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  • Ahead of Karate practice, Tabasum Khatun, 14, is standing with other girls, inside a class of the local school in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    39_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, (left) and her best friend Anju Kumari, 13, are observing a Karate counter-attack move during a class in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    26_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Walking past her family's oxen, Tabasum Khatun, 14, preparing to wash dishes in the courtyard of her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    11_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, and her best friend Anju Kumari, 13, (left) are practising a Karate counter-attack move during a class in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    27_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is carrying two buckets of water to her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    18_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is washing the floor of her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    38_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is carrying some dishes to be washed in the courtyard of her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    35_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Mr Sarujit, 40, (left) project coordinator of the local charity Jago Foundation, whose Karate project is being sponsored by Unicef, is walking among children in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    32_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Holding a toddler, Tabasum Khatun, 14, is standing next to her mother, Kitabun Bibi, 45, (centre) and other women in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    24_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is studying the Holy Koran inside her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    23_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Walking past one of her family's ox after washing some dishes, Tabasum Khatun, 14, is carrying them across the courtyard into her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    15_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, and her best friend Anju Kumari, 13, (centre) are practising a Karate counter-attack move during a class in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    10_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is throwing a punch during a Karate class in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    03_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is lighting up a small fire to cook some rice insider her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    02_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is carrying some old hay on her head, to be disposed near her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    40_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • A large Bodhi tree is standing among houses in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    33_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, (right) and her best friend Anju Kumari, 13, are observing a Karate counter-attack move during a class in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    31_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is practising a Karate defensive move during a class in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    30_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Munna Kumar, 40, the local Karate instructor is walking among his girl students during a class in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    29_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, (centre) and her best friend Anju Kumari, 13, (left) are practising a Karate salute to their instructor during a class in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    28_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Standing next to her mother Kitabun Bibi, 45, (right) Tabasum Khatun, 14, is embracing her best friend - and partner of Karate classes - Anju Kumari, 13, (front) in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    25_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Next to the local Imam, Tabasum Khatun, 14, is studying the Holy Koran in the Madrassa of Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    21_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is drying the cloth used to filter water from the well, while standing in the courtyard of her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    20_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • A man is walking with his ox among trees near Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    19_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Next to one of her family's ox, Tabasum Khatun, 14, is washing dishes in the courtyard of her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    14_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is separating the wheat from the chaff, while preparing rice to be cooked for breakfast inside her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    13_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is washing the entrance of her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    12_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, and her best friend Anju Kumari, 13, (right) are observing a Karate counter-attack move during a class in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    09_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is walking with other children on a road of Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    08_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is holding a toddler while standing near her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    07_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • People living in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India, are walking past the home of Tabasum Khatun, 14, one of the local girls trained with Karate skills by Unicef.
    06_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is potrayied in front of the entrance to her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    01_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is washing dishes in the courtyard of her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    37_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is washing a metal pot in the courtyard of her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    36_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Next to her mother Kitabun Bibi, 45, (left) Tabasum Khatun, 14, is lifting her neighbour's toddler while standing in their courtyard in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    34_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is studying the Holy Koran in the Madrassa of Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    22_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Next to her father, Babujan Mia, 48, Tabasum Khatun, 14, is collecting fresh water from a well near her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    17_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, is collecting some hay to be fed to the family's oxen, while in the courtyard of her home in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    16_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Tabasum Khatun, 14, and her best friend Anju Kumari, 13, (right) are observing a Karate counter-attack move during a class in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    05_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Next to her best friend Anju Kumari, 13, (left) Tabasum Khatun, 14, is throwing a kick during a Karate class in Algunda village, pop. 1000, Giridih District, rural Jharkhand, India.
    04_Unicef_Karate_Classes_Jharkhand_I...JPG
  • Portrait of an labourer from Jharkhand State, east India, on the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_10.jpg
  • Two adventurous tourists on bikes are riding along the Leh-Manali Highway...The Leh-Manali Highway is the main road connection between the remote mountainous region of Ladhak, with capital in Leh (3300m), and Manali, HP, a famous hill station 600 km north of New Delhi. Open only four months a year, it is the second-highest motorable road in the world crossing passes up to 5300 meters. It was constructed by the Indian Army in order to develop the surrounding areas as well as monitoring the nearby borders with Kashmir and China. Due to its beauty and increased accessibility, the road to Leh and Ladhak has recently become a must-see destination for local and international tourists leaving the scorching Indian plains..
    Leh-Manali-Highway_India_07.jpg
  • The Indian Army routinely check foreign passports in various locations along the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_21.jpg
  • Labourers are fixing part of the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_12.jpg
  • Travellers are taking a break at one of the various tent camps where they can be hosted, served food and hot drinks..The Leh-Manali Highway is the main road connection between the remote mountainous region of Ladhak, with capital in Leh (3300m), and Manali, HP, a famous hill station 600 km north of New Delhi. Open only four months a year, it is the second-highest motorable road in the world crossing passes up to 5300 meters. It was constructed by the Indian Army in order to develop the surrounding areas as well as monitoring the nearby borders with Kashmir and China. Due to its beauty and increased accessibility, the road to Leh and Ladhak has recently become a must-see destination for local and international tourists leaving the scorching Indian plains..
    Leh-Manali-Highway_India_17.jpg
  • An Indian tourist is taking a break along the Leh-Manali Highway during one of the many long queues that come to create due to its steepness and narrowness. Six thousands workers are employed from East India by the Indian Army every year to maintain and strengthen the road which has become an important tourist and economic route to the north...The Leh-Manali Highway is the main road connection between the remote mountainous region of Ladhak, with capital in Leh (3300m), and Manali, HP, a famous hill station 600 km north of New Delhi. Open only four months a year, it is the second-highest motorable road in the world crossing passes up to 5300 meters. It was constructed by the Indian Army in order to develop the surrounding areas as well as monitoring the nearby borders with Kashmir and China. Due to its beauty and increased accessibility, the road to Leh and Ladhak has recently become a must-see destination for local and international tourists leaving the scorching Indian plains..
    Leh-Manali-Highway_India_24.jpg
  • Local shop-owners sitting in their shop catered for travellers and excursionists along the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_31.jpg
  • Two Buddhist novices dressing up after a bath in a nearby spring along of the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_28.jpg
  • A herd of Bharals (Himalayan blue sheep) along the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_27.jpg
  • A lone woman is prostrating to a Buddhist Stupa along the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_25.jpg
  • A truck is passing through a narrow and steep section of the Leh-Manali Highway bordering a lake.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_22.jpg
  • Labourers are busy on fixing the road on the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_04.jpg
  • Solitary cars travel on the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_02.jpg
  • A bus is travelling on a narrow section of the Leh-Manali Highway near parts of a melting icy section of the mountain along the Leh-Manali Highway...The Leh-Manali Highway is the main road connection between the remote mountainous region of Ladhak, with capital in Leh (3300m), and Manali, HP, a famous hill station 600 km north of New Delhi. Open only four months a year, it is the second-highest motorable road in the world crossing passes up to 5300 meters. It was constructed by the Indian Army in order to develop the surrounding areas as well as monitoring the nearby borders with Kashmir and China. Due to its beauty and increased accessibility, the road to Leh and Ladhak has recently become a must-see destination for local and international tourists leaving the scorching Indian plains..
    Leh-Manali-Highway_India_19.jpg
  • Local people in Leh are passing by a large praying wheel near the gate to the city where the Leh-Manali Highway beings...The Leh-Manali Highway is the main road connection between the remote mountainous region of Ladhak, with capital in Leh (3300m), and Manali, HP, a famous hill station 600 km north of New Delhi. Open only four months a year, it is the second-highest motorable road in the world crossing passes up to 5300 meters. It was constructed by the Indian Army in order to develop the surrounding areas as well as monitoring the nearby borders with Kashmir and China. Due to its beauty and increased accessibility, the road to Leh and Ladhak has recently become a must-see destination for local and international tourists leaving the scorching Indian plains..
    Leh-Manali-Highway_India_02.jpg
  • The Buddhist Monastery 'Thikse Gompa' is photographed at night along the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_29.jpg
  • A mountain view along the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_26.jpg
  • Bikers are taking a break near a small lake while travelling along the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_20.jpg
  • Two adventurous bikers are about to enter a hail storm along the More Plains, a part of the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_19.jpg
  • Army trucks are crossing a small watercourse to reach one of the many military installations positioned along the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_16.jpg
  • A view of a recently constructed section of Leh where migrants or itinerant workers from nearby villages move to in search for better economic conditions.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_32.jpg
  • A group of men is pushing a truck on slippery and muddy soil common of the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_14.jpg
  • A labourer taking a break on a bed of stones against a view of the mountain landscape along the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_09.jpg
  • Along the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_03.jpg
  • A labourer in his tent during an early morning on the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_01.jpg
  • A tent camp where travellers can sleep during the 479 Km trip, which takes on verge 2 days to complete, is photographed along the Leh-Manali Highway...The Leh-Manali Highway is the main road connection between the remote mountainous region of Ladhak, with capital in Leh (3300m), and Manali, HP, a famous hill station 600 km north of New Delhi. Open only four months a year, it is the second-highest motorable road in the world crossing passes up to 5300 meters. It was constructed by the Indian Army in order to develop the surrounding areas as well as monitoring the nearby borders with Kashmir and China. Due to its beauty and increased accessibility, the road to Leh and Ladhak has recently become a must-see destination for local and international tourists leaving the scorching Indian plains..
    Leh-Manali-Highway_India_11.jpg
  • A mountain lake is bordering the Leh-Manali Highway near Taglang La, a mountain pass 5,325 m high, and one of the five the road crosses in its 479 Km, some of the highest in the world, including Rohtang La 3,978 m (13,051 ft), Baralacha La 4,892 m (16,050 ft), Lachulung La 5,059 m. (16,598 ft) ..The Leh-Manali Highway is the main road connection between the remote mountainous region of Ladhak, with capital in Leh (3300m), and Manali, HP, a famous hill station 600 km north of New Delhi. Open only four months a year, it is the second-highest motorable road in the world crossing passes up to 5300 meters. It was constructed by the Indian Army in order to develop the surrounding areas as well as monitoring the nearby borders with Kashmir and China. Due to its beauty and increased accessibility, the road to Leh and Ladhak has recently become a must-see destination for local and international tourists leaving the scorching Indian plains..
    Leh-Manali-Highway_India_09.jpg
  • A day-tourist riding a bike is having a hard time along a wet and particularly muddy section of the Leh-Manali Highway leading up to Rotanlg La, (3,978 m) the nearest pass to the hill station of Manali, in Himachal Pradesh, 600 km north of New Delhi...The Leh-Manali Highway is the main road connection between the remote mountainous region of Ladhak, with capital in Leh (3300m), and Manali, HP, a famous hill station 600 km north of New Delhi. Open only four months a year, it is the second-highest motorable road in the world crossing passes up to 5300 meters. It was constructed by the Indian Army in order to develop the surrounding areas as well as monitoring the nearby borders with Kashmir and China. Due to its beauty and increased accessibility, the road to Leh and Ladhak has recently become a must-see destination for local and international tourists leaving the scorching Indian plains..
    Leh-Manali-Highway_India_08.jpg
  • Young Buddhist monks are awaiting to be gin a Puja in the early morning inside 'Thikse Gompa', a spectacular monastery near Leh, the capital of Ladhak, a small northern Himalayan Indian state with a dominant Buddhist population...The Leh-Manali Highway is the main road connection between the remote mountainous region of Ladhak, with capital in Leh (3300m), and Manali, HP, a famous hill station 600 km north of New Delhi. Open only four months a year, it is the second-highest motorable road in the world crossing passes up to 5300 meters. It was constructed by the Indian Army in order to develop the surrounding areas as well as monitoring the nearby borders with Kashmir and China. Due to its beauty and increased accessibility, the road to Leh and Ladhak has recently become a must-see destination for local and international tourists leaving the scorching Indian plains..
    Leh-Manali-Highway_India_06.jpg
  • The town of Leh, capital of Ladhak, a small northern Himalayan Indian state with a dominant Buddhist population, is photographed from a nearby hill. ...The Leh-Manali Highway is the main road connection between the remote mountainous region of Ladhak, with capital in Leh (3300m), and Manali, HP, a famous hill station 600 km north of New Delhi. Open only four months a year, it is the second-highest motorable road in the world crossing passes up to 5300 meters. It was constructed by the Indian Army in order to develop the surrounding areas as well as monitoring the nearby borders with Kashmir and China. Due to its beauty and increased accessibility, the road to Leh and Ladhak has recently become a must-see destination for local and international tourists leaving the scorching Indian plains..
    Leh-Manali-Highway_India_01.jpg
  • The beginning of the Leh-Manali Highway in Leh. The road has increasingly favoured tourism and development in this remote mountain town.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_30.jpg
  • A labourer is having a bath near a little mountain spring along the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_24.jpg
  • A local family is washing clothes near Leh, the capital of Ladhakh, along the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_23.jpg
  • Tilak Raj, 23, a Punjabi driver living inside his truck for 14 days before being rescued by the truck owner. His vehicle broke down along the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_15.jpg
  • A traffic jam along the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_18.jpg
  • Labourers are making asphalt to repair a section of the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_17.jpg
  • An Indian serviceman is photographed while warming up in his temporary room on the Leh-Manali Highway where he supervises labourers.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_13.jpg
  • Labourers are having breakfast near their tents along the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_11.jpg
  • A truck is passing through a narrow and steep section of the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_08.jpg
  • Labourers are making asphalt to repair a section of the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_07.jpg
  • A labourer has just woken up and is stretching outside his tent on the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_05.jpg
  • A local woman is preparing an omelette for travellers passing by her hut-turned-restaurant along the Leh-Manali Highway...The Leh-Manali Highway is the main road connection between the remote mountainous region of Ladhak, with capital in Leh (3300m), and Manali, HP, a famous hill station 600 km north of New Delhi. Open only four months a year, it is the second-highest motorable road in the world crossing passes up to 5300 meters. It was constructed by the Indian Army in order to develop the surrounding areas as well as monitoring the nearby borders with Kashmir and China. Due to its beauty and increased accessibility, the road to Leh and Ladhak has recently become a must-see destination for local and international tourists leaving the scorching Indian plains..
    Leh-Manali-Highway_India_18.jpg
  • A labourer is portrayed inside his tent on the Leh-Manali Highway.
    Leh_Manali_Highway_India_06.jpg
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