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  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • Parisians gathered in Republic Square and in front of the locations where the attacks took place to observe 1 minute of silence in memory of missing persons during the attack of Friday, November 13<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_memory_of_paris_Attacks...jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound13.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound16.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound17.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound15.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound14.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound11.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound12.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound08.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound09.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound10.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound07.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound04.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound06.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound05.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound03.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound01.jpg
  • World's creepiest mausoleum where rotting corpses left in disintegrating caskets on metal shelves goes up for sale<br />
<br />
A neglected mausoleum whose inhabitants had been left to rot has finally opened its doors - and what lies beneath is as creepy as expected.<br />
<br />
These pictures were taken inside Memorial Mound, Kentucky, an underground burial site opened by a former gravedigger who was fascinated with the after life.<br />
<br />
It was created by Clyde Booth and opened in 1992 but in 2000, went out of business and was closed to relatives of the dead buried inside.<br />
<br />
This left the corpses unkempt until they were reportedly discovered rotting in bags inside disintegrating caskets when local authorities reopened the site in 2014. The site is now listed for sale - not including the corpses that currently occupy the space.<br />
<br />
As can be seen in these pictures, 14 years of neglect has left the skeletons dirty and brown in colour as the bones seem to have been thrown into the blue plastic bags.<br />
<br />
Coffins were left to decompose and were placed in unusual structures metres above the ground.<br />
<br />
Floors, walls and curtains within the viewing sections were dirty and ripped where they would once be pristine for visiting relatives. And the warehouse in which the bodies were prepared had materials and chemicals such as kerosene strewn across the floor.<br />
<br />
Booth originally opened the site because he was sick of seeing unkempt graves left to become ruins.<br />
<br />
His idea was drawn from ancient Indian burial traditions, but updated with modern technology to include video information on those inside.<br />
<br />
The facility’s foundation was dug 8ft below ground level with a large interior room serving as a chapel. Relatives could not enter the warehouse-like room that housed the caskets, but could place items and floors on an interior marble wall. Booth placed the caskets on racks in the wings up to 10ft high - the more expensive ones being on the lower racks, because prices were based on worker’s accessibility.<br />
<br />
The averag
    ExPix_Abandoned_Memorial_Mound02.jpg
  • Jun 12, 2007 - San Diego, CA, USA - A memorial paddle out took place at WindanSea Beach in La Jolla, CA, to honor professional surfer Emery Kauanui, a 24-year-old surfer who was beaten to death in late May. Kauanui's ashes were spread at the surf shot he grew up surfing.<br />
©ZP/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Surfers_memorial1.jpg
  • Jun 12, 2007 - San Diego, CA, USA - A memorial paddle out took place at WindanSea Beach in La Jolla, CA, to honor professional surfer Emery Kauanui, a 24-year-old surfer who was beaten to death in late May. Kauanui's ashes were spread at the surf shot he grew up surfing.<br />
©ZP/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Surfers_memorial2.jpg
  • SHENZHEN, CHINA - JUNE 07: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
A woman is arrested as she illegally hid 3,000 memory cards at her private part on June 7, 2016 in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province of China. Armed police of Guangdong Frontier Defense Bureau arrested a woman tying 220,000 US dollars on her legs and a woman hiding over 3,000 memory cards at her private part when they were checked at the entry to Shenzhen on Tuesday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Woman_hides_Cards_in_private_p...jpg
  • SHENZHEN, CHINA - JUNE 07: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
A woman is arrested as she illegally hid 3,000 memory cards at her private part on June 7, 2016 in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province of China. Armed police of Guangdong Frontier Defense Bureau arrested a woman tying 220,000 US dollars on her legs and a woman hiding over 3,000 memory cards at her private part when they were checked at the entry to Shenzhen on Tuesday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Woman_hides_Cards_in_private_p...jpg
  • Two kids walking past former president Nelson Mandela larger than life poster at the Nelson Mandela  centre of Memory in Houghton, Johannesburg. Scores of people were brought flowers an lit candles in memory of the fallen hero. Mandela died on the December 5 in his Houghton home.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Nelson_Mandela2.jpg
  • Bikers flying an ANC flag ride past the Nelson Mandela Foundation Centre of Memory in Houghton. They were  amongst thousands of people who came from all walks of life to pay respect to the  former president Nelson Mandela outside his Houghton home, Johannesburg. Scores of people  brought flowers and lit candles in memory of the fallen hero. Mandela died on the December 5 in his Houghton home.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Nelson_Mandela9.jpg
  • SHENZHEN, CHINA - JUNE 07: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
 Armed police officer shows the US dollars peeled form a woman\'s legs on June 7, 2016 in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province of China. Armed police of Guangdong Frontier Defense Bureau arrested a woman tying 220,000 US dollars on her legs and a woman hiding over 3,000 memory cards at her private part when they were checked at the entry to Shenzhen on Tuesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Woman_hides_Cards_in_private_p...jpg
  • SHENZHEN, CHINA - JUNE 07: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
A woman is arrested as she tied 220,000 US dollars on legs on June 7, 2016 in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province of China. Armed police of Guangdong Frontier Defense Bureau arrested a woman with 220,000 US dollars tied on her legs and a woman hiding over 3,000 memory cards in her private part when they were checked at the entry to Shenzhen on Tuesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Woman_hides_Cards_in_private_p...jpg
  • SHENZHEN, CHINA - JUNE 07: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
A woman is arrested as she tied 220,000 US dollars on legs on June 7, 2016 in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province of China. Armed police of Guangdong Frontier Defense Bureau arrested a woman with 220,000 US dollars tied on her legs and a woman hiding over 3,000 memory cards in her private part when they were checked at the entry to Shenzhen on Tuesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Woman_hides_Cards_in_private_p...jpg
  • SHENZHEN, CHINA - JUNE 07: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Armed police officers pick off US dollars tied on a woman\'s legs on June 7, 2016 in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province of China. Armed police of Guangdong Frontier Defense Bureau arrested a woman tying 220,000 US dollars on her legs and a woman hiding over 3,000 memory cards at her private part when they were checked at the entry to Shenzhen on Tuesday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Woman_hides_Cards_in_private_p...jpg
  • SHENZHEN, CHINA - JUNE 07: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Armed police officers pick off US dollars tied on a woman\'s legs on June 7, 2016 in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province of China. Armed police of Guangdong Frontier Defense Bureau arrested a woman tying 220,000 US dollars on her legs and a woman hiding over 3,000 memory cards at her private part when they were checked at the entry to Shenzhen on Tuesday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Woman_hides_Cards_in_private_p...jpg
  • SHENZHEN, CHINA - JUNE 07: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Armed police officers pick off US dollars tied on a woman\'s legs on June 7, 2016 in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province of China. Armed police of Guangdong Frontier Defense Bureau arrested a woman tying 220,000 US dollars on her legs and a woman hiding over 3,000 memory cards at her private part when they were checked at the entry to Shenzhen on Tuesday<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Woman_hides_Cards_in_private_p...jpg
  • SHENZHEN, CHINA - JUNE 07: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Armed police officers pick off US dollars tied on a woman\'s legs on June 7, 2016 in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province of China. Armed police of Guangdong Frontier Defense Bureau arrested a woman tying 220,000 US dollars on her legs and a woman hiding over 3,000 memory cards at her private part when they were checked at the entry to Shenzhen on Tuesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Woman_hides_Cards_in_private_p...jpg
  • SHENZHEN, CHINA - JUNE 07: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
A woman is arrested as she tied 220,000 US dollars on legs on June 7, 2016 in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province of China. Armed police of Guangdong Frontier Defense Bureau arrested a woman tying 220,000 US dollars on her legs and a woman hiding over 3,000 memory cards at her private part when they were checked at the entry to Shenzhen on Tuesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Woman_hides_Cards_in_private_p...jpg
  • SHENZHEN, CHINA - JUNE 07: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Armed police officers pick off US dollars tied on a woman\'s legs on June 7, 2016 in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province of China. Armed police of Guangdong Frontier Defense Bureau arrested a woman tying 220,000 US dollars on her legs and a woman hiding over 3,000 memory cards at her private part when they were checked at the entry to Shenzhen on Tuesday.<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Woman_hides_Cards_in_private_p...jpg
  • SHENZHEN, CHINA - JUNE 07: (CHINA OUT) <br />
<br />
Armed police officer shows the US dollars peeled form a woman\'s legs on June 7, 2016 in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province of China. Armed police of Guangdong Frontier Defense Bureau arrested a woman tying 220,000 US dollars on her legs and a woman hiding over 3,000 memory cards at her private part when they were checked at the entry to Shenzhen on Tuesday. <br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_Woman_hides_Cards_in_private_p...jpg
  • Tsunami memorial sculpture in Krabi, Thailand was a celebrated piece of artwork which paid tribute the all the lives lost during the tsunami on boxing day in 2004. The memorial sculpture is still visited by tourists but it has not been maintained and been completely destroyed, much to the dismay of tourists visiting to pay respects.<br />
<br />
images from that day showed: Foreign tourists far out on the sand react as the first of six tsunami start to roll towards Hat Rai Lay Beach, near Krabi in southern Thailand, Krabi was the second largest hit on that fatal day where many british tourist lost there lives<br />
<br />
Thai deaths: 288<br />
Foreign Deaths: 188<br />
total Deaths: 488<br />
Foreign Injured: 568<br />
<br />
<br />
Photo shows Before: The memorial when built in the memory of all that lost there lives in 2004<br />
<br />
©Darren Cools/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Memorial_Before1.jpg
  • Tsunami memorial sculpture in Krabi, Thailand was a celebrated piece of artwork which paid tribute the all the lives lost during the tsunami on boxing day in 2004. The memorial sculpture is still visited by tourists but it has not been maintained and been completely destroyed, much to the dismay of tourists visiting to pay respects.<br />
<br />
images from that day showed: Foreign tourists far out on the sand react as the first of six tsunami start to roll towards Hat Rai Lay Beach, near Krabi in southern Thailand, Krabi was the second largest hit on that fatal day where many british tourist lost there lives<br />
<br />
Thai deaths: 288<br />
Foreign Deaths: 188<br />
total Deaths: 488<br />
Foreign Injured: 568<br />
<br />
<br />
Photo shows Before: The memorial when built in the memory of all that lost there lives in 2004<br />
<br />
©Darren Cools/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Memorial_Before2.jpg
  • Tsunami memorial sculpture in Krabi, Thailand was a celebrated piece of artwork which paid tribute the all the lives lost during the tsunami on boxing day in 2004. The memorial sculpture is still visited by tourists but it has not been maintained and been completely destroyed, much to the dismay of tourists visiting to pay respects.<br />
<br />
images from that day showed: Foreign tourists far out on the sand react as the first of six tsunami start to roll towards Hat Rai Lay Beach, near Krabi in southern Thailand, Krabi was the second largest hit on that fatal day where many british tourist lost there lives<br />
<br />
Thai deaths: 288<br />
Foreign Deaths: 188<br />
total Deaths: 488<br />
Foreign Injured: 568<br />
<br />
Photo shows Before: The memorial when built in the memory of all that lost there lives in 2004<br />
<br />
©Darren Cools/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Memorial_Before3.jpg
  • Tsunami memorial sculpture in Krabi, Thailand was a celebrated piece of artwork which paid tribute the all the lives lost during the tsunami on boxing day in 2004. The memorial sculpture is still visited by tourists but it has not been maintained and been completely destroyed, much to the dismay of tourists visiting to pay respects.<br />
<br />
images from that day showed: Foreign tourists far out on the sand react as the first of six tsunami start to roll towards Hat Rai Lay Beach, near Krabi in southern Thailand, Krabi was the second largest hit on that fatal day where many british tourist lost there lives<br />
<br />
Thai deaths: 288<br />
Foreign Deaths: 188<br />
total Deaths: 488<br />
Foreign Injured: 568<br />
<br />
Photo shows Before: The memorial when built in the memory of all that lost there lives in 2004<br />
<br />
©Darren Cools/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Memorial_Before4.jpg
  • Tsunami memorial sculpture in Krabi, Thailand was a celebrated piece of artwork which paid tribute the all the lives lost during the tsunami on boxing day in 2004. The memorial sculpture is still visited by tourists but it has not been maintained and been completely destroyed, much to the dismay of tourists visiting to pay respects.<br />
<br />
images from that day showed: Foreign tourists far out on the sand react as the first of six tsunami start to roll towards Hat Rai Lay Beach, near Krabi in southern Thailand, Krabi was the second largest hit on that fatal day where many british tourist lost there lives<br />
<br />
Thai deaths: 288<br />
Foreign Deaths: 188<br />
total Deaths: 488<br />
Foreign Injured: 568<br />
<br />
<br />
Photo shows Before: The memorial when built in the memory of all that lost there lives in 2004<br />
<br />
©Darren Cools/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Memorial_Before5.jpg
  • Tsunami memorial sculpture in Krabi, Thailand was a celebrated piece of artwork which paid tribute the all the lives lost during the tsunami on boxing day in 2004. The memorial sculpture is still visited by tourists but it has not been maintained and been completely destroyed, much to the dismay of tourists visiting to pay respects.<br />
<br />
images from that day showed: Foreign tourists far out on the sand react as the first of six tsunami start to roll towards Hat Rai Lay Beach, near Krabi in southern Thailand, Krabi was the second largest hit on that fatal day where many british tourist lost there lives<br />
<br />
Thai deaths: 288<br />
Foreign Deaths: 188<br />
total Deaths: 488<br />
Foreign Injured: 568<br />
<br />
<br />
Photo shows Before: The memorial when built in the memory of all that lost there lives in 2004<br />
<br />
©Darren Cools/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Memorial_Before6.jpg
  • Tsunami memorial sculpture in Krabi, Thailand was a celebrated piece of artwork which paid tribute the all the lives lost during the tsunami on boxing day in 2004. The memorial sculpture is still visited by tourists but it has not been maintained and been completely destroyed, much to the dismay of tourists visiting to pay respects.<br />
<br />
images from that day showed: Foreign tourists far out on the sand react as the first of six tsunami start to roll towards Hat Rai Lay Beach, near Krabi in southern Thailand, Krabi was the second largest hit on that fatal day where many british tourist lost there lives<br />
<br />
Thai deaths: 288<br />
Foreign Deaths: 188<br />
total Deaths: 488<br />
Foreign Injured: 568<br />
<br />
Photo shows Before: The memorial when built in the memory of all that lost there lives in 2004<br />
<br />
©Darren Cools/Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Memorial_Before7.jpg
  • Washington, D.C, U.S - <br />
<br />
'Unaccompanied’ - Children On The Border<br />
<br />
A new surge of unaccompanied children from Central American countries is expected at the U.S. southern border, as officials ask Congress for more money to handle them. Customs and Border Protection estimated 75,000 children may arrive at the ports of entry before the end of the current fiscal year. Already, the number of minors arriving at the border is growing, with 20,000 apprehended at the border in the first five months of the federal fiscal year - double the number from a year earlier. <br />
<br />
'Unaccompanied' is a visual story of youth immigrants who were among the thousands of children seeking refuge from the violence of Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala. Following Obama's statement announcing a humanitarian crisis on the border in summer 2014, these youth captured the national spotlight. Countless articles related sensationalized stories of tragic and violent journeys. Noticeably absent from the discourse were the voices and stories of the youth themselves. What circumstances drove the children to seek refuge on US soil? What challenges do they face adapting to a new life in a foreign land? ’Unaccompanied' provides these youth a platform to directly share their personal stories with the public, free from the bias of a political agenda, and elevate their individual and collective challenges. Unaccompanied child immigrants represent an entanglement of issues in both the countries they hail from and to. This project seeks to demonstrate the realities that youth immigrants face: the doubts, aspirations, complexity and humanity of their experience.<br />
<br />
<br />
 ring, is the only thing GISSELL keeps as a memory for her trip. At age 13, Gissell wants the chance to prove her worth in society. 'I think it's really important to tell our story,' she says. Gissell's father left for the United States from her native El Salvador when she was three years old. She spoke to him every day, but dreamed of the day when the
    Exclusivepix_Children_On_The_Border0...jpg
  • MADRID, SPAIN, 2015, DECEMBER 27 <br />
<br />
Luka Modric and his friend and team mate Kovacic, champions in love. Now Modric has more company in Madrid, and is one of the recent signings of Real Madrid was his friend Mateo Kovacic. Together and in the company of their wives, they enjoyed a romantic evening. Modric has it all footballing terms, quality, technique, effort, sacrifice and humility. Besides his talent in the field transmits other virtues of a boy who forged his personality with the indelible memory of the War of Croatia. Now, the player wins on the field and share these successes with his family, his wife and son Luka. His wife, Croatian birth as he worked in the office of Mario Maric, Croatian agent, when they met. They saw, they liked and the rest came alone. They married in 2010 and only a month later welcomed their first, and currently only child. Vanja Bosnic has become the best Croatian travel companion, who in recent years has accompanied him on his football career. After settling in Ukraine, the family packed Modric to move to London, the city where the player started playing at Tottenham. Established and used to English life, Vanja also had to get used to his new life in Spain<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Luka_Modric5.JPG
  • MADRID, SPAIN, 2015, DECEMBER 27 <br />
<br />
Luka Modric and his friend and team mate Kovacic, champions in love. Now Modric has more company in Madrid, and is one of the recent signings of Real Madrid was his friend Mateo Kovacic. Together and in the company of their wives, they enjoyed a romantic evening. Modric has it all footballing terms, quality, technique, effort, sacrifice and humility. Besides his talent in the field transmits other virtues of a boy who forged his personality with the indelible memory of the War of Croatia. Now, the player wins on the field and share these successes with his family, his wife and son Luka. His wife, Croatian birth as he worked in the office of Mario Maric, Croatian agent, when they met. They saw, they liked and the rest came alone. They married in 2010 and only a month later welcomed their first, and currently only child. Vanja Bosnic has become the best Croatian travel companion, who in recent years has accompanied him on his football career. After settling in Ukraine, the family packed Modric to move to London, the city where the player started playing at Tottenham. Established and used to English life, Vanja also had to get used to his new life in Spain<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Luka_Modric2.JPG
  • MADRID, SPAIN, 2015, DECEMBER 27 <br />
<br />
Luka Modric and his friend and team mate Kovacic, champions in love. Now Modric has more company in Madrid, and is one of the recent signings of Real Madrid was his friend Mateo Kovacic. Together and in the company of their wives, they enjoyed a romantic evening. Modric has it all footballing terms, quality, technique, effort, sacrifice and humility. Besides his talent in the field transmits other virtues of a boy who forged his personality with the indelible memory of the War of Croatia. Now, the player wins on the field and share these successes with his family, his wife and son Luka. His wife, Croatian birth as he worked in the office of Mario Maric, Croatian agent, when they met. They saw, they liked and the rest came alone. They married in 2010 and only a month later welcomed their first, and currently only child. Vanja Bosnic has become the best Croatian travel companion, who in recent years has accompanied him on his football career. After settling in Ukraine, the family packed Modric to move to London, the city where the player started playing at Tottenham. Established and used to English life, Vanja also had to get used to his new life in Spain<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Luka_Modric4.JPG
  • MADRID, SPAIN, 2015, DECEMBER 27 <br />
<br />
Luka Modric and his friend and team mate Kovacic, champions in love. Now Modric has more company in Madrid, and is one of the recent signings of Real Madrid was his friend Mateo Kovacic. Together and in the company of their wives, they enjoyed a romantic evening. Modric has it all footballing terms, quality, technique, effort, sacrifice and humility. Besides his talent in the field transmits other virtues of a boy who forged his personality with the indelible memory of the War of Croatia. Now, the player wins on the field and share these successes with his family, his wife and son Luka. His wife, Croatian birth as he worked in the office of Mario Maric, Croatian agent, when they met. They saw, they liked and the rest came alone. They married in 2010 and only a month later welcomed their first, and currently only child. Vanja Bosnic has become the best Croatian travel companion, who in recent years has accompanied him on his football career. After settling in Ukraine, the family packed Modric to move to London, the city where the player started playing at Tottenham. Established and used to English life, Vanja also had to get used to his new life in Spain<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Luka_Modric1.JPG
  • A little girl playing next to Mandela mural. The girl was amongst thousands of people who came from all walks of life to pay respect to the  former president Nelson Mandela outside his Houghton home, Johannesburg. Scores of people  brought flowers and lit candles in memory of the fallen hero. Mandela died on the December 5 in his Houghton home.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Nelson_Mandela10.jpg
  • A tennager lit a candle in respect of former president Nelson Mandela out his Houghton home, Johannesburg. Scores of people were brought flowers an lit candles in memory of the fallen hero. Mandela died on the December 5 in his Houghton home.Pic. Bafana Mahlangu. Date 05/12/2013. Sowetan
    Exclusivepix_Nelson_Mandela5.jpg
  • MADRID, SPAIN, 2015, DECEMBER 27 <br />
<br />
Luka Modric and his friend and team mate Kovacic, champions in love. Now Modric has more company in Madrid, and is one of the recent signings of Real Madrid was his friend Mateo Kovacic. Together and in the company of their wives, they enjoyed a romantic evening. Modric has it all footballing terms, quality, technique, effort, sacrifice and humility. Besides his talent in the field transmits other virtues of a boy who forged his personality with the indelible memory of the War of Croatia. Now, the player wins on the field and share these successes with his family, his wife and son Luka. His wife, Croatian birth as he worked in the office of Mario Maric, Croatian agent, when they met. They saw, they liked and the rest came alone. They married in 2010 and only a month later welcomed their first, and currently only child. Vanja Bosnic has become the best Croatian travel companion, who in recent years has accompanied him on his football career. After settling in Ukraine, the family packed Modric to move to London, the city where the player started playing at Tottenham. Established and used to English life, Vanja also had to get used to his new life in Spain<br />
©Exclusivepix Media
    Exclusivepix_Luka_Modric3.JPG
  • Umkhonto we Sizwe soldiers marching towards former president Nelson Mandela Houghton home, Johannesburg. Scores of people were brought flowers an lit candles in memory of the fallen hero. Mandela died on the December 5 in his Houghton home.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Nelson_Mandela12.jpg
  • Umkhonto we Sizwe soldiers marching towards former president Nelson Mandela Houghton home, Johannesburg. Scores of people were brought flowers an lit candles in memory of the fallen hero. Mandela died on the December 5 in his Houghton home.<br />
©Exclusivepix
    Exclusivepix_Nelson_Mandela11.jpg
  • A little girl flying a South African Flag next to Mandela mural. The girl was amongst thousands of people who came from all walks of life to pay respect to the  former president Nelson Mandela outside his Houghton home, Johannesburg. Scores of people  brought flowers and lit candles in memory of the fallen hero. Mandela died on the December 5 in his Houghton home.Pic. Bafana Mahlangu. Date 05/12/2013. Sowetan
    Exclusivepix_Nelson_Mandela1.jpg
  • People dancing in celebration of former president Nelson Mandela out his Houghton home, Johannesburg. Scores of people were brought flowers an lit candles in memory of the fallen hero. Mandela died on the December 5 in his Houghton home.Pic. Bafana Mahlangu. Date 05/12/2013. Sowetan
    Exclusivepix_Nelson_Mandela4.jpg
  • The Ghosts of World War II: The photographs found at flea markets superimposed on to modern street scenes<br />
<br />
This haunting collection of images shows what it would look like if the ghosts of World War II returned to our streets.<br />
The remarkable pictures overlay modern scenes from France with atmospheric photographs taken in the same place during the war.<br />
Historical expert Jo Teeuwisse, from Amsterdam, began the project after finding 300 old negatives at a flea market in her home city depicting familiar places in a very different context.<br />
<br />
She researched the background to each of the most interesting finds and created a beautiful series of pictures by super-imposing the old pictures on top of new ones.<br />
Now she has rediscovered photographs of soldiers at war in France and across Europe and put together further sets of evocative and emotional designs.<br />
Miss Teeuwisse believes that making war scenes familiar by linking them to somewhere we recognise heightens their impact.<br />
'I knew what happened there, but knowing the exact spot of some detail will etch it into your visual memory,' she said.<br />
<br />
Her work goes much further than the visual, too. <br />
The website of her organisation, Historical Consultancy, reads: 'For years we have been researching daily life before and during the Second World war, not just gathering information but also interviewing eye witnesses and recreating certain aspects of history to gain a unique insight into that era.'<br />
The organisation works with authors, film and TV companies, museums, schools, documentary makers, designers, theatre productions and many more.<br />
It has helped individuals trying to find out more about their family history, carrying out close research into any events from between 1900 and 1950.<br />
<br />
Miss Teeuwisse says she began the project as a research tool, but now continues it mostly because of her 'passion for history and fascination with the subject.'<br />
<br />
The emotional photos juxtapose wartorn paths piled high with rubble with newly painted sign
    ExPix_The_Ghosts_of_World_War_II03.jpg
  • The Ghosts of World War II: The photographs found at flea markets superimposed on to modern street scenes<br />
<br />
This haunting collection of images shows what it would look like if the ghosts of World War II returned to our streets.<br />
The remarkable pictures overlay modern scenes from France with atmospheric photographs taken in the same place during the war.<br />
Historical expert Jo Teeuwisse, from Amsterdam, began the project after finding 300 old negatives at a flea market in her home city depicting familiar places in a very different context.<br />
<br />
She researched the background to each of the most interesting finds and created a beautiful series of pictures by super-imposing the old pictures on top of new ones.<br />
Now she has rediscovered photographs of soldiers at war in France and across Europe and put together further sets of evocative and emotional designs.<br />
Miss Teeuwisse believes that making war scenes familiar by linking them to somewhere we recognise heightens their impact.<br />
'I knew what happened there, but knowing the exact spot of some detail will etch it into your visual memory,' she said.<br />
<br />
Her work goes much further than the visual, too. <br />
The website of her organisation, Historical Consultancy, reads: 'For years we have been researching daily life before and during the Second World war, not just gathering information but also interviewing eye witnesses and recreating certain aspects of history to gain a unique insight into that era.'<br />
The organisation works with authors, film and TV companies, museums, schools, documentary makers, designers, theatre productions and many more.<br />
It has helped individuals trying to find out more about their family history, carrying out close research into any events from between 1900 and 1950.<br />
<br />
Miss Teeuwisse says she began the project as a research tool, but now continues it mostly because of her 'passion for history and fascination with the subject.'<br />
<br />
The emotional photos juxtapose wartorn paths piled high with rubble with newly painted sign
    ExPix_The_Ghosts_of_World_War_II02.jpg
  • The Ghosts of World War II: The photographs found at flea markets superimposed on to modern street scenes<br />
<br />
This haunting collection of images shows what it would look like if the ghosts of World War II returned to our streets.<br />
The remarkable pictures overlay modern scenes from France with atmospheric photographs taken in the same place during the war.<br />
Historical expert Jo Teeuwisse, from Amsterdam, began the project after finding 300 old negatives at a flea market in her home city depicting familiar places in a very different context.<br />
<br />
She researched the background to each of the most interesting finds and created a beautiful series of pictures by super-imposing the old pictures on top of new ones.<br />
Now she has rediscovered photographs of soldiers at war in France and across Europe and put together further sets of evocative and emotional designs.<br />
Miss Teeuwisse believes that making war scenes familiar by linking them to somewhere we recognise heightens their impact.<br />
'I knew what happened there, but knowing the exact spot of some detail will etch it into your visual memory,' she said.<br />
<br />
Her work goes much further than the visual, too. <br />
The website of her organisation, Historical Consultancy, reads: 'For years we have been researching daily life before and during the Second World war, not just gathering information but also interviewing eye witnesses and recreating certain aspects of history to gain a unique insight into that era.'<br />
The organisation works with authors, film and TV companies, museums, schools, documentary makers, designers, theatre productions and many more.<br />
It has helped individuals trying to find out more about their family history, carrying out close research into any events from between 1900 and 1950.<br />
<br />
Miss Teeuwisse says she began the project as a research tool, but now continues it mostly because of her 'passion for history and fascination with the subject.'<br />
<br />
The emotional photos juxtapose wartorn paths piled high with rubble with newly painted sign
    ExPix_The_Ghosts_of_World_War_II04.jpg
  • The Ghosts of World War II: The photographs found at flea markets superimposed on to modern street scenes<br />
<br />
This haunting collection of images shows what it would look like if the ghosts of World War II returned to our streets.<br />
The remarkable pictures overlay modern scenes from France with atmospheric photographs taken in the same place during the war.<br />
Historical expert Jo Teeuwisse, from Amsterdam, began the project after finding 300 old negatives at a flea market in her home city depicting familiar places in a very different context.<br />
<br />
She researched the background to each of the most interesting finds and created a beautiful series of pictures by super-imposing the old pictures on top of new ones.<br />
Now she has rediscovered photographs of soldiers at war in France and across Europe and put together further sets of evocative and emotional designs.<br />
Miss Teeuwisse believes that making war scenes familiar by linking them to somewhere we recognise heightens their impact.<br />
'I knew what happened there, but knowing the exact spot of some detail will etch it into your visual memory,' she said.<br />
<br />
Her work goes much further than the visual, too. <br />
The website of her organisation, Historical Consultancy, reads: 'For years we have been researching daily life before and during the Second World war, not just gathering information but also interviewing eye witnesses and recreating certain aspects of history to gain a unique insight into that era.'<br />
The organisation works with authors, film and TV companies, museums, schools, documentary makers, designers, theatre productions and many more.<br />
It has helped individuals trying to find out more about their family history, carrying out close research into any events from between 1900 and 1950.<br />
<br />
Miss Teeuwisse says she began the project as a research tool, but now continues it mostly because of her 'passion for history and fascination with the subject.'<br />
<br />
The emotional photos juxtapose wartorn paths piled high with rubble with newly painted sign
    ExPix_The_Ghosts_of_World_War_II05.jpg
  • The Ghosts of World War II: The photographs found at flea markets superimposed on to modern street scenes<br />
<br />
This haunting collection of images shows what it would look like if the ghosts of World War II returned to our streets.<br />
The remarkable pictures overlay modern scenes from France with atmospheric photographs taken in the same place during the war.<br />
Historical expert Jo Teeuwisse, from Amsterdam, began the project after finding 300 old negatives at a flea market in her home city depicting familiar places in a very different context.<br />
<br />
She researched the background to each of the most interesting finds and created a beautiful series of pictures by super-imposing the old pictures on top of new ones.<br />
Now she has rediscovered photographs of soldiers at war in France and across Europe and put together further sets of evocative and emotional designs.<br />
Miss Teeuwisse believes that making war scenes familiar by linking them to somewhere we recognise heightens their impact.<br />
'I knew what happened there, but knowing the exact spot of some detail will etch it into your visual memory,' she said.<br />
<br />
Her work goes much further than the visual, too. <br />
The website of her organisation, Historical Consultancy, reads: 'For years we have been researching daily life before and during the Second World war, not just gathering information but also interviewing eye witnesses and recreating certain aspects of history to gain a unique insight into that era.'<br />
The organisation works with authors, film and TV companies, museums, schools, documentary makers, designers, theatre productions and many more.<br />
It has helped individuals trying to find out more about their family history, carrying out close research into any events from between 1900 and 1950.<br />
<br />
Miss Teeuwisse says she began the project as a research tool, but now continues it mostly because of her 'passion for history and fascination with the subject.'<br />
<br />
The emotional photos juxtapose wartorn paths piled high with rubble with newly painted sign
    ExPix_The_Ghosts_of_World_War_II06.jpg
  • The Ghosts of World War II: The photographs found at flea markets superimposed on to modern street scenes<br />
<br />
This haunting collection of images shows what it would look like if the ghosts of World War II returned to our streets.<br />
The remarkable pictures overlay modern scenes from France with atmospheric photographs taken in the same place during the war.<br />
Historical expert Jo Teeuwisse, from Amsterdam, began the project after finding 300 old negatives at a flea market in her home city depicting familiar places in a very different context.<br />
<br />
She researched the background to each of the most interesting finds and created a beautiful series of pictures by super-imposing the old pictures on top of new ones.<br />
Now she has rediscovered photographs of soldiers at war in France and across Europe and put together further sets of evocative and emotional designs.<br />
Miss Teeuwisse believes that making war scenes familiar by linking them to somewhere we recognise heightens their impact.<br />
'I knew what happened there, but knowing the exact spot of some detail will etch it into your visual memory,' she said.<br />
<br />
Her work goes much further than the visual, too. <br />
The website of her organisation, Historical Consultancy, reads: 'For years we have been researching daily life before and during the Second World war, not just gathering information but also interviewing eye witnesses and recreating certain aspects of history to gain a unique insight into that era.'<br />
The organisation works with authors, film and TV companies, museums, schools, documentary makers, designers, theatre productions and many more.<br />
It has helped individuals trying to find out more about their family history, carrying out close research into any events from between 1900 and 1950.<br />
<br />
Miss Teeuwisse says she began the project as a research tool, but now continues it mostly because of her 'passion for history and fascination with the subject.'<br />
<br />
The emotional photos juxtapose wartorn paths piled high with rubble with newly painted sign
    ExPix_The_Ghosts_of_World_War_II09.jpg
  • The Ghosts of World War II: The photographs found at flea markets superimposed on to modern street scenes<br />
<br />
This haunting collection of images shows what it would look like if the ghosts of World War II returned to our streets.<br />
The remarkable pictures overlay modern scenes from France with atmospheric photographs taken in the same place during the war.<br />
Historical expert Jo Teeuwisse, from Amsterdam, began the project after finding 300 old negatives at a flea market in her home city depicting familiar places in a very different context.<br />
<br />
She researched the background to each of the most interesting finds and created a beautiful series of pictures by super-imposing the old pictures on top of new ones.<br />
Now she has rediscovered photographs of soldiers at war in France and across Europe and put together further sets of evocative and emotional designs.<br />
Miss Teeuwisse believes that making war scenes familiar by linking them to somewhere we recognise heightens their impact.<br />
'I knew what happened there, but knowing the exact spot of some detail will etch it into your visual memory,' she said.<br />
<br />
Her work goes much further than the visual, too. <br />
The website of her organisation, Historical Consultancy, reads: 'For years we have been researching daily life before and during the Second World war, not just gathering information but also interviewing eye witnesses and recreating certain aspects of history to gain a unique insight into that era.'<br />
The organisation works with authors, film and TV companies, museums, schools, documentary makers, designers, theatre productions and many more.<br />
It has helped individuals trying to find out more about their family history, carrying out close research into any events from between 1900 and 1950.<br />
<br />
Miss Teeuwisse says she began the project as a research tool, but now continues it mostly because of her 'passion for history and fascination with the subject.'<br />
<br />
The emotional photos juxtapose wartorn paths piled high with rubble with newly painted sign
    ExPix_The_Ghosts_of_World_War_II12.jpg
  • The Ghosts of World War II: The photographs found at flea markets superimposed on to modern street scenes<br />
<br />
This haunting collection of images shows what it would look like if the ghosts of World War II returned to our streets.<br />
The remarkable pictures overlay modern scenes from France with atmospheric photographs taken in the same place during the war.<br />
Historical expert Jo Teeuwisse, from Amsterdam, began the project after finding 300 old negatives at a flea market in her home city depicting familiar places in a very different context.<br />
<br />
She researched the background to each of the most interesting finds and created a beautiful series of pictures by super-imposing the old pictures on top of new ones.<br />
Now she has rediscovered photographs of soldiers at war in France and across Europe and put together further sets of evocative and emotional designs.<br />
Miss Teeuwisse believes that making war scenes familiar by linking them to somewhere we recognise heightens their impact.<br />
'I knew what happened there, but knowing the exact spot of some detail will etch it into your visual memory,' she said.<br />
<br />
Her work goes much further than the visual, too. <br />
The website of her organisation, Historical Consultancy, reads: 'For years we have been researching daily life before and during the Second World war, not just gathering information but also interviewing eye witnesses and recreating certain aspects of history to gain a unique insight into that era.'<br />
The organisation works with authors, film and TV companies, museums, schools, documentary makers, designers, theatre productions and many more.<br />
It has helped individuals trying to find out more about their family history, carrying out close research into any events from between 1900 and 1950.<br />
<br />
Miss Teeuwisse says she began the project as a research tool, but now continues it mostly because of her 'passion for history and fascination with the subject.'<br />
<br />
The emotional photos juxtapose wartorn paths piled high with rubble with newly painted sign
    ExPix_The_Ghosts_of_World_War_II11.jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:  A rare example of an undisciplined kid in North Korea. The bus was driving in the small roads of Samijyon in the north, when this kid stood in the middle of the road.<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:   North Korea say foreign aid is a war debt, but taking pics of the WFP sign through the window of a house in a village is forbidden.<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:   Something you can see often in North Korea, but still forbidden to photograph.<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:   A very rare picture of a wheelchair. In six trips, I saw only two of them.<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:   On the highways, you can see trucks loaded with coal, since North Korea has big problem getting oil like during WW2.<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:   In the art center of Pyongyang, we experienced a power outage, a daily event the North Koreans hate to show. When it happens, they tell you it’s because of the american embargo.<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:  Street Seller, North Korea<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:  Queueing is a national sport for North Koreans.<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:   At the DMZ, I took a picture of the South Korean side. A soldier asked me to delete this, as it was not in the mood of a “military” photo with the blurred curtains effect<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:  It is forbidden to take pictures of the daily life of the North Korean people if they are not well dressed. For my guide this man was not well dressed enough to be photographed.<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:   The officials took issue with this photo for two reasons: 1) the teen has his cap worn in a strange way (according to my guide), and 2) there are soldiers in the back.<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:  On this day in spring, people had put some carpets to dry on the banks of the Taedong River. Since there was a Kim Il Sung statue in the back, taking picture with those carpets was forbidden.<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:   I went to Chongjin, a city in the north that suffered a lot from hunger few years ago. My camera was confiscated for the duration of the bus trip. Once at the hotel, I understood why when I saw the people in the street.<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:   This soldier was sleeping in a field. This picture really contributed to me getting banned from the country.<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:  Every year, people from the town go to the country to help out in public projects. On this day, they repainted milestones. Before to government regarded shots like these as positive, but now they understand that we can interpret this as forced labor.<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
  • NORTH KOREA:<br />
The pictures Kim Jong Un doesn't want you to see<br />
<br />
Since 2008, Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, I was able to save photos that I was forbidden to take or was told to delete by the minders.<br />
<br />
Photo Shows:  It is absolutely forbidden to take a picture of the Kim statues from the back. It is considered very rude.<br />
©Eric Lafforgue/Exclusivepix Media
    ExPix_The_pictures_Kim_Jong_Un_doesn...jpg
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