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  • Iraqi men are standing on the street by a building still showing signs of the 2004 US-led battles for Fallujah, Iraq.
    33_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Abdullah Kodhum, a 4-day-old boy affected by a severe case of hydrocephalus and spina bifida, is lying inside a room of the children's ward at Fallujah General Hospital, Iraq. More then 15 per cent of children at the hospital are now being born with some sort of congenital defect. The average elsewhere in the world is believed to be between 2 and 4 per cent.
    32_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Khadija, 27 days, a young girl with a severe heart defect, is breathing through an aerosol while in her mother's arms, inside a room of the children's ward at Fallujah General Hospital, Iraq.
    30_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Zakhia, 3, is crying in the arms of her mother (centre) while Jasim, 5, (right) is playing with his father, in Fallujah, Iraq. Both children are suffering from severe neurological disorders, and were born after the 2004 US-led battles for the city. Sausaan, (left) the family’s healthy 8-year-old sister, born before the attacks, regularly assists her two disabled siblings. The parents and their relatives have no history of birth defects.
    28_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Zahra Mohammed, 5, a girl affected by a neurological disorder and the presence of six fingers in each hand and foot, is holding a book while sitting on the floor of her home in Fallujah, Iraq. The parents and their relatives have no history of birth defects.
    27_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • A man is walking on the streets of Fallujah, Iraq.
    25_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Maath, 6, a child suffering from a shortage of brain cells and mental disability, is crying on the floor of his home in Fallujah, Iraq. The parents and their relatives have no history of birth defects.
    24_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Mariam, 7, (top right) is awakening next to her brothers Mustafah, 4, (bottom right) and Ammar, 6, (left) in Fallujah, Iraq. The three children are all affected by severe neurological disorders. The parents and their relatives have no history of defects, and have been tested for compatibility.
    15_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • A newborn suffering from a heart and kidney defect, is drinking milk while held by the mother, inside the children's ward of Fallujah General Hospital, Iraq. Around 15 per cent of children at the hospital are now being born with some sort of congenital defect. The average elsewhere in the world is believed to be between 2 and 4 per cent.
    13_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Mohammed Thiab, a young 25-year-old father, is playing with Jasim, 5, one of his two children suffering from severe neurological disorders, on the floor of their home in Fallujah, Iraq. The children have a healthy 8-year-old sister, Sauusan, born before the 2004 US-led battles for the city, who regularly helps the parents in assisting her disabled siblings. The parents and their relatives have no history of birth defects.
    10_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Saadi Othman, 3, a boy suffering from a severe brain damage, blindness and paralysis, is being comforted by his mother while having breakfast in their home in Fallujah, Iraq. The parents and their relatives have no history of birth defects.
    07_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • A boy is walking by a building still showing signs of the 2004 US-led battles on the streets of Fallujah, Iraq.
    41_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • A woman is walking by a building of the Fallujah General Hospital, Iraq. Around 15 per cent of children at the hospital are now being born with some sort of congenital defect. The average elsewhere in the world is believed to be between 2 and 4 per cent.
    39_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • A newborn suffering from a birth defect is lying inside an incubator in the children's ward of Fallujah General Hospital, Iraq, while the grandmother is sitting nearby. (right) Around 15 per cent of children at the hospital are now being born with some sort of congenital defect. The average elsewhere in the world is believed to be between 2 and 4 per cent.
    38_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Mohammed Thiab, a young 25-year-old father, is playing with Jasim, 5, one of his two children affected by neurological disorders, on the floor of their home in Fallujah, Iraq. The children have a healthy 8-year-old sister, Sauusan, born before the 2004 US-led battles, who regularly helps the parents in assisting her sick siblings. The parents and their relatives have no history of birth defects.
    31_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Jasim, 5, (right) one of Mohammed Thiab's two disabled young children, is sitting in his pram with his grandfather in the front-yard of their home in Fallujah, Iraq. The family has a healthy 8-year-old sister, Sauusan, born before the 2004 US-led battles, who regularly helps the parents in assisting her sick siblings. The parents and their relatives have no history of birth defects.
    26_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Munem Adnan Abdullah, 37, is holding Mohammed, 4, one of his two severely disabled sons, while standing in front of the entrance to their home in Fallujah, Iraq. The family also has two healthy older brothers, Ali, 10, and Omer, 9, both born before the two US-led battles for the city took place in 2004. Ayob and his brother Mohammed are both affected by neurological and spinal cord disorders. The parents and their relatives have no history of birth defects.
    23_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Abdullah Kodhum, a young 4-day-old boy affected by a severe case of hydrocephalus and spina bifida, is lying inside a room of the children's ward of the Fallujah General Hospital, Iraq. Around 15 per cent of children at the hospital are now being born with some sort of congenital defect. The average elsewhere in the world is believed to be between 2 and 4 per cent.
    22_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Zakhia, 3, a girl suffering from a severe neurological disorder, is crying inside her home in Fallujah, Iraq. Her brother, Jasim, 5, is also affected by a similar illness. The family has a healthy 8-year-old daughter, Sauusan, born before the 2004 US-led battles for the city, who regularly assists her two disabled siblings. The parents and their relatives have no history of birth defects.
    18_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Zahra Mohammed, 5, a girl affected by a severe neurological disorder and six fingers in each hand and foot, is sitting on her pram on a family photograph, in between medical records collected by her father, in Fallujah, Iraq. The parents and their relatives have no history of birth defects.
    16_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Men are waiting for daily-wage jobs, while standing at a corner next to a building still showing signs of the US-led 2004 battles on the streets of Fallujah, Iraq.
    14_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Two men are walking by a mosque and a building still showing signs of the 2004 US-led battles on the streets of Fallujah, Iraq.
    11_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • The Fallujah General Hospital, (top right) and the large Al-Khulafa Mosque (top left) are shining in orange lights during an early winter evening in Fallujah, Iraq. More then 15 per cent of children at the hospital are now being born with some sort of congenital defect. The average elsewhere in the world is believed to be between 2 and 4 per cent.
    08_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Munem Adnan Abdullah, 37, is holding Mohammed, 4, (right) one of his two disabled children, in Fallujah, Iraq. Ayob, 5, his second disabled child is being pushed by one of his two older, and healthy brothers, both born before the two 2004 battles. The parents and their relatives have no history of birth defects.
    05_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Ali, 10, is assisting one of his two disabled brothers born after the 2004 battles, Ayob, 5, while he is sitting on a wheelchair inside their home in Fallujah, Iraq. The parents and their relatives have no history of birth defects.
    03_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Members of the Iraqi Police are checking vehicles passing through the main checkpoint to the city of Fallujah, Iraq, on the Highway N.10. (Baghdad-Fallujah-Ramadi)
    43_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • The Sun is setting over the city of Fallujah, Iraq.
    29_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • A minaret destroyed by a US missile during the 2004 battles for the city, has been left in ruin as a monument, while in this mosque in central Fallujah, Iraq, a new one has been erected across the front-yard.
    21_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Hamed Hamid, 30, a local policeman and the son of a police Colonel who was murdered by Al-Qaida supporters for its supposed collaboration with American forces, is sitting in his home in Fallujah, Iraq. Hamed has a boy, Maath, 6, suffering from a shortage of brain cells and mental disability. The parents and their relatives have no history of birth defects.
    20_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • An Iraqi soldier (left) and a member of the Iraqi Police (right) are sitting next to a Humvee vehicle, guarding the main checkpoint to the city of Fallujah, Iraq, on Highway N.10. (Baghdad-Fallujah-Ramadi)
    19_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • The Sun is setting over the city of Fallujah, Iraq.
    17_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Maath, 6, a child suffering from a shortage of brain cells and a mental disability, is crying in his home in Fallujah, Iraq. The parents and their relatives have no history of birth defects.
    12_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • An Iraqi Police officer is guarding traffic at the main checkpoint to the city of Fallujah, Iraq, on Highway N.10. (Baghdad-Fallujah-Ramadi)
    09_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • A newborn suffering from a severe neurological disorder and paralysis is lying in an incubator inside the children's ward at Fallujah General Hospital, Iraq. More then 15 per cent of children at the hospital are now being born with some sort of congenital defect. The average elsewhere in the world is believed to be between 2 and 4 per cent.
    06_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Saadi Othman, 3, a child suffering from a severe brain damage and paralysis, is undergoing aerosol therapy in the arms of his mother in Fallujah, Iraq. The family was in the city during both US-led battles for the city in 2004. The parents and relatives have no history of birth defects.
    02_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Luay Hadi, 29, is comforting his daughter, Tebah, 7, a child affected by cerebral palsy, in Fallujah, Iraq. Tebah's mother was pregnant during both US-led battles in 2004. The parents and their relatives have no history of birth defects.
    01_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • An Iraqi soldier (left) and a member of the Iraqi Police (right) are sitting next to a Humvee vehicle, guarding the main checkpoint to the city of Fallujah, Iraq, on Highway N.10. (Baghdad-Fallujah-Ramadi)
    36_Fallujah_Legacy.JPG
  • Elaha Soroor, 20, (centre) a finalist for 'Afghan Star', a Tolo TV program similar to American Idol, is portrayed in her home in Kabul, Afghanistan. Elaha Soroor was a finalist of Afghan Star in the 2008-2009 edition but failed to win on the final night. Some believe she lost because of her gender, others believe because she is ethnically Hazara, a minority group constituting about 15% of Afghanistan's population with features similar to Mongolians, flat noses, broad faces and almond-shaped eyes. Hazaras are mostly Shia Muslims, as opposed to other Afghans who are for the most part Sunnis.
    Performing_For_Freedom_Kabul_Afghani...JPG
  • Elaha Soroor, 20, (centre) a finalist for 'Afghan Star', a Tolo TV program similar to American Idol, is practising in her home in Kabul, Afghanistan. Elaha Soroor was a finalist of Afghan Star in the 2008-2009 edition but failed to win on the final night. Some believe she lost because of her gender, others believe because she is ethnically Hazara, a minority group constituting about 15% of Afghanistan's population with features similar to Mongolians, flat noses, broad faces and almond-shaped eyes. Hazaras are mostly Shia Muslims, as opposed to other Afghans who are for the most part Sunnis. .
    Performing_For_Freedom_Kabul_Afghani...JPG
  • Elaha Soroor, 20, (centre) a finalist for 'Afghan Star', a Tolo TV program similar to American Idol, is practising in her home in Kabul, Afghanistan. Elaha Soroor was a finalist of Afghan Star in the 2008-2009 edition but failed to win on the final night. Some believe she lost because of her gender, others believe because she is ethnically Hazara, a minority group constituting about 15% of Afghanistan's population with features similar to Mongolians, flat noses, broad faces and almond-shaped eyes. Hazaras are mostly Shia Muslims, as opposed to other Afghans who are for the most part Sunnis.
    Performing_For_Freedom_Kabul_Afghani...JPG
  • Elaha Soroor, 20, (centre) a finalist for 'Afghan Star', a Tolo TV program similar to American Idol, is practising in her home in Kabul, Afghanistan. Elaha Soroor was a finalist of Afghan Star in the 2008-2009 edition but failed to win on the final night. Some believe she lost because of her gender, others believe because she is ethnically Hazara, a minority group constituting about 15% of Afghanistan's population with features similar to Mongolians, flat noses, broad faces and almond-shaped eyes. Hazaras are mostly Shia Muslims, as opposed to other Afghans who are for the most part Sunnis.
    Performing_For_Freedom_Kabul_Afghani...JPG
  • Elaha Soroor, 20, (centre) a finalist for 'Afghan Star', a Tolo TV program similar to American Idol, is portrayed in her home in Kabul, Afghanistan. Elaha Soroor was a finalist of Afghan Star in the 2008-2009 edition but failed to win on the final night. Some believe she lost because of her gender, others believe because she is ethnically Hazara, a minority group constituting about 15% of Afghanistan's population with features similar to Mongolians, flat noses, broad faces and almond-shaped eyes. Hazaras are mostly Shia Muslims, as opposed to other Afghans who are for the most part Sunnis.
    Performing_For_Freedom_Kabul_Afghani...JPG
  • Elaha Soroor, 20, (centre) a finalist for 'Afghan Star', a Tolo TV program similar to American Idol, is portrayed in her home in Kabul, Afghanistan. Elaha Soroor was a finalist of Afghan Star in the 2008-2009 edition but failed to win on the final night. Some believe she lost because of her gender, others believe because she is ethnically Hazara, a minority group constituting about 15% of Afghanistan's population with features similar to Mongolians, flat noses, broad faces and almond-shaped eyes. Hazaras are mostly Shia Muslims, as opposed to other Afghans who are for the most part Sunnis. .
    Performing_For_Freedom_Kabul_Afghani...JPG
  • Elaha Soroor, 20, (right) a finalist for 'Afghan Star', a Tolo TV program similar to American Idol, is listening to some of her songs with her younger brother (centre) and a female member of her music group (left) in her home in Kabul, Afghanistan. Elaha Soroor was a finalist of Afghan Star in the 2008-2009 edition but failed to win on the final night. Some believe she lost because of her gender, others believe because she is ethnically Hazara, a minority group constituting about 15% of Afghanistan's population with features similar to Mongolians, flat noses, broad faces and almond-shaped eyes. Hazaras are mostly Shia Muslims, as opposed to other Afghans who are for the most part Sunnis.
    Performing_For_Freedom_Kabul_Afghani...JPG
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