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  • Familiares de sujeto que fue encontrado dentro de su vehiculo, con signos de haber sido asesinado, en los Pantanos de Villa, Lima.
    13-HM-David-Vexelman-10.JPG
  • Recorrido policial por el distrito de la Victoria, Lima, con el fin de encontrar personas requisitoriadas por la justicia peruana.
    13-HM-David-Vexelman-04.JPG
  • Sujeto asesinado. Morgue Central de Lima.
    13-HM-David-Vexelman-11.JPG
  • Sujeto es encontrado dentro de su vehiculo, con signos de haber sido asesinado, en los Pantanos de Villa, Lima.
    13-HM-David-Vexelman-09.JPG
  • Recorrido policial por el distrito de la Victoria, Lima, con el fin de encontrar personas requisitoriadas por la justicia peruana.
    13-HM-David-Vexelman-05.JPG
  • A man, owner of a destroyed and looted compound, pauses as he cleans up the area in the devastated city of Sirte, on October 25, 2011, in Libya. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-17.JPG
  • Medical staff members attempt unsuccessfully to keep an Anti-Qaddafi figther alive from a sniper shot on his neck during a street battle against loyalists to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi for the city of Sirte, Libya, on October 13, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    04-2-Mauricio-Lima-04.JPG
  • An anti-Gadhafi fighter is carried by comrades after being shot by a sniper during a gunfight against fighters loyal to Col. Moammar Gadhafi in the town of Sirte, Libya, on October 15, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    04-2-Mauricio-Lima-03.JPG
  • Anti-Qaddafi fighters from Benghazi engage on a firefight with snipers loyalists to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi during a street fighting inside Qaddafi's hometown city of Sirte, Libya, on October 19, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    04-2-Mauricio-Lima-02.JPG
  • A homeless man sleeps by a shoes shop in Lisbon, Portugal, on November 10, 2012. Around 1.4 million people are currently unemployed in Portugal, and only 370,000 of them have receiving monthly social support from the government, leaving around 1 million people without the benefit. Over youths, unemployment rates is breaking records reaching 39% in the third quarter of the year, or equivalent to more than 175,000 people. The official unemployment rate in Portugal is currently on 15.7%, a bit away from the highest European rate in Spain, with 25.8%, followed by Greece with 25.1% of jobless. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-36.JPG
  • A resident walks by a police member of special forces (L) during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-29.JPG
  • Anti-Qaddafi fighters exchange fire with loyalists to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi during a heavy gun battle atop of a residential building from the east end, for Qaddafi's hometown city of Sirte, Libya, on October 9, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-10.JPG
  • Anti-Qaddafi fighters from Benghazi engage on a firefight with snipers loyalists to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi during a street fighting inside Qaddafi's hometown city of Sirte, Libya, on October 19, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-07.JPG
  • Libyan Rebels gather around the body of late leader Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi during a public visit to see his body, inside a refrigerator at a market in Misurata, Libya, on October 21, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    04-2-Mauricio-Lima-12.JPG
  • A man, owner of a destroyed and looted compound, pauses as he cleans up the area in the devastated city of Sirte, on October 25, 2011, in Libya. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    04-2-Mauricio-Lima-11.JPG
  • Libyan Hamid Al Jayar, 32, a wounded patient resident of Sirte, remains on the floor at a partially powercut hospital taken by anti-Qaddafi fighter from the control of loyalists to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, during an assault from the east end for Qaddafi's hometown city of Sirte, Libya, on October 10, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    04-2-Mauricio-Lima-10.JPG
  • An anti-Qaddafi sniper fires from inside a stormed bedroom at a residential compound during an intense street battle against loyalists to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi as they advance into the town of Sirte, Libya, on October 15, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    04-2-Mauricio-Lima-08.JPG
  • Supporters of anti-Qaddafi rebels celebrate their victory atop of a tank following a military parade at Freedom Square in Misurata, on October 28, 2011, Libya. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    04-2-Mauricio-Lima-06.JPG
  • Homelessness since March, Former Portuguese Army officer Captain Alberto Rodrigues, 70, who was in the Army for 11 years (66-68 Guinea Bissau, 68-70 Macau and 70-77 Mozambique), has some soup as his wife Natalia Gusmao, 50, eats some food by the stairs of a closed Christmas gift shop, after they have receiving a lunch at a free food distribution centre nearby "Praça de Espanha" square (or Spain square), in Lisbon, Portugal, on November 28, 2012. Around 1.4 million people are currently unemployed in Portugal, and only 370,000 of them have receiving monthly social support from the government, leaving around 1 million people without the benefit. Over youths, unemployment rates is breaking records reaching 39% in the third quarter of the year, or equivalent to more than 175,000 people. The official unemployment rate in Portugal is currently on 15.7%, a bit away from the highest European rate in Spain, with 25.8%, followed by Greece with 25.1% of jobless. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-41.JPG
  • Protestors gather near the cordon of riot police officers by the stairway of the Congress during a demonstration to marking the European coordinated general strike in Lisbon, Portugal, on November 14, 2012. Around 1.4 million people are currently unemployed in Portugal, and only 370,000 of them have receiving monthly social support from the government, leaving around 1 million people without the benefit. Over youths, unemployment rates is breaking records reaching 39% in the third quarter of the year, or equivalent to more than 175,000 people. The official unemployment rate in Portugal is currently on 15.7%, a bit away from the highest European rate in Spain, with 25.8%, followed by Greece with 25.1% of jobless. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-38.JPG
  • To follow a story on Euro zone crisis in Portugal by Susanne Daley - An elderly man sits by a vacant building, which used to be a teather, while watching a demonstration by Army officers through Avenida da Liberdade, or Freedom Avenue in Portuguese, in Lisbon, Portugal, on November 10, 2012. Portugal is on the top EU country list in inequality and social contrast. Poverty rates on elderly community is nowadays in 21%, and Lisbon itself has increased 80% over the past 20 years. Due to the financial crisis, the number of retired people on food distribution centers increases weekly while austerity measures recently announced by the government has affected dozens of social institutions. Data released on Sunday by the WHO (World Health Organization) indicates that 39.4% of elderly people in Portugal are victims of abuse and, of these, 32.9% are victims of psychological abuse, 16.5% of racketeering, 12.8% of violation of their rights, 9.9% of negligence, 3.6% of sexual abuse and 2.8% of physical abuse. Still, from a WHO research, in Portugal, 44% of households with a person aged over 65 years have financial difficulties in keeping the home adequately heated. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-37.JPG
  • Cape Verde-born, Portuguese Emilia Garcia, 46, who also has her house scheduled to be destroyed, is seen at Santa Filomena neighborhood, in Amadora, Portugal, on November 13, 2012. According to local authorities, the Santa Filomena neighborhood, a predominantly area which hosts Cape Verde immigrants, is an illegally occupied area scheduled to be totally demolished, as part of local Special Rehousing Program (PER), and those families whose are not enrolled in the PER program, will have to find out alternative solutions by themselves. Near 250 houses still remain there. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-32.JPG
  • A resident collects some water as a special forces officer patrols nearby during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-30.JPG
  • A man is arrested at a pre dawn incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, early on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-26.JPG
  • A resident reads a newspaper a female police member of special forces patrols nearby during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-24.JPG
  • Policemen move forward during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-23.JPG
  • Libyan Rebels gather around the body of late leader Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi during a public visit to see his body, inside a refrigerator at a market in Misurata, Libya, on October 21, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-18.JPG
  • Disfigured bodies of men alleged to be part of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi's bodyguards lie amid destroyed vehicles at the place Qaddafi's convoy was hitten by NATO airstrike and later he was assassinated by rebels, in the outskirts of Sirte, Libya, on October 20, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-16.JPG
  • An anti-Qaddafi fighter (L) falls on the ground after being shot on the left arm, seconds after a young man (R) being hit on the chest by loyalists to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi during a heavy gun battle atop of a residential building from the east end for Qaddafi's hometown city of Sirte, Libya, on October 9, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-14.JPG
  • An anti-Qaddafi machine gunner from Misurata collects more ammunition as comrades take a break during a street fighting against loyalists to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi inside the city of Sirte, on October 18, 2011, in Libya. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-06.JPG
  • Afghan villagers look towards unseen US and Afghan soldiers as they walk by patrolling the area in the remote area of Naka, Paktika province, eastern Afghanistan near the Pakistan border, on April 13, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-04.JPG
  • An anti-Qaddafi fighter (L) falls on the ground after being shot on the left arm, seconds after a young man (R) being hit on the chest by loyalists to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi during a heavy gun battle atop of a residential building from the east end for Qaddafi's hometown city of Sirte, Libya, on October 9, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    04-2-Mauricio-Lima-09.JPG
  • Anti-Qaddafi fighters exchange fire with loyalists to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi during a heavy gun battle atop of a residential building from the east end, for Qaddafi's hometown city of Sirte, Libya, on October 9, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    04-2-Mauricio-Lima-05.JPG
  • An anti-Qaddafi machine gunner from Misurata collects more ammunition as comrades take a break during a street fighting against loyalists to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi inside the city of Sirte, on October 18, 2011, in Libya. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    04-2-Mauricio-Lima-01.JPG
  • An elderly walks down an alley inside a cemetery after praying for a relative during the All Souls Day (one of four holidays that cease from 2013 due to austerity measures), in Lisbon, Portugal, on November 1, 2012. Portugal is on the top EU country list in inequality and social contrast. Poverty rates on elderly community is nowadays in 21%, and Lisbon itself has increased 80% over the past 20 years. Due to the financial crisis, the number of retired people on food distribution centers increases weekly while austerity measures recently announced by the government has affected dozens of social institutions. Data released on Sunday by the WHO (World Health Organization) indicates that 39.4% of elderly people in Portugal are victims of abuse and, of these, 32.9% are victims of psychological abuse, 16.5% of racketeering, 12.8% of violation of their rights, 9.9% of negligence, 3.6% of sexual abuse and 2.8% of physical abuse. Still, from a WHO research, in Portugal, 44% of households with a person aged over 65 years have financial difficulties in keeping the home adequately heated. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-43.JPG
  • Another empty building is seen in central Lisbon, Portugal, on October 12, 2012. An estimative of around 735 thousands empty buildings all over Portugal as well as 50% of Lisbon apartments are empty. Per day, 25 homes for hypothec nonpayment are returned to banks. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-42.JPG
  • Protestors disassemble the sidewalk to throw rocks towards the cordon of riot police officers by the stairway of the Congress during a demonstration to marking the European coordinated general strike in Lisbon, Portugal, on November 14, 2012. Around 1.4 million people are currently unemployed in Portugal, and only 370,000 of them have receiving monthly social support from the government, leaving around 1 million people without the benefit. Over youths, unemployment rates is breaking records reaching 39% in the third quarter of the year, or equivalent to more than 175,000 people. The official unemployment rate in Portugal is currently on 15.7%, a bit away from the highest European rate in Spain, with 25.8%, followed by Greece with 25.1% of jobless. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-39.JPG
  • People sing the Portuguese national anthem near the cordon of riot police officers by the stairway of the Congress during a demonstration to marking the European coordinated general strike in Lisbon, Portugal, on November 14, 2012. Around 1.4 million people are currently unemployed in Portugal, and only 370,000 of them have receiving monthly social support from the government, leaving around 1 million people without the benefit. Over youths, unemployment rates is breaking records reaching 39% in the third quarter of the year, or equivalent to more than 175,000 people. The official unemployment rate in Portugal is currently on 15.7%, a bit away from the highest European rate in Spain, with 25.8%, followed by Greece with 25.1% of jobless. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-35.JPG
  • A man carries an armchair over his head while moving furnishings from an apartment of an elderly person who died few days before, at Martim Moniz neighborhood, in central Lisbon, Portugal, on November 21, 2012. Portugal is on the top EU country list in inequality and social contrast. Poverty rates on elderly community is nowadays in 21%, and Lisbon itself has increased 80% over the past 20 years. Due to the financial crisis, the number of retired people on food distribution centers increases weekly while austerity measures recently announced by the government has affected dozens of social institutions. Data released on Sunday by the WHO (World Health Organization) indicates that 39.4% of elderly people in Portugal are victims of abuse and, of these, 32.9% are victims of psychological abuse, 16.5% of racketeering, 12.8% of violation of their rights, 9.9% of negligence, 3.6% of sexual abuse and 2.8% of physical abuse. Still, from a WHO research, in Portugal, 44% of households with a person aged over 65 years have financial difficulties in keeping the home adequately heated. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-34.JPG
  • Guilherme (C) and his sister Mafalda (R), sons of a family who lives inside a trailer, which is attached to a tide room used for cooking and resting-- play around after having lunch, in Lisbon, Portugal, on November 17, 2012. Around 1.4 million people are currently unemployed in Portugal, and only 370,000 of them have receiving monthly social support from the government, leaving around 1 million people without the benefit. Over youths, unemployment rates is breaking records reaching 39% in the third quarter of the year, or equivalent to more than 175,000 people. The official unemployment rate in Portugal is currently on 15.7%, a bit away from the highest European rate in Spain, with 25.8%, followed by Greece with 25.1% of jobless. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-33.JPG
  • Police members of BOPE special forces rides on a bulldozer by residents during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-27.JPG
  • A helicopter overflies as the sun rises during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, early on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-25.JPG
  • Residents are seen at a bar at the beginning of an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, early on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-22.JPG
  • A resident crosses a street between armored carriers of Brazilian Navy during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-21.JPG
  • Residents watch as a police helicopter overflies nearby during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-20.JPG
  • Libyan Hamid Al Jayar, 32, a wounded patient resident of Sirte, remains on the floor at a partially powercut hospital taken by anti-Qaddafi fighter from the control of loyalists to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, during an assault from the east end for Qaddafi's hometown city of Sirte, Libya, on October 10, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-15.JPG
  • An anti-Qaddafi sniper fires from inside a stormed bedroom at a residential compound during an intense street battle against loyalists to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi as they advance into the town of Sirte, Libya, on October 15, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-13.JPG
  • An anti-Gadhafi fighter is carried by comrades after being shot by a sniper during a gunfight against fighters loyal to Col. Moammar Gadhafi in the town of Sirte, Libya, on October 15, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-08.JPG
  • Physicians with Medecins du Monde checks the heart rate of a collapsed drug addict under the Pul-i-Sokhta bridge, where there can be 200 or 300 addicts here on any given day, in Kabul, Afghanistan, on May 2, 2011. A growing drug addiction problem and all the ills that come with is just another one of Afghanistan's increasing afflictions. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-02.JPG
  • Portuguese psychologist Monica Alexandra (C), 32, checks her mobile phone before heading to the airport, next to her mother Lidia (L), 49, and helped by her sister Filipa, 26, at their home in Sintra, Portugal, on November 16, 2012. Monica Alexandra decided to leave Portugal and move to the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais, where her Brazilian boyfriend has living, and according to her, she already has two job offers scheduled in the upcoming weeks. Better job perspectives and salary were her motivations to leave Portugal behind of indefinite duration. She used to work at a high society gym in Lisbon. The emigration level in Portugal in 2003 was to 30 thousands emigrations per year. Now, up to 100 thousands Portugueses annually flee the country. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-40.JPG
  • A policeman, member of BOPE special forces, move forward following an armored carrier of Brazilian Navy during an incursion by security forces into 'Rocinha', one of Brazil’s biggest slums controlled by drug traffickers, on November 13, 2011, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-28.JPG
  • Supporters of anti-Qaddafi rebels celebrate their victory atop of a tank following a military parade at Freedom Square in Misurata, on October 28, 2011, Libya. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-11.JPG
  • Medical staff members attempt unsuccessfully to keep an Anti-Qaddafi figther alive from a sniper shot on his neck during a street battle against loyalists to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi for the city of Sirte, Libya, on October 13, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-09.JPG
  • Afghan Mohammad Akbar, 65, a former Mujahedeen fighter who became blind of his right eye, asks for a portrait holding his picture when he was 30, after cutting some grass near Soviet tanks destroyed during the 80's war, in Kandahar, Afghanistan, on May 9, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-03.JPG
  • Anti-Qaddafi fighters capture a man alleged by them to be a figthter loyalist to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi during a street battle inside the city of Sirte, Libya, on October 13, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    04-2-Mauricio-Lima-07.JPG
  • Anti-Qaddafi fighters capture a man alleged by them to be a figthter loyalist to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi during a street battle inside the city of Sirte, Libya, on October 13, 2011. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-12.JPG
  • Two Afghan National Army soldiers secure a check point at the northern entrance of Kabul, on the road coming from Mazar-e-Sharif, in Afghanistan, on September 21, 2012. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
    16-2-Mauricio-Lima-01.JPG
  • Lima, Kilómetro 100 es un libro que se mueve en varios planos <br />
y que, como su escenario principal, -el pueblo y sus habitantes-, <br />
contiene múltiples niveles de información. <br />
A pocas cuadras de la central de energía nuclear Atucha, Lima tiene en sí misma algo de fusión nuclear (“el proceso por el cual varios núcleos <br />
atómicos de carga similar se unen para formar un núcleo más <br />
pesado”). El surrealismo mágico que cada uno de los <br />
fotografiados proyecta es solo una parte de ese universo <br />
maravilloso que Gaby Messina encontró en el pueblo de la <br />
provincia de Buenos Aires. <br />
<br />
Antropológico y fantástico, a través de sus diseñadas puestas, <br />
Lima, Kilómetro 100 crea en el observador una sensación de <br />
estar asomándose a una mitología personal y colectiva única, en <br />
la cual coexisten el hermetismo y a la vez la cotidianeidad. <br />
Gaby Messina logra con sus fotos irradiarnos con la energía <br />
mágica y creativa que emana de un pueblo muy particular, así <br />
como de cada uno de sus habitantes. Bajo los efectos podemos <br />
ver intenciones, actitudes y emociones que al final, también <br />
reconocemos como nuestras.
    LAT01-05-MessG-01.JPG
  • Agentes del orden detuvieron a 25 personas que se encontraban buscadas por la justicia peruana, tras intervenir a 1,278 personas en el Callao, en un gran operativo que contó con más de 300 efectivos de diferentes divisiones de la Policía Nacional del Perú
    13-HM-David-Vexelman-06.JPG
  • The Paco<br />
<br />
The Paco is a drug that is killing some years miles of kids in Argentina, Chile, Brazil and Peru. Born in the suburbs of Buenos Aires shortly after the 2001 crisis, soon spread to other countries. Paco is done with the residue of cocaine mixed with more harmful substances such as dust or glass halogen lamps burned. In a few time dependence is total and you get to death, body slimming, teeth falling out, until I choke. The paco only costs 5 pesos in Argentina dose (one euro) and has a few seconds 1000 times stronger than regular cocaine. Most affected are the young kids from 12 to 17 years. The great tragedy is that this deadly drug was released from the poorest areas and is now becoming fashionable even in the middle class. Without some kind of unstoppable epidemic.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
01) Lomas de Zamora, Argentina 2011. A guy is sleeping outside his house in the middle of an open sewer. People who use to smoke paco sleep during the day.<br />
02) Lima, Perù, 2011 A boy in an abandoned bulding. People spend all the night smoking Paco.<br />
03) Cartagena, Colombia, 2011 is the city with the biggest amount of young girls forced into prostitution. Most of these girls uses the money to buy drugs.<br />
04) Brazil, Salvador de Bahia, 2011. Guys on the street in the centre of the city.They need to smoke Paco all the night.<br />
05) Lima, Perù, 2011. Youg guys having breaskfast and smoking Paco and Crack.<br />
06) Brazil, Salvador de Bahia, 2011, a girl smokes Paco in his slums in the city center.<br />
07) Brazil, Salvador de Bahia, 2011. Very young guys on the street in the centre of the city. They are used to smoke Paco all the night.<br />
08) Lomas de Zamora, Argentina 2011. A man is selling Paco to young boys in front of children.<br />
09) Lomas de Zamora, Argentina 2011. A guy smoking paco in an a abandoned building.<br />
10) Brazil, Salvador de Bahia, 2011. A doped prostitute is wandering in the city.<br />
11) Brazil, Salvador de Bahia, 2011. The police arrest Paco dealers.<br />
12) Lomas de Zamora. Buenos Aires, April 2012. A
    13-1-Valerio-Bispuri-01.JPG
  • El Huayno con Arpa es uno de los generos musicales mas ovacionados en el Peru. De origen y arraigo en los sectores rurales, es con la migracion de la poblacion campesina hacia las zonas urbanas, en especial a la capital Lima, que ocurre el desplazamiento de los cantos y musicas andinas. La pupularidad del Huayno ha destado desde hace decadas la proliferacion de jovenes cantantes especialmente adolescentes que desean iniciar una carrera musical. Respaldadas por sus padres y/o madres; y alentadas por el exito de algunas interpretes ya consagradas, componen sus primeras canciones y adquieren sus primeros vestuarios. Asumen carreras como solistas en las urbanizaciones de la periferie(pueblos jovenes)  de la ciudad de Lima. El costo de cada vestuario oscila alrededor de los 200 dolares. Pequeñas tarimas en fiestas de barrio son escenario de sus primeros conciertos en busqueda de la soñada popularidad y exito economico.
    LAT01-18-CabeM-01.JPG
  • Agentes del orden detuvieron a 25 personas que se encontraban buscadas por la justicia peruana, tras intervenir a 1,278 personas en el Callao, en un gran operativo que contó con más de 300 efectivos de diferentes divisiones de la Policía Nacional del Perú
    13-HM-David-Vexelman-08.JPG
  • Asesinato por ajuste de cuentas en la provincia constitucional del Callao, Perú.
    13-HM-David-Vexelman-07.JPG
  • Asaltantes se enfrentan  a balazos con la policia por el secuestro de un empresario Limeño en el distrito de Santa Anita, dejando el saldo de 3 delincuentes muertos.
    13-HM-David-Vexelman-01.JPG
  • Asaltantes se enfrentan  a balazos con la policia por el secuestro de un empresario Limeño en el distrito de Santa Anita, dejando el saldo de 3 delincuentes muertos.
    13-HM-David-Vexelman-03.JPG
  • Entierro de niña que fue baleada en la cabeza en el distrito de San Juan de Miraflores.
    13-HM-David-Vexelman-12.JPG
  • Asaltantes se enfrentan  a balazos con la policia por el secuestro de un empresario Limeño a las afueras de una casa de cambio en el distrito de San Isidro. Los dos vehiculos de delincuentes logra escapar.
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  • Lima Perù, diciembre 2006 chicos que se despiertan despues al droga en la calle de la ciudad.
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  • Afghan boys (L) play atop of a destroyed Soviet bus parked outside the ruins of a compound, which use to be home to a timber manufacturing factory in the late 80's, on the western outskirts of Kabul on May 14, 2010. Two NATO soldiers fighting in Afghanistan to quell a Taliban-led insurgency were killed in attacks, the military said. One was killed in an "insurgent attack" in the east of the country and the other died after a crude Taliban-style bomb exploded in the south on May 13, NATO's International Security Assistance Force said. AFP PHOTO/Mauricio LIMA
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  • An Afghan man enjoys a sunny day at a swimming pool in Kabul on April 28, 2010. Afghanistan has commemorated the 1992 toppling of a Soviet-backed regime, which led to bloody civil war and arguably to the rise of the Taliban, as the capital Kabul went under security lockdown. Helicopter gunships clattered overhead as the Afghan army staged a 21-gun salute at a sports stadium in central Kabul, used as a public execution ground by the 1996-2001 Taliban regime that emerged from the devastating civil war. TOPSHOTS/AFP PHOTO/Mauricio LIMA
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  • An Afghan girl plays in front of a cemetery in the westerns outskirts of Kabul, on May 4, 2010. The US military has ordered 850 troops to Afghanistan to fill a shortage of trainers for security forces, as European allies needed more time to deploy their instructors, the Pentagon said. AFP PHOTO/Mauricio LIMA
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  • Lima, Perù, dicembre 2006, un chico vive en un rincon de una casa abandonada con otros chicos y con perros. Se drogan toda la noche.
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  • Afghan men work at a factory manufacturing concrete blast walls on the outskirts of Kabul on May 18, 2010. International firms are exploring the cement industry in wartorn countries such as Afghanistan, Iraq, Israel and Palestinian Territories, neighbors Pakistan and Iran are the major exporters of the product. Many Kabul streets contain concrete blast barriers for protection from insurgency attacks, such as the 'Wazir Akbar Khan' district, an area home to foreign companies and embassy compounds. AFP PHOTO/Mauricio LIMA
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  • An Afghan youth (L) pauses during his training to pray as a colleague hits a punch bag during a training session at a boxing club in central Kabul on May 13, 2010. Under the Taliban regime boxing was among many sports banned. After the reinstatement of Afghanistan to Olympic competition in 2002, one athlete Basharmal Sultani took part in the boxing competition of the 2004 Athens Olympic Games. AFP PHOTO/Mauricio LIMA
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  • Burqa-clad Afghan women walk against the wind during a sandstorm following rain in central Kabul, on May 16, 2010. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon will attend an international conference on Afghanistan due to be held in the capital, Kabul, in July, Afghan officials said. AFP PHOTO/Mauricio LIMA
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  • Afghan horsemen compete for the goat carcass during a game of buzkashi in Kabul on April 23, 2010. The ancient game is an Afghan national sport, played between two teams of horsemen competing to throw a goat carcass into a scoring circle. AFP PHOTO/Mauricio LIMA
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  • An Afghan boy prepares to bowl a ball while playing cricket inside the ruins of a compound, which use to be home to a timber manufacturing factory in the late 80's, on the western outskirts of Kabul on May 14, 2010. Two NATO soldiers fighting in Afghanistan to quell a Taliban-led insurgency were killed in attacks, the military said. One was killed in an "insurgent attack" in the east of the country and the other died after a crude Taliban-style bomb exploded in the south on May 13, NATO's International Security Assistance Force said. AFP PHOTO/Mauricio LIMA
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  • Afghan men and youths at a traditional hamam bathhouse in Kabul on April 30, 2010. Mostly Afghans come in the morning for one-hour sessions inside the steamfilled rooms, paying 50 afghanis (1 dollar) each before heading on to the mosque for Friday prayers. AFP PHOTO/Mauricio LIMA
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  • APOCALYPSE AFGHANISTAN - Afghan protestors shout slogans against Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad during a demonstration in front of the Iranian embassy compound in Kabul on May 2, 2010. Some 200 people gathered in the protest during which they accused the Iranian government  of a public execution of 40 Afghans two weeks ago. AFP PHOTO/Mauricio LIMA
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  • TOPSHOTS<br />
An Afghan National Army soldier prays during a foot patrol with unseen US Marines from India Company, 3rd Battalion, 6th Marines near a poppy field in a stronghold Taliban area of Marjah, Helmand province, southern Afghanistan, on April 5, 2010. Nearly two months after US Marines led what was billed the biggest offensive against the Taliban in more than eight years of war, troops still come under daily fire from insurgents and bombs are still exploding.     TOPSHOTS/AFP PHOTO/Mauricio LIMA
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  • An Afghan man (L) looks from outside towards his wounded relative in a hospital bed reflected in a window after a suicide attack in Kabul, on May 18, 2010. A suicide car bomb attack has targeted NATO troops in the Afghan capital, killing at least 20 people near parliament in the deadliest strike on Kabul in more than a year, an army doctor said. The Taliban, the militia leading a nearly nine-year insurgency against the Western-backed government and US-led foreign troops, claimed responsibility for the attack, saying they had targeted "invading NATO forces. AFP PHOTO/Mauricio LIMA
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  • Flor Romero cantante de 15 años se mira en el espejo de la peluqueria de su barrio en Villa Maria del Trinfo , al sur de la ciudad de Lima
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  • UNA MUJER ORINANDO EN LOS BARRIOS DE CLASE ALTA DE LIMA
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  • Lima Perù 2006
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  • Lima Perù 2006
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