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  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 23/03/2017. London, UK.   A technician shows a Wedgwood anti-slavery medallion, circa 1790, bearing the incription "AM I NOT MAN AND A BROTHER?" (Est. GBP800-1,200).  Preview at Sotheby's New Bond Street of property from two great Scottish families, the Forbeses of Pitsligo and the Marquesses of Lothian, which will be auctioned in London on 28 March.   Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_SCOTTISH_FAMILIES_SCU_06.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 23/03/2017. London, UK.   A technician shows a Wedgwood anti-slavery medallion, circa 1790, bearing the incription "AM I NOT MAN AND A BROTHER?" (Est. GBP800-1,200).  Preview at Sotheby's New Bond Street of property from two great Scottish families, the Forbeses of Pitsligo and the Marquesses of Lothian, which will be auctioned in London on 28 March.   Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_SCOTTISH_FAMILIES_CROP_SCU_02.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 23/03/2017. London, UK.   A technician shows a Wedgwood anti-slavery medallion, circa 1790, bearing the incription "AM I NOT MAN AND A BROTHER?" (Est. GBP800-1,200).  Preview at Sotheby's New Bond Street of property from two great Scottish families, the Forbeses of Pitsligo and the Marquesses of Lothian, which will be auctioned in London on 28 March.   Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_SCOTTISH_FAMILIES_SCU_05.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 23/03/2017. London, UK.   A technician shows a Wedgwood anti-slavery medallion, circa 1790, bearing the incription "AM I NOT MAN AND A BROTHER?" (Est. GBP800-1,200).  Preview at Sotheby's New Bond Street of property from two great Scottish families, the Forbeses of Pitsligo and the Marquesses of Lothian, which will be auctioned in London on 28 March.   Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_SCOTTISH_FAMILIES_CROP_SCU_01.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/10/2107. London, UK. People prepare to take part in the "The Walk For Freedom", marching around the capital demonstrating against modern slavery.  The protest is co-ordinated with other walks which abolitionist group A21 is staging in 400 cities around the world on the same day. The facemasks represents the silence of modern slaves. Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_WALK_FOR_FREEDOM_SCU_10.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/03/2015. London, UK. Domestic workers from Justice 4 Domestic Workers (J4DW) re-enact being suffragettes outside the Houses of Parliament to highlight the quest for domestic worker equality on International Womens Day. The demonstration follows a recent House of Lords amendment to the Modern Slavery Bill which will, if made law, will allow migrant domestic workers to change employers once in the UK. The amendment will be heard by Members of Parliament (MP's) in the House of Commons within the next week for the third and final reading. Photo credit : Vickie Flores/LNP
    LNP_Domestic_workers_equality_VFL_05.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/03/2015. London, UK. Domestic workers from Justice 4 Domestic Workers (J4DW) re-enact being suffragettes outside the Houses of Parliament to highlight the quest for domestic worker equality on International Womens Day. The demonstration follows a recent House of Lords amendment to the Modern Slavery Bill which will, if made law, will allow migrant domestic workers to change employers once in the UK. The amendment will be heard by Members of Parliament (MP's) in the House of Commons within the next week for the third and final reading. Photo credit : Vickie Flores/LNP
    LNP_Domestic_workers_equality_VFL_04.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/10/2107. London, UK. People take part in the "The Walk For Freedom", marching around the capital demonstrating against modern slavery.  The protest is co-ordinated with other walks which abolitionist group A21 is staging in 400 cities around the world on the same day. The facemasks represents the silence of modern slaves. Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_WALK_FOR_FREEDOM_SCU_21.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/10/2107. London, UK. People prepare to take part in the "The Walk For Freedom", marching around the capital demonstrating against modern slavery.  The protest is co-ordinated with other walks which abolitionist group A21 is staging in 400 cities around the world on the same day. The facemasks represents the silence of modern slaves. Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_WALK_FOR_FREEDOM_SCU_09.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/10/2107. London, UK. Girls prepare to take part in the "The Walk For Freedom", marching around the capital demonstrating against modern slavery.  The protest is co-ordinated with other walks which abolitionist group A21 is staging in 400 cities around the world on the same day. The facemasks represents the silence of modern slaves. Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_WALK_FOR_FREEDOM_SCU_08.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/10/2107. London, UK. People prepare to take part in the "The Walk For Freedom", marching around the capital demonstrating against modern slavery.  The protest is co-ordinated with other walks which abolitionist group A21 is staging in 400 cities around the world on the same day. The facemasks represents the silence of modern slaves. Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_WALK_FOR_FREEDOM_SCU_04.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/10/2107. London, UK. Girls prepare to take part in the "The Walk For Freedom", marching around the capital demonstrating against modern slavery.  The protest is co-ordinated with other walks which abolitionist group A21 is staging in 400 cities around the world on the same day. The facemasks represents the silence of modern slaves. Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_WALK_FOR_FREEDOM_SCU_01.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/03/2015. London, UK. Domestic workers from Justice 4 Domestic Workers (J4DW) re-enact being suffragettes outside the Houses of Parliament to highlight the quest for domestic worker equality on International Womens Day. The demonstration follows a recent House of Lords amendment to the Modern Slavery Bill which will, if made law, will allow migrant domestic workers to change employers once in the UK. The amendment will be heard by Members of Parliament (MP's) in the House of Commons within the next week for the third and final reading. Photo credit : Vickie Flores/LNP
    LNP_Domestic_workers_equality_VFL_10.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/03/2015. London, UK. Domestic workers from Justice 4 Domestic Workers (J4DW) re-enact being suffragettes outside the Houses of Parliament to highlight the quest for domestic worker equality on International Womens Day. The demonstration follows a recent House of Lords amendment to the Modern Slavery Bill which will, if made law, will allow migrant domestic workers to change employers once in the UK. The amendment will be heard by Members of Parliament (MP's) in the House of Commons within the next week for the third and final reading. Photo credit : Vickie Flores/LNP
    LNP_Domestic_workers_equality_VFL_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/10/2107. London, UK. People take part in the "The Walk For Freedom", marching around the capital demonstrating against modern slavery.  The protest is co-ordinated with other walks which abolitionist group A21 is staging in 400 cities around the world on the same day. The facemasks represents the silence of modern slaves. Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_WALK_FOR_FREEDOM_SCU_24.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/10/2107. London, UK. People take part in the "The Walk For Freedom", marching around the capital demonstrating against modern slavery.  The protest is co-ordinated with other walks which abolitionist group A21 is staging in 400 cities around the world on the same day. The facemasks represents the silence of modern slaves. Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_WALK_FOR_FREEDOM_SCU_17.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/10/2107. London, UK. People prepare to take part in the "The Walk For Freedom", marching around the capital demonstrating against modern slavery.  The protest is co-ordinated with other walks which abolitionist group A21 is staging in 400 cities around the world on the same day. The facemasks represents the silence of modern slaves. Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_WALK_FOR_FREEDOM_SCU_11.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/10/2107. London, UK. A girl prepares to take part in the "The Walk For Freedom", marching around the capital demonstrating against modern slavery.  The protest is co-ordinated with other walks which abolitionist group A21 is staging in 400 cities around the world on the same day. The facemasks represents the silence of modern slaves. Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_WALK_FOR_FREEDOM_SCU_07.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/10/2107. London, UK. Women prepare to take part in the "The Walk For Freedom", marching around the capital demonstrating against modern slavery.  The protest is co-ordinated with other walks which abolitionist group A21 is staging in 400 cities around the world on the same day. The facemasks represents the silence of modern slaves. Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_WALK_FOR_FREEDOM_SCU_03.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/03/2015. London, UK. Domestic workers from Justice 4 Domestic Workers (J4DW) re-enact being suffragettes outside the Houses of Parliament to highlight the quest for domestic worker equality on International Womens Day. The demonstration follows a recent House of Lords amendment to the Modern Slavery Bill which will, if made law, will allow migrant domestic workers to change employers once in the UK. The amendment will be heard by Members of Parliament (MP's) in the House of Commons within the next week for the third and final reading. Photo credit : Vickie Flores/LNP
    LNP_Domestic_workers_equality_VFL_11.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/03/2015. London, UK. Domestic workers from Justice 4 Domestic Workers (J4DW) re-enact being suffragettes outside the Houses of Parliament to highlight the quest for domestic worker equality on International Womens Day. The demonstration follows a recent House of Lords amendment to the Modern Slavery Bill which will, if made law, will allow migrant domestic workers to change employers once in the UK. The amendment will be heard by Members of Parliament (MP's) in the House of Commons within the next week for the third and final reading. Photo credit : Vickie Flores/LNP
    LNP_Domestic_workers_equality_VFL_07.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/03/2015. London, UK. Domestic workers from Justice 4 Domestic Workers (J4DW) re-enact being suffragettes outside the Houses of Parliament to highlight the quest for domestic worker equality on International Womens Day. The demonstration follows a recent House of Lords amendment to the Modern Slavery Bill which will, if made law, will allow migrant domestic workers to change employers once in the UK. The amendment will be heard by Members of Parliament (MP's) in the House of Commons within the next week for the third and final reading. Photo credit : Vickie Flores/LNP
    LNP_Domestic_workers_equality_VFL_06.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/03/2015. London, UK. Domestic workers from Justice 4 Domestic Workers (J4DW) re-enact being suffragettes outside the Houses of Parliament to highlight the quest for domestic worker equality on International Womens Day. The demonstration follows a recent House of Lords amendment to the Modern Slavery Bill which will, if made law, will allow migrant domestic workers to change employers once in the UK. The amendment will be heard by Members of Parliament (MP's) in the House of Commons within the next week for the third and final reading. Photo credit : Vickie Flores/LNP
    LNP_Domestic_workers_equality_VFL_02.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/03/2015. London, UK. Domestic workers from Justice 4 Domestic Workers (J4DW) re-enact being suffragettes outside the Houses of Parliament to highlight the quest for domestic worker equality on International Womens Day. The demonstration follows a recent House of Lords amendment to the Modern Slavery Bill which will, if made law, will allow migrant domestic workers to change employers once in the UK. The amendment will be heard by Members of Parliament (MP's) in the House of Commons within the next week for the third and final reading. Photo credit : Vickie Flores/LNP
    LNP_Domestic_workers_equality_VFL_01.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/10/2107. London, UK. People take part in the "The Walk For Freedom", marching around the capital demonstrating against modern slavery.  The protest is co-ordinated with other walks which abolitionist group A21 is staging in 400 cities around the world on the same day. The facemasks represents the silence of modern slaves. Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_WALK_FOR_FREEDOM_SCU_18.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/03/2015. London, UK. Domestic workers from Justice 4 Domestic Workers (J4DW) re-enact being suffragettes outside the Houses of Parliament to highlight the quest for domestic worker equality on International Womens Day. The demonstration follows a recent House of Lords amendment to the Modern Slavery Bill which will, if made law, will allow migrant domestic workers to change employers once in the UK. The amendment will be heard by Members of Parliament (MP's) in the House of Commons within the next week for the third and final reading. Photo credit : Vickie Flores/LNP
    LNP_Domestic_workers_equality_VFL_09.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/10/2107. London, UK. People prepare to take part in the "The Walk For Freedom", marching around the capital demonstrating against modern slavery.  The protest is co-ordinated with other walks which abolitionist group A21 is staging in 400 cities around the world on the same day. The facemasks represents the silence of modern slaves. Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_WALK_FOR_FREEDOM_SCU_12.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/10/2107. London, UK. People prepare to take part in the "The Walk For Freedom", marching around the capital demonstrating against modern slavery.  The protest is co-ordinated with other walks which abolitionist group A21 is staging in 400 cities around the world on the same day. The facemasks represents the silence of modern slaves. Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_WALK_FOR_FREEDOM_SCU_14.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 14/10/2107. London, UK. Girls prepare to take part in the "The Walk For Freedom", marching around the capital demonstrating against modern slavery.  The protest is co-ordinated with other walks which abolitionist group A21 is staging in 400 cities around the world on the same day. The facemasks represents the silence of modern slaves. Photo credit : Stephen Chung/LNP
    LNP_WALK_FOR_FREEDOM_SCU_06.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/03/2015. London, UK. Domestic workers from Justice 4 Domestic Workers (J4DW) re-enact being suffragettes outside the Houses of Parliament to highlight the quest for domestic worker equality on International Womens Day. The demonstration follows a recent House of Lords amendment to the Modern Slavery Bill which will, if made law, will allow migrant domestic workers to change employers once in the UK. The amendment will be heard by Members of Parliament (MP's) in the House of Commons within the next week for the third and final reading. Photo credit : Vickie Flores/LNP
    LNP_Domestic_workers_equality_VFL_12.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/03/2015. London, UK. Domestic workers from Justice 4 Domestic Workers (J4DW) re-enact being suffragettes outside the Houses of Parliament to highlight the quest for domestic worker equality on International Womens Day. The demonstration follows a recent House of Lords amendment to the Modern Slavery Bill which will, if made law, will allow migrant domestic workers to change employers once in the UK. The amendment will be heard by Members of Parliament (MP's) in the House of Commons within the next week for the third and final reading. Photo credit : Vickie Flores/LNP
    LNP_Domestic_workers_equality_VFL_08.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 22/10/2018. Bristol, UK. Modern Slavery. Avon & Somerset police today launch a new campaign that aims to increase the amount of intelligence they receive on Modern Day Slavery and raise awareness of this form of exploitative crime. The campaign, called #TellUsWhatYouSee, aims to educate the public on the signs and indicators of various forms of modern day slavery, as well as details of how and where to report this information, in order to help police tackle this crime. File picture dated 21/10/2018 of an unofficial guerilla art exhibit that appeared last week in front of a city centre statue of Edward Colston to link Bristol’s slave-trading history with modern-day slavery, and to mark Anti-Slavery Day to raise awareness of and campaign to end modern slavery in the UK. (There is no suggestion that the police are responsible for the art exhibit). The artwork depicts around 100 human figures lying in front of the statue of slave-trader merchant Edward Colston. The figures have been placed in a similar formation to the way millions of people from West Africa were forced to lie on board slave ships sent from Bristol and other English ports to be transported to Bristol business-owned slave plantations in the Caribbean and North America. The outline of the ship was made up of blocks with the kind of professions and jobs now done by modern-day slaves, living and forced to work in Britain in 2018, such as ‘nail bar workers’, ‘sex worker’, ‘car wash attendant’, ‘domestic servant’, ‘fruit picker’, ‘kitchen worker’ and ‘farm worker’. The blocks are all chained together and the ones at the bow of the ship show the words ‘here and now’, with Edward Colston standing as if the ship's captain, gazing down on the bodies lying in rows on deck before him. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_MODERN_SLAVERY_181022_SCH_20.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 22/10/2018. Bristol, UK. Modern Slavery. Avon & Somerset police today launch a new campaign that aims to increase the amount of intelligence they receive on Modern Day Slavery and raise awareness of this form of exploitative crime. The campaign, called #TellUsWhatYouSee, aims to educate the public on the signs and indicators of various forms of modern day slavery, as well as details of how and where to report this information, in order to help police tackle this crime. File picture dated 21/10/2018 of an unofficial guerilla art exhibit that appeared last week in front of a city centre statue of Edward Colston to link Bristol’s slave-trading history with modern-day slavery, and to mark Anti-Slavery Day to raise awareness of and campaign to end modern slavery in the UK. (There is no suggestion that the police are responsible for the art exhibit). The artwork depicts around 100 human figures lying in front of the statue of slave-trader merchant Edward Colston. The figures have been placed in a similar formation to the way millions of people from West Africa were forced to lie on board slave ships sent from Bristol and other English ports to be transported to Bristol business-owned slave plantations in the Caribbean and North America. The outline of the ship was made up of blocks with the kind of professions and jobs now done by modern-day slaves, living and forced to work in Britain in 2018, such as ‘nail bar workers’, ‘sex worker’, ‘car wash attendant’, ‘domestic servant’, ‘fruit picker’, ‘kitchen worker’ and ‘farm worker’. The blocks are all chained together and the ones at the bow of the ship show the words ‘here and now’, with Edward Colston standing as if the ship's captain, gazing down on the bodies lying in rows on deck before him. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_MODERN_SLAVERY_181022_SCH_13.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 22/10/2018. Bristol, UK. Modern Slavery. Avon & Somerset police today launch a new campaign that aims to increase the amount of intelligence they receive on Modern Day Slavery and raise awareness of this form of exploitative crime. The campaign, called #TellUsWhatYouSee, aims to educate the public on the signs and indicators of various forms of modern day slavery, as well as details of how and where to report this information, in order to help police tackle this crime. File picture dated 21/10/2018 of an unofficial guerilla art exhibit that appeared last week in front of a city centre statue of Edward Colston to link Bristol’s slave-trading history with modern-day slavery, and to mark Anti-Slavery Day to raise awareness of and campaign to end modern slavery in the UK. (There is no suggestion that the police are responsible for the art exhibit). The artwork depicts around 100 human figures lying in front of the statue of slave-trader merchant Edward Colston. The figures have been placed in a similar formation to the way millions of people from West Africa were forced to lie on board slave ships sent from Bristol and other English ports to be transported to Bristol business-owned slave plantations in the Caribbean and North America. The outline of the ship was made up of blocks with the kind of professions and jobs now done by modern-day slaves, living and forced to work in Britain in 2018, such as ‘nail bar workers’, ‘sex worker’, ‘car wash attendant’, ‘domestic servant’, ‘fruit picker’, ‘kitchen worker’ and ‘farm worker’. The blocks are all chained together and the ones at the bow of the ship show the words ‘here and now’, with Edward Colston standing as if the ship's captain, gazing down on the bodies lying in rows on deck before him. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_MODERN_SLAVERY_181022_SCH_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 22/10/2018. Bristol, UK. Modern Slavery. Avon & Somerset police today launch a new campaign that aims to increase the amount of intelligence they receive on Modern Day Slavery and raise awareness of this form of exploitative crime. The campaign, called #TellUsWhatYouSee, aims to educate the public on the signs and indicators of various forms of modern day slavery, as well as details of how and where to report this information, in order to help police tackle this crime. File picture dated 21/10/2018 of an unofficial guerilla art exhibit that appeared last week in front of a city centre statue of Edward Colston to link Bristol’s slave-trading history with modern-day slavery, and to mark Anti-Slavery Day to raise awareness of and campaign to end modern slavery in the UK. (There is no suggestion that the police are responsible for the art exhibit). The artwork depicts around 100 human figures lying in front of the statue of slave-trader merchant Edward Colston. The figures have been placed in a similar formation to the way millions of people from West Africa were forced to lie on board slave ships sent from Bristol and other English ports to be transported to Bristol business-owned slave plantations in the Caribbean and North America. The outline of the ship was made up of blocks with the kind of professions and jobs now done by modern-day slaves, living and forced to work in Britain in 2018, such as ‘nail bar workers’, ‘sex worker’, ‘car wash attendant’, ‘domestic servant’, ‘fruit picker’, ‘kitchen worker’ and ‘farm worker’. The blocks are all chained together and the ones at the bow of the ship show the words ‘here and now’, with Edward Colston standing as if the ship's captain, gazing down on the bodies lying in rows on deck before him. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_MODERN_SLAVERY_181022_SCH_15.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 22/10/2018. Bristol, UK. Modern Slavery. Avon & Somerset police today launch a new campaign that aims to increase the amount of intelligence they receive on Modern Day Slavery and raise awareness of this form of exploitative crime. The campaign, called #TellUsWhatYouSee, aims to educate the public on the signs and indicators of various forms of modern day slavery, as well as details of how and where to report this information, in order to help police tackle this crime. File picture dated 21/10/2018 of an unofficial guerilla art exhibit that appeared last week in front of a city centre statue of Edward Colston to link Bristol’s slave-trading history with modern-day slavery, and to mark Anti-Slavery Day to raise awareness of and campaign to end modern slavery in the UK. (There is no suggestion that the police are responsible for the art exhibit). The artwork depicts around 100 human figures lying in front of the statue of slave-trader merchant Edward Colston. The figures have been placed in a similar formation to the way millions of people from West Africa were forced to lie on board slave ships sent from Bristol and other English ports to be transported to Bristol business-owned slave plantations in the Caribbean and North America. The outline of the ship was made up of blocks with the kind of professions and jobs now done by modern-day slaves, living and forced to work in Britain in 2018, such as ‘nail bar workers’, ‘sex worker’, ‘car wash attendant’, ‘domestic servant’, ‘fruit picker’, ‘kitchen worker’ and ‘farm worker’. The blocks are all chained together and the ones at the bow of the ship show the words ‘here and now’, with Edward Colston standing as if the ship's captain, gazing down on the bodies lying in rows on deck before him. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_MODERN_SLAVERY_181022_SCH_10.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 22/10/2018. Bristol, UK. Modern Slavery. Avon & Somerset police today launch a new campaign that aims to increase the amount of intelligence they receive on Modern Day Slavery and raise awareness of this form of exploitative crime. The campaign, called #TellUsWhatYouSee, aims to educate the public on the signs and indicators of various forms of modern day slavery, as well as details of how and where to report this information, in order to help police tackle this crime. File picture dated 21/10/2018 of an unofficial guerilla art exhibit that appeared last week in front of a city centre statue of Edward Colston to link Bristol’s slave-trading history with modern-day slavery, and to mark Anti-Slavery Day to raise awareness of and campaign to end modern slavery in the UK. (There is no suggestion that the police are responsible for the art exhibit). The artwork depicts around 100 human figures lying in front of the statue of slave-trader merchant Edward Colston. The figures have been placed in a similar formation to the way millions of people from West Africa were forced to lie on board slave ships sent from Bristol and other English ports to be transported to Bristol business-owned slave plantations in the Caribbean and North America. The outline of the ship was made up of blocks with the kind of professions and jobs now done by modern-day slaves, living and forced to work in Britain in 2018, such as ‘nail bar workers’, ‘sex worker’, ‘car wash attendant’, ‘domestic servant’, ‘fruit picker’, ‘kitchen worker’ and ‘farm worker’. The blocks are all chained together and the ones at the bow of the ship show the words ‘here and now’, with Edward Colston standing as if the ship's captain, gazing down on the bodies lying in rows on deck before him. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_MODERN_SLAVERY_181022_SCH_05.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 22/10/2018. Bristol, UK. Modern Slavery. Avon & Somerset police today launch a new campaign that aims to increase the amount of intelligence they receive on Modern Day Slavery and raise awareness of this form of exploitative crime. The campaign, called #TellUsWhatYouSee, aims to educate the public on the signs and indicators of various forms of modern day slavery, as well as details of how and where to report this information, in order to help police tackle this crime. File picture dated 21/10/2018 of an unofficial guerilla art exhibit that appeared last week in front of a city centre statue of Edward Colston to link Bristol’s slave-trading history with modern-day slavery, and to mark Anti-Slavery Day to raise awareness of and campaign to end modern slavery in the UK. (There is no suggestion that the police are responsible for the art exhibit). The artwork depicts around 100 human figures lying in front of the statue of slave-trader merchant Edward Colston. The figures have been placed in a similar formation to the way millions of people from West Africa were forced to lie on board slave ships sent from Bristol and other English ports to be transported to Bristol business-owned slave plantations in the Caribbean and North America. The outline of the ship was made up of blocks with the kind of professions and jobs now done by modern-day slaves, living and forced to work in Britain in 2018, such as ‘nail bar workers’, ‘sex worker’, ‘car wash attendant’, ‘domestic servant’, ‘fruit picker’, ‘kitchen worker’ and ‘farm worker’. The blocks are all chained together and the ones at the bow of the ship show the words ‘here and now’, with Edward Colston standing as if the ship's captain, gazing down on the bodies lying in rows on deck before him. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_MODERN_SLAVERY_181022_SCH_02.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 22/10/2018. Bristol, UK. Modern Slavery. Avon & Somerset police today launch a new campaign that aims to increase the amount of intelligence they receive on Modern Day Slavery and raise awareness of this form of exploitative crime. The campaign, called #TellUsWhatYouSee, aims to educate the public on the signs and indicators of various forms of modern day slavery, as well as details of how and where to report this information, in order to help police tackle this crime. File picture dated 21/10/2018 of an unofficial guerilla art exhibit that appeared last week in front of a city centre statue of Edward Colston to link Bristol’s slave-trading history with modern-day slavery, and to mark Anti-Slavery Day to raise awareness of and campaign to end modern slavery in the UK. (There is no suggestion that the police are responsible for the art exhibit). The artwork depicts around 100 human figures lying in front of the statue of slave-trader merchant Edward Colston. The figures have been placed in a similar formation to the way millions of people from West Africa were forced to lie on board slave ships sent from Bristol and other English ports to be transported to Bristol business-owned slave plantations in the Caribbean and North America. The outline of the ship was made up of blocks with the kind of professions and jobs now done by modern-day slaves, living and forced to work in Britain in 2018, such as ‘nail bar workers’, ‘sex worker’, ‘car wash attendant’, ‘domestic servant’, ‘fruit picker’, ‘kitchen worker’ and ‘farm worker’. The blocks are all chained together and the ones at the bow of the ship show the words ‘here and now’, with Edward Colston standing as if the ship's captain, gazing down on the bodies lying in rows on deck before him. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_MODERN_SLAVERY_181022_SCH_09.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 22/10/2018. Bristol, UK. Modern Slavery. Avon & Somerset police today launch a new campaign that aims to increase the amount of intelligence they receive on Modern Day Slavery and raise awareness of this form of exploitative crime. The campaign, called #TellUsWhatYouSee, aims to educate the public on the signs and indicators of various forms of modern day slavery, as well as details of how and where to report this information, in order to help police tackle this crime. File picture dated 21/10/2018 of an unofficial guerilla art exhibit that appeared last week in front of a city centre statue of Edward Colston to link Bristol’s slave-trading history with modern-day slavery, and to mark Anti-Slavery Day to raise awareness of and campaign to end modern slavery in the UK. (There is no suggestion that the police are responsible for the art exhibit). The artwork depicts around 100 human figures lying in front of the statue of slave-trader merchant Edward Colston. The figures have been placed in a similar formation to the way millions of people from West Africa were forced to lie on board slave ships sent from Bristol and other English ports to be transported to Bristol business-owned slave plantations in the Caribbean and North America. The outline of the ship was made up of blocks with the kind of professions and jobs now done by modern-day slaves, living and forced to work in Britain in 2018, such as ‘nail bar workers’, ‘sex worker’, ‘car wash attendant’, ‘domestic servant’, ‘fruit picker’, ‘kitchen worker’ and ‘farm worker’. The blocks are all chained together and the ones at the bow of the ship show the words ‘here and now’, with Edward Colston standing as if the ship's captain, gazing down on the bodies lying in rows on deck before him. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_MODERN_SLAVERY_181022_SCH_06.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 22/10/2018. Bristol, UK. Modern Slavery. Avon & Somerset police today launch a new campaign that aims to increase the amount of intelligence they receive on Modern Day Slavery and raise awareness of this form of exploitative crime. The campaign, called #TellUsWhatYouSee, aims to educate the public on the signs and indicators of various forms of modern day slavery, as well as details of how and where to report this information, in order to help police tackle this crime. File picture dated 21/10/2018 of an unofficial guerilla art exhibit that appeared last week in front of a city centre statue of Edward Colston to link Bristol’s slave-trading history with modern-day slavery, and to mark Anti-Slavery Day to raise awareness of and campaign to end modern slavery in the UK. (There is no suggestion that the police are responsible for the art exhibit). The artwork depicts around 100 human figures lying in front of the statue of slave-trader merchant Edward Colston. The figures have been placed in a similar formation to the way millions of people from West Africa were forced to lie on board slave ships sent from Bristol and other English ports to be transported to Bristol business-owned slave plantations in the Caribbean and North America. The outline of the ship was made up of blocks with the kind of professions and jobs now done by modern-day slaves, living and forced to work in Britain in 2018, such as ‘nail bar workers’, ‘sex worker’, ‘car wash attendant’, ‘domestic servant’, ‘fruit picker’, ‘kitchen worker’ and ‘farm worker’. The blocks are all chained together and the ones at the bow of the ship show the words ‘here and now’, with Edward Colston standing as if the ship's captain, gazing down on the bodies lying in rows on deck before him. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_MODERN_SLAVERY_181022_SCH_01.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 28/05/2018. Bristol, UK. KWAME KWEI-ARMAH, Artistic Director of the Young Vic and former actor on Casualty, plays the part of Frederick Douglass at a commemorative event by the statue of poet and actor Alfred Fagon in St Pauls, Bristol. Frederick Douglass (Feb 1818– Feb 20 1895) who was an African-American social reformer, abolitionist, orator, writer, and statesman. After escaping from slavery in Maryland, he became a national leader of the abolitionist movement in Massachusetts and New York, gaining note for his oratory and incisive antislavery writings. In his time, he was described by abolitionists as a living counter-example to slaveholders’ arguments that slaves lacked the intellectual capacity to function as independent American citizens. Northerners at the time found it hard to believe that such a great orator had once been a slave. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_FREDERICK_DOUGLASS_180528_SCH_08.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 28/05/2018. Bristol, UK. KWAME KWEI-ARMAH, Artistic Director of the Young Vic and former actor on Casualty, plays the part of Frederick Douglass at a commemorative event by the statue of poet and actor Alfred Fagon in St Pauls, Bristol. Frederick Douglass (Feb 1818– Feb 20 1895) who was an African-American social reformer, abolitionist, orator, writer, and statesman. After escaping from slavery in Maryland, he became a national leader of the abolitionist movement in Massachusetts and New York, gaining note for his oratory and incisive antislavery writings. In his time, he was described by abolitionists as a living counter-example to slaveholders’ arguments that slaves lacked the intellectual capacity to function as independent American citizens. Northerners at the time found it hard to believe that such a great orator had once been a slave. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_FREDERICK_DOUGLASS_180528_SCH_07.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 28/05/2018. Bristol, UK. KWAME KWEI-ARMAH, Artistic Director of the Young Vic and former actor on Casualty, plays the part of Frederick Douglass at a commemorative event by the statue of poet and actor Alfred Fagon in St Pauls, Bristol. Frederick Douglass (Feb 1818– Feb 20 1895) who was an African-American social reformer, abolitionist, orator, writer, and statesman. After escaping from slavery in Maryland, he became a national leader of the abolitionist movement in Massachusetts and New York, gaining note for his oratory and incisive antislavery writings. In his time, he was described by abolitionists as a living counter-example to slaveholders’ arguments that slaves lacked the intellectual capacity to function as independent American citizens. Northerners at the time found it hard to believe that such a great orator had once been a slave. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_FREDERICK_DOUGLASS_180528_SCH_01.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 28/05/2018. Bristol, UK. KWAME KWEI-ARMAH, Artistic Director of the Young Vic and former actor on Casualty, plays the part of Frederick Douglass at a commemorative event by the statue of poet and actor Alfred Fagon in St Pauls, Bristol. Frederick Douglass (Feb 1818– Feb 20 1895) who was an African-American social reformer, abolitionist, orator, writer, and statesman. After escaping from slavery in Maryland, he became a national leader of the abolitionist movement in Massachusetts and New York, gaining note for his oratory and incisive antislavery writings. In his time, he was described by abolitionists as a living counter-example to slaveholders’ arguments that slaves lacked the intellectual capacity to function as independent American citizens. Northerners at the time found it hard to believe that such a great orator had once been a slave. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_FREDERICK_DOUGLASS_180528_SCH_04.jpg