America (photo on TV set because she's proud that it was a boy).- The second time she became emotional and they got a gold ring of Rs. 1,500 made for the boy, which they presented to the biological parents. They are not in touch with either couple..- From the two surrogacies, they earned a little over 700,000rupees..-200,000rupees will be given as dowry for Lakshmi's wedding..- They leased agricultural land (Rs. 2 lakhs for five years) which earns them Rs. 60,000-70,000 a year; they bought two buffaloes worth Rs. 60,000 and make almost 6000-7000 per month selling milk; they bought a motorbike for Rs. 25,000; they put some money into house repairs and the construction of toilets, and opened a fixed deposit in Shardaben's name for Rs. 1.5 lakh and one in the name of their son, Chintan, for Rs. 25,000..Quotes.."Everyone says they'll keep in touch and take down addresses and phone numbers but nobody looks back. And I guess it works well. Our main interest was in the money. Their main interest is in the baby." - KantiBhai."Their rules apply at the surrogate house. It does curtail the freedom. When I used to go, everybody would just be lying. They count the days when they can go back." - Kantibhai."Ours is natural birth but surrogacy is a man-made pregnancy. There's a lot of risk. She must have taken at least 300 injections." - Kantibhai of his wife...The Akanksha Infertility Clinic is known internationally for its surrogacy program and currently has over a hundred surrogate mothers pregnant in their
    surrogacy-15.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
    20022014-tearfund-tamsingreig-0522.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
    20022014-tearfund-tamsingreig-0516.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
    20022014-tearfund-tamsingreig-0508.JPG
  • Child bride Rina Akhter Meghla (14) sits for a portrait in the meeting hut of a Children's Group in Bhashantek Basti (Slum) in Zon H, Dhaka, Bangladesh on 23rd September 2011. "I was about to be wed. The groom was already selected. I told my parents that I didn't want to get married now because I just will be a servant to my husband. I wanted to be independent." Her parents had said that they wanted to marry her off because she was watching too much television and not doing well in school, after which she promised to stop watching TV and improve her grades. Her ambition is to be a police inspector. The Bhashantek Basti Childrens Group is run by children for children with the facilitation of PLAN Bangladesh and other partner NGOs. Slum children from ages 8 to 17 run the group within their own communities to protect vulnerable children from child related issues such as child marriage. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The Guardian
    Suzanne20110921-Guardian-Plan-0894.jpg
  • Child bride Rina Akhter Meghla (14) sits for a portrait in the meeting hut of a Children's Group in Bhashantek Basti (Slum) in Zon H, Dhaka, Bangladesh on 23rd September 2011. "I was about to be wed. The groom was already selected. I told my parents that I didn't want to get married now because I just will be a servant to my husband. I wanted to be independent." Her parents had said that they wanted to marry her off because she was watching too much television and not doing well in school, after which she promised to stop watching TV and improve her grades. Her ambition is to be a police inspector. The Bhashantek Basti Childrens Group is run by children for children with the facilitation of PLAN Bangladesh and other partner NGOs. Slum children from ages 8 to 17 run the group within their own communities to protect vulnerable children from child related issues such as child marriage. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The Guardian
    Suzanne20110921-Guardian-Plan-0876.jpg
  • Rina Akhter Meghla (14, baby blue scarf) speaks of her ordeal during a monthly meeting of a Children's Group in Bhashantek Basti (Slum) in Zon H, Dhaka, Bangladesh on 23rd September 2011. "I was about to be wed. The groom was already selected. I told my parents that I didn't want to get married now because I just will be a servant to my husband. I wanted to be independent." Her parents had said that they wanted to marry her off because she was watching too much television and not doing well in school, after which she promised to stop watching TV and improve her grades. Her ambition is to be a police inspector. The Bhashantek Basti Childrens Group is run by children for children with the facilitation of PLAN Bangladesh and other partner NGOs. Slum children from ages 8 to 17 run the group within their own communities to protect vulnerable children from child related issues such as child marriage. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The Guardian
    Suzanne20110921-Guardian-Plan-0744.jpg
  • Rina Akhter Meghla (14, baby blue scarf) speaks of her ordeal during a monthly meeting of a Children's Group in Bhashantek Basti (Slum) in Zon H, Dhaka, Bangladesh on 23rd September 2011. "I was about to be wed. The groom was already selected. I told my parents that I didn't want to get married now because I just will be a servant to my husband. I wanted to be independent." Her parents had said that they wanted to marry her off because she was watching too much television and not doing well in school, after which she promised to stop watching TV and improve her grades. Her ambition is to be a police inspector. The Bhashantek Basti Childrens Group is run by children for children with the facilitation of PLAN Bangladesh and other partner NGOs. Slum children from ages 8 to 17 run the group within their own communities to protect vulnerable children from child related issues such as child marriage. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The Guardian
    Suzanne20110921-Guardian-Plan-0730.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
    20022014-tearfund-tamsingreig-0532.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
    20022014-tearfund-tamsingreig-0521.JPG
  • Child bride Rina Akhter Meghla (14) sits for a portrait in the meeting hut of a Children's Group in Bhashantek Basti (Slum) in Zon H, Dhaka, Bangladesh on 23rd September 2011. "I was about to be wed. The groom was already selected. I told my parents that I didn't want to get married now because I just will be a servant to my husband. I wanted to be independent." Her parents had said that they wanted to marry her off because she was watching too much television and not doing well in school, after which she promised to stop watching TV and improve her grades. Her ambition is to be a police inspector. The Bhashantek Basti Childrens Group is run by children for children with the facilitation of PLAN Bangladesh and other partner NGOs. Slum children from ages 8 to 17 run the group within their own communities to protect vulnerable children from child related issues such as child marriage. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The Guardian
    Suzanne20110921-Guardian-Plan-0908.jpg
  • Child bride Rina Akhter Meghla (14) sits for a portrait in the meeting hut of a Children's Group in Bhashantek Basti (Slum) in Zon H, Dhaka, Bangladesh on 23rd September 2011. "I was about to be wed. The groom was already selected. I told my parents that I didn't want to get married now because I just will be a servant to my husband. I wanted to be independent." Her parents had said that they wanted to marry her off because she was watching too much television and not doing well in school, after which she promised to stop watching TV and improve her grades. Her ambition is to be a police inspector. The Bhashantek Basti Childrens Group is run by children for children with the facilitation of PLAN Bangladesh and other partner NGOs. Slum children from ages 8 to 17 run the group within their own communities to protect vulnerable children from child related issues such as child marriage. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The Guardian
    Suzanne20110921-Guardian-Plan-0890.jpg
  • Rina Akhter Meghla (14, baby blue scarf) speaks of her ordeal during a monthly meeting of a Children's Group in Bhashantek Basti (Slum) in Zon H, Dhaka, Bangladesh on 23rd September 2011. "I was about to be wed. The groom was already selected. I told my parents that I didn't want to get married now because I just will be a servant to my husband. I wanted to be independent." Her parents had said that they wanted to marry her off because she was watching too much television and not doing well in school, after which she promised to stop watching TV and improve her grades. Her ambition is to be a police inspector. The Bhashantek Basti Childrens Group is run by children for children with the facilitation of PLAN Bangladesh and other partner NGOs. Slum children from ages 8 to 17 run the group within their own communities to protect vulnerable children from child related issues such as child marriage. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The Guardian
    Suzanne20110921-Guardian-Plan-0752.jpg
  • Rina Akhter Meghla (14, baby blue scarf) speaks of her ordeal during a monthly meeting of a Children's Group in Bhashantek Basti (Slum) in Zon H, Dhaka, Bangladesh on 23rd September 2011. "I was about to be wed. The groom was already selected. I told my parents that I didn't want to get married now because I just will be a servant to my husband. I wanted to be independent." Her parents had said that they wanted to marry her off because she was watching too much television and not doing well in school, after which she promised to stop watching TV and improve her grades. Her ambition is to be a police inspector. The Bhashantek Basti Childrens Group is run by children for children with the facilitation of PLAN Bangladesh and other partner NGOs. Slum children from ages 8 to 17 run the group within their own communities to protect vulnerable children from child related issues such as child marriage. Photo by Suzanne Lee for The Guardian
    Suzanne20110921-Guardian-Plan-0741.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
  • 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
    suzanne20130119-scuk-myleene-philipp...JPG
  • 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
    suzanne20130119-scuk-myleene-philipp...JPG
  • 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
    suzanne20130119-scuk-myleene-philipp...JPG
  • Shardaben walks along the trench in the agricultural land that she leased for 5 years with the money she got from surrogacy...Shardaben Kantiben, 31; Husband is Kantibhai Motibhai (37).3 children --- 2 girls -  Usha(15) and Lakshmi (18, in pink); 1 boy, Chintan (17).- Education costs for all three come to Rs. 15,000 per year.- Shardaben was a two-time surrogate. First time she gave birth to twin girls for a Taiwanese couple and the second time a boy for an Indian couple from America (photo on TV set because she's proud that it was a boy).- The second time she became emotional and they got a gold ring of Rs. 1,500 made for the boy, which they presented to the biological parents. They are not in touch with either couple..- From the two surrogacies, they earned a little over 700,000rupees..-200,000rupees will be given as dowry for Lakshmi's wedding..- They leased agricultural land (Rs. 2 lakhs for five years) which earns them Rs. 60,000-70,000 a year; they bought two buffaloes worth Rs. 60,000 and make almost 6000-7000 per month selling milk; they bought a motorbike for Rs. 25,000; they put some money into house repairs and the construction of toilets, and opened a fixed deposit in Shardaben's name for Rs. 1.5 lakh and one in the name of their son, Chintan, for Rs. 25,000..Quotes.."Everyone says they'll keep in touch and take down addresses and phone numbers but nobody looks back. And I guess it works well. Our main interest was in the money. Their main interest is in the baby." - KantiBhai."Their rules apply at the surrogate house. It does curtail the freedom. When I used to go, everybody would just be lying. They count the days when they can go back." - Kantibhai."Ours is natural birth but surrogacy is a man-made pregnancy. There's a lot of risk. She must have taken at least 300 injections." - Kantibhai of his wife...The Akanksha Infertility Clinic is known internationally for its surrogacy program and currently has over a hundred surrogate mothers pregnant in their
    Suzanne20110511-Surrogacy-Gujarat-10...JPG
  • Shardaben holds up a photograph of her first surrogacy job..Shardaben Kantiben, 31; Husband is Kantibhai Motibhai (37).3 children --- 2 girls -  Usha(15) and Lakshmi (18, in pink); 1 boy, Chintan (17).- Education costs for all three come to Rs. 15,000 per year.- Shardaben was a two-time surrogate. First time she gave birth to twin girls for a Taiwanese couple and the second time a boy for an Indian couple from America (photo on TV set because she's proud that it was a boy).- The second time she became emotional and they got a gold ring of Rs. 1,500 made for the boy, which they presented to the biological parents. They are not in touch with either couple..- From the two surrogacies, they earned a little over 700,000rupees..-200,000rupees will be given as dowry for Lakshmi's wedding..- They leased agricultural land (Rs. 2 lakhs for five years) which earns them Rs. 60,000-70,000 a year; they bought two buffaloes worth Rs. 60,000 and make almost 6000-7000 per month selling milk; they bought a motorbike for Rs. 25,000; they put some money into house repairs and the construction of toilets, and opened a fixed deposit in Shardaben's name for Rs. 1.5 lakh and one in the name of their son, Chintan, for Rs. 25,000..Quotes.."Everyone says they'll keep in touch and take down addresses and phone numbers but nobody looks back. And I guess it works well. Our main interest was in the money. Their main interest is in the baby." - KantiBhai."Their rules apply at the surrogate house. It does curtail the freedom. When I used to go, everybody would just be lying. They count the days when they can go back." - Kantibhai."Ours is natural birth but surrogacy is a man-made pregnancy. There's a lot of risk. She must have taken at least 300 injections." - Kantibhai of his wife...The Akanksha Infertility Clinic is known internationally for its surrogacy program and currently has over a hundred surrogate mothers pregnant in their environmentally controlled surrogate houses. .Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20110511-Surrogacy-Gujarat-10...JPG
  • Myleene Klass, a high profile UK celebrity, TV host, violinist and pianist, holds the IF letters for the IF campaign, photographed in Paranaque, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 18 January 2013. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
    suzanne20130118-scuk-myleene-philipp...jpg
  • Myleene Klass, a high profile UK celebrity, TV host, violinist and pianist, dances in the streets 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
    suzanne20130119-scuk-myleene-philipp...JPG
  • Myleene Klass, a high profile UK celebrity, TV host, violinist and pianist, walks through narrow urban slum alleyways as she visits under-priviledged families and mothers in Paranaque, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. 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, holds 2-month-old John Darwin Tagyam, who has pneumonia, 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
  • Myleene Klass, a high profile UK celebrity, TV host, violinist and pianist, holds 2-month-old John Darwin Tagyam, who has pneumonia, 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
  • 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
    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
  • 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
    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
  • Video Volunteer videojournalist Niru J. Rathod, 24, reads the newspaper with the TV running news channels in the background as her sister Daksha (left), 15, walks past 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
    suzanne20121214-mc-rural-journos-068...JPG
  • Shardaben and Kantibhai walk toward their house in Vagpura village,  Anand, Gujarat. ..Shardaben Kantiben, 31; Husband is Kantibhai Motibhai (37).3 children --- 2 girls -  Usha(15) and Lakshmi (18, in pink); 1 boy, Chintan (17).-Kantibhai was already a sperm donor at Dr. Patel's clinic when they came to know about surrogacy and its benefits from Dr. Patel and Shardaben went in for her first surrogacy in early late 2006, early 2007..- Education costs for all three come to Rs. 15,000 per year.- Shardaben was a two-time surrogate. First time she gave birth to twin girls for a Taiwanese couple and the second time a boy for an Indian couple from America (photo on TV set because she's proud that it was a boy).- The second time she became emotional and they got a gold ring of Rs. 1,500 made for the boy, which they presented to the biological parents. They are not in touch with either couple..- From the two surrogacies, they earned a little over 700,000rupees..-200,000rupees will be given as dowry for Lakshmi's wedding..- They leased agricultural land (Rs. 2 lakhs for five years) which earns them Rs. 60,000-70,000 a year; they bought two buffaloes worth Rs. 60,000 and make almost 6000-7000 per month selling milk; they bought a motorbike for Rs. 25,000; they put some money into house repairs and the construction of toilets, and opened a fixed deposit in Shardaben's name for Rs. 1.5 lakh and one in the name of their son, Chintan, for Rs. 25,000..Quotes.."Everyone says they'll keep in touch and take down addresses and phone numbers but nobody looks back. And I guess it works well. Our main interest was in the money. Their main interest is in the baby." - KantiBhai."Their rules apply at the surrogate house. It does curtail the freedom. When I used to go, everybody would just be lying. They count the days when they can go back." - Kantibhai."Ours is natural birth but surrogacy is a man-made pregnancy. There's a lot of risk. She must have taken at least 300 injections." - Kantibh
    Suzanne20110511-Surrogacy-Gujarat-10...JPG
  • Shardaben holds a photo album of her 7th month of pregnancy during the surrogacy. The Godbharai, which literally means "filling the lap", is a tradition of providing the mother with gifts etc. and dolling her up in finery. Dr. Patel said that many of these women don't experience such a nice godbharai and that they do this for the surrogates in their 7th month of pregnancy. . .Shardaben Kantiben, 31; Husband is Kantibhai Motibhai (37).3 children --- 2 girls -  Usha(15) and Lakshmi (18, in pink); 1 boy, Chintan (17).-Kantibhai was already a sperm donor at Dr. Patel's clinic when they came to know about surrogacy and its benefits from Dr. Patel and Shardaben went in for her first surrogacy in early late 2006, early 2007..- Education costs for all three come to Rs. 15,000 per year.- Shardaben was a two-time surrogate. First time she gave birth to twin girls for a Taiwanese couple and the second time a boy for an Indian couple from America (photo on TV set because she's proud that it was a boy).- The second time she became emotional and they got a gold ring of Rs. 1,500 made for the boy, which they presented to the biological parents. They are not in touch with either couple..- From the two surrogacies, they earned a little over 700,000rupees..-200,000rupees will be given as dowry for Lakshmi's wedding..- They leased agricultural land (Rs. 2 lakhs for five years) which earns them Rs. 60,000-70,000 a year; they bought two buffaloes worth Rs. 60,000 and make almost 6000-7000 per month selling milk; they bought a motorbike for Rs. 25,000; they put some money into house repairs and the construction of toilets, and opened a fixed deposit in Shardaben's name for Rs. 1.5 lakh and one in the name of their son, Chintan, for Rs. 25,000..Quotes.."Everyone says they'll keep in touch and take down addresses and phone numbers but nobody looks back. And I guess it works well. Our main interest was in the money. Their main interest is in the baby." - KantiBhai."Their rules apply at the
    Suzanne20110511-Surrogacy-Gujarat-10...JPG
  • Shardaben holds photographs of her surrogacy jobs...Shardaben Kantiben, 31; Husband is Kantibhai Motibhai (37).3 children --- 2 girls -  Usha(15) and Lakshmi (18, in pink); 1 boy, Chintan (17).- Education costs for all three come to Rs. 15,000 per year.- Shardaben was a two-time surrogate. First time she gave birth to twin girls for a Taiwanese couple and the second time a boy for an Indian couple from America (photo on TV set because she's proud that it was a boy).- The second time she became emotional and they got a gold ring of Rs. 1,500 made for the boy, which they presented to the biological parents. They are not in touch with either couple..- From the two surrogacies, they earned a little over 700,000rupees..-200,000rupees will be given as dowry for Lakshmi's wedding..- They leased agricultural land (Rs. 2 lakhs for five years) which earns them Rs. 60,000-70,000 a year; they bought two buffaloes worth Rs. 60,000 and make almost 6000-7000 per month selling milk; they bought a motorbike for Rs. 25,000; they put some money into house repairs and the construction of toilets, and opened a fixed deposit in Shardaben's name for Rs. 1.5 lakh and one in the name of their son, Chintan, for Rs. 25,000..Quotes.."Everyone says they'll keep in touch and take down addresses and phone numbers but nobody looks back. And I guess it works well. Our main interest was in the money. Their main interest is in the baby." - KantiBhai."Their rules apply at the surrogate house. It does curtail the freedom. When I used to go, everybody would just be lying. They count the days when they can go back." - Kantibhai."Ours is natural birth but surrogacy is a man-made pregnancy. There's a lot of risk. She must have taken at least 300 injections." - Kantibhai of his wife...The Akanksha Infertility Clinic is known internationally for its surrogacy program and currently has over a hundred surrogate mothers pregnant in their environmentally controlled surrogate houses. .Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20110511-Surrogacy-Gujarat-09...JPG
  • Shardaben walks around the back of her house where she used the surrogacy money to build two toilets...Shardaben Kantiben, 31; Husband is Kantibhai Motibhai (37).3 children --- 2 girls -  Usha(15) and Lakshmi (18, in pink); 1 boy, Chintan (17).- Education costs for all three come to Rs. 15,000 per year.- Shardaben was a two-time surrogate. First time she gave birth to twin girls for a Taiwanese couple and the second time a boy for an Indian couple from America (photo on TV set because she's proud that it was a boy).- The second time she became emotional and they got a gold ring of Rs. 1,500 made for the boy, which they presented to the biological parents. They are not in touch with either couple..- From the two surrogacies, they earned a little over 700,000rupees..-200,000rupees will be given as dowry for Lakshmi's wedding..- They leased agricultural land (Rs. 2 lakhs for five years) which earns them Rs. 60,000-70,000 a year; they bought two buffaloes worth Rs. 60,000 and make almost 6000-7000 per month selling milk; they bought a motorbike for Rs. 25,000; they put some money into house repairs and the construction of toilets, and opened a fixed deposit in Shardaben's name for Rs. 1.5 lakh and one in the name of their son, Chintan, for Rs. 25,000..Quotes.."Everyone says they'll keep in touch and take down addresses and phone numbers but nobody looks back. And I guess it works well. Our main interest was in the money. Their main interest is in the baby." - KantiBhai."Their rules apply at the surrogate house. It does curtail the freedom. When I used to go, everybody would just be lying. They count the days when they can go back." - Kantibhai."Ours is natural birth but surrogacy is a man-made pregnancy. There's a lot of risk. She must have taken at least 300 injections." - Kantibhai of his wife...The Akanksha Infertility Clinic is known internationally for its surrogacy program and currently has over a hundred surrogate mothers pregnant in their environmentally control
    Suzanne20110511-Surrogacy-Gujarat-09...JPG
  • Photographs of Shardaben's pregnancy (right) and 2nd surrogacy baby are displayed atop the television set in her living room...Shardaben Kantiben, 31; Husband is Kantibhai Motibhai (37).3 children --- 2 girls -  Usha(15) and Lakshmi (18, in pink); 1 boy, Chintan (17).- Education costs for all three come to Rs. 15,000 per year.- Shardaben was a two-time surrogate. First time she gave birth to twin girls for a Taiwanese couple and the second time a boy for an Indian couple from America (photo on TV set because she's proud that it was a boy).- The second time she became emotional and they got a gold ring of Rs. 1,500 made for the boy, which they presented to the biological parents. They are not in touch with either couple..- From the two surrogacies, they earned a little over 700,000rupees..-200,000rupees will be given as dowry for Lakshmi's wedding..- They leased agricultural land (Rs. 2 lakhs for five years) which earns them Rs. 60,000-70,000 a year; they bought two buffaloes worth Rs. 60,000 and make almost 6000-7000 per month selling milk; they bought a motorbike for Rs. 25,000; they put some money into house repairs and the construction of toilets, and opened a fixed deposit in Shardaben's name for Rs. 1.5 lakh and one in the name of their son, Chintan, for Rs. 25,000..Quotes.."Everyone says they'll keep in touch and take down addresses and phone numbers but nobody looks back. And I guess it works well. Our main interest was in the money. Their main interest is in the baby." - KantiBhai."Their rules apply at the surrogate house. It does curtail the freedom. When I used to go, everybody would just be lying. They count the days when they can go back." - Kantibhai."Ours is natural birth but surrogacy is a man-made pregnancy. There's a lot of risk. She must have taken at least 300 injections." - Kantibhai of his wife...The Akanksha Infertility Clinic is known internationally for its surrogacy program and currently has over a hundred surrogate mothers pregnant in their
    Suzanne20110511-Surrogacy-Gujarat-09...JPG
  • Shardaben's eldest daughter, Lakshmi (18) walks out of a room. 200,000 rupees out of the money Shardaben earned from surrogacy will soon be given to Lakshmi's husband-to-be as her dowry. ..Shardaben Kantiben, 31; Husband is Kantibhai Motibhai (37).3 children --- 2 girls -  Usha(15) and Lakshmi (18, in pink); 1 boy, Chintan (17).- Education costs for all three come to Rs. 15,000 per year.- Shardaben was a two-time surrogate. First time she gave birth to twin girls for a Taiwanese couple and the second time a boy for an Indian couple from America (photo on TV set because she's proud that it was a boy).- The second time she became emotional and they got a gold ring of Rs. 1,500 made for the boy, which they presented to the biological parents. They are not in touch with either couple..- From the two surrogacies, they earned a little over 700,000rupees..-200,000rupees will be given as dowry for Lakshmi's wedding..- They leased agricultural land (Rs. 2 lakhs for five years) which earns them Rs. 60,000-70,000 a year; they bought two buffaloes worth Rs. 60,000 and make almost 6000-7000 per month selling milk; they bought a motorbike for Rs. 25,000; they put some money into house repairs and the construction of toilets, and opened a fixed deposit in Shardaben's name for Rs. 1.5 lakh and one in the name of their son, Chintan, for Rs. 25,000..Quotes.."Everyone says they'll keep in touch and take down addresses and phone numbers but nobody looks back. And I guess it works well. Our main interest was in the money. Their main interest is in the baby." - KantiBhai."Their rules apply at the surrogate house. It does curtail the freedom. When I used to go, everybody would just be lying. They count the days when they can go back." - Kantibhai."Ours is natural birth but surrogacy is a man-made pregnancy. There's a lot of risk. She must have taken at least 300 injections." - Kantibhai of his wife...The Akanksha Infertility Clinic is known internationally for its surrogacy program and cu
    Suzanne20110511-Surrogacy-Gujarat-09...JPG
  • Shardaben's eldest daughter, Lakshmi (18, in pink) carries a younger relative as Shardaben looks on. 200,000 rupees out of the money Shardaben earned from surrogacy will soon be given to Lakshmi's husband-to-be as her dowry. ..Shardaben Kantiben, 31; Husband is Kantibhai Motibhai (37).3 children --- 2 girls -  Usha(15) and Lakshmi (18, in pink); 1 boy, Chintan (17).- Education costs for all three come to Rs. 15,000 per year.- Shardaben was a two-time surrogate. First time she gave birth to twin girls for a Taiwanese couple and the second time a boy for an Indian couple from America (photo on TV set because she's proud that it was a boy).- The second time she became emotional and they got a gold ring of Rs. 1,500 made for the boy, which they presented to the biological parents. They are not in touch with either couple..- From the two surrogacies, they earned a little over 700,000rupees..-200,000rupees will be given as dowry for Lakshmi's wedding..- They leased agricultural land (Rs. 2 lakhs for five years) which earns them Rs. 60,000-70,000 a year; they bought two buffaloes worth Rs. 60,000 and make almost 6000-7000 per month selling milk; they bought a motorbike for Rs. 25,000; they put some money into house repairs and the construction of toilets, and opened a fixed deposit in Shardaben's name for Rs. 1.5 lakh and one in the name of their son, Chintan, for Rs. 25,000..Quotes.."Everyone says they'll keep in touch and take down addresses and phone numbers but nobody looks back. And I guess it works well. Our main interest was in the money. Their main interest is in the baby." - KantiBhai."Their rules apply at the surrogate house. It does curtail the freedom. When I used to go, everybody would just be lying. They count the days when they can go back." - Kantibhai."Ours is natural birth but surrogacy is a man-made pregnancy. There's a lot of risk. She must have taken at least 300 injections." - Kantibhai of his wife...The Akanksha Infertility Clinic is known internatio
    Suzanne20110511-Surrogacy-Gujarat-08...JPG
  • Shardaben Kantiben, 31; Husband is Kantibhai Motibhai (37).3 children --- 2 girls -  Usha(15) and Lakshmi (18, in pink); 1 boy, Chintan (17).- Education costs for all three come to Rs. 15,000 per year.- Shardaben was a two-time surrogate. First time she gave birth to twin girls for a Taiwanese couple and the second time a boy for an Indian couple from America (photo on TV set because she's proud that it was a boy).- The second time she became emotional and they got a gold ring of Rs. 1,500 made for the boy, which they presented to the biological parents. They are not in touch with either couple..- From the two surrogacies, they earned a little over 700,000rupees..-200,000rupees will be given as dowry for Lakshmi's wedding..- They leased agricultural land (Rs. 2 lakhs for five years) which earns them Rs. 60,000-70,000 a year; they bought two buffaloes worth Rs. 60,000 and make almost 6000-7000 per month selling milk; they bought a motorbike for Rs. 25,000; they put some money into house repairs and the construction of toilets, and opened a fixed deposit in Shardaben's name for Rs. 1.5 lakh and one in the name of their son, Chintan, for Rs. 25,000..Quotes.."Everyone says they'll keep in touch and take down addresses and phone numbers but nobody looks back. And I guess it works well. Our main interest was in the money. Their main interest is in the baby." - KantiBhai."Their rules apply at the surrogate house. It does curtail the freedom. When I used to go, everybody would just be lying. They count the days when they can go back." - Kantibhai."Ours is natural birth but surrogacy is a man-made pregnancy. There's a lot of risk. She must have taken at least 300 injections." - Kantibhai of his wife...The Akanksha Infertility Clinic is known internationally for its surrogacy program and currently has over a hundred surrogate mothers pregnant in their environmentally controlled surrogate houses. .Photo by Suzanne Lee
    Suzanne20110511-Surrogacy-Gujarat-08...JPG
  • (L-R) Shuki, Tal, Gil, Lital.rest and watch TV together in Shuki's room after a full day of training..(please refer to emailed captions for individual stories).Shuki Rosenweig and Students in training and daily life in Bangkok Thailand on 30th January 2010. .Photo by Suzanne Lee for Chabad Lubavitch
    slee_jews_thailand_083.JPG
  • Shuki (left) coaches Ilya (center) as Eran (right) trains with punching bags in Rompo Muay Thai Gym, Khlong Toei, Bangkok city, Thailand on 14th December 2009..Shuki Rosenzweig, aged 40, is a professional Muay Thai Boxing fighter (champion) and trainer who has lived for 9 years in Thailand. He is famous in Israel as the authority of this sport. Started at the age of 12 in boxing in Israel, Jerusalem. Used to work in the fish market. His father is a 'legend' in Jerusalem fish market. Shuki stopped working with his dad about 13 years ago. He has opened some muay thai gyms in Thailand in the past. He currently has about 5 Israeli fighters under his training in Bangkok, besides fighters of other nationalities. Shuki found religion in Bangkok with Chabad about 4 years ago. He never misses Shabbat and loves to sing the songs of prayer, priding himself with a good voice. "Chabad integrates all Jews. it keeps us together. When at Chabad, we are at home, united with people of the same culture, language and beliefs"..Eran Schwartz, aged 30, from Jerusalem, has been training for 8 years. He trains for endurance, fitness and fun, although he has fought in one competition in Bangkok the last time he was here. "Eran is very talented, technically adept, wise and has a 'good eye' for fights" says Shuki. This time Eran is staying 3 and a half months in Thailand to train, travel, and write scripts for a TV show and a cartoon series. He had studied economics and used to work in a bank in Israel before he came here. Eran's grandparents are religious but he grew up being secular. "Chabad never pushes you to be religious. It is a relaxed place, they accept you for what you are" says Eran. "It is important to go for Shabbat for all Jews on travel.".Ilya Bashes, aged 27, from Herzeliya, Israel, has been fighting seriously for 5 years. He met Shuki in a muay thai seminar in Israel and decided immediately that he would come to Thailand to train under Shuki. "I knew he was serious from the lo
    slee_jews_thailand_058.JPG
  • Shuki (second from right) demonstrates the techniques for a 'flying elbow' to Eran (right) while Ilya (left) train with punching bags in Rompo Muay Thai Gym, Khlong Toei, Bangkok city, Thailand on 14th December 2009..Shuki Rosenzweig, aged 40, is a professional Muay Thai Boxing fighter (champion) and trainer who has lived for 9 years in Thailand. He is famous in Israel as the authority of this sport. Started at the age of 12 in boxing in Israel, Jerusalem. Used to work in the fish market. His father is a 'legend' in Jerusalem fish market. Shuki stopped working with his dad about 13 years ago. He has opened some muay thai gyms in Thailand in the past. He currently has about 5 Israeli fighters under his training in Bangkok, besides fighters of other nationalities. Shuki found religion in Bangkok with Chabad about 4 years ago. He never misses Shabbat and loves to sing the songs of prayer, priding himself with a good voice. "Chabad integrates all Jews. it keeps us together. When at Chabad, we are at home, united with people of the same culture, language and beliefs"..Eran Schwartz, aged 30, from Jerusalem, has been training for 8 years. He trains for endurance, fitness and fun, although he has fought in one competition in Bangkok the last time he was here. "Eran is very talented, technically adept, wise and has a 'good eye' for fights" says Shuki. This time Eran is staying 3 and a half months in Thailand to train, travel, and write scripts for a TV show and a cartoon series. He had studied economics and used to work in a bank in Israel before he came here. Eran's grandparents are religious but he grew up being secular. "Chabad never pushes you to be religious. It is a relaxed place, they accept you for what you are" says Eran. "It is important to go for Shabbat for all Jews on travel.".Ilya Bashes, aged 27, from Herzeliya, Israel, has been fighting seriously for 5 years. He met Shuki in a muay thai seminar in Israel and decided immediately that he would come to Thailand
    slee_jews_thailand_057.JPG
  • 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
    suzanne20130119-scuk-myleene-philipp...JPG
  • Myleene Klass, a high profile UK celebrity, TV host, violinist and pianist, poses for a portrait in an urban slum where she had visited an underprivileged mother and her family in Paranaque, Metro Manila, The Philippines on 19 January 2013. Photo by Suzanne Lee for Save the Children UK
    suzanne20130119-scuk-myleene-philipp...JPG
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