Direct Communication at the Ministry of Environment and Forests in New Delhi
Toxics are everywhere
There is really no escape from toxic chemicals
Workers at factories producing toxic chemicals are faced with a difficult choice - a life of poverty or death due to poisoning?
Ruby Sul and Sanjay, Bhopali activists in Pune during the Raghu Rai exhibition
Youth meeting at the inauguration of the Bhopal exhibition in Bhopal
An Edible Sea Urchin (Echinus esculentus) from Whalsay Island, Shetland, North Sea.
BAHUT HO GAYA!
Women singing at midnight to wake politicians to their duty.
Map of Asia showing where e-waste is imported and recycling sites in China and India.
Children extract copper from discarded computer parts. New Delhi
Acid-soaked rags are used to clean out Cathode Ray Tubes before they are reprocessed in this workshop in Delhi.
Young workers at an e-waste recycling yard in Delhi.
A man works in a Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) 'recycling' yard, with newly reprocessed CRTs piled up high in the background.
Piles of discarded computer parts in a godown in Delhi. These parts are sorted, broken apart and sent to various 'recycling' workshops.
Workers use cleavers for extracting metal parts from used capacitors.
A boy winces at the smoke rising from the computer motherboards being melted over open fires in a recycling yard in Delhi.
Recycling yard workers continue their work in a narrow, open lane in Delhi.
A man takes a break in this workshop-living quarters, surrounded by heaps of electronic scrap.
Sparks fly from a grinding machine, while youngsters sitting a few metres away sort discarded computer parts in preparation for the recycling process.
A worker grinds the surface of an old picture tube, as part of an elaborate process to recycle the Cathode Ray Tubes.
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