FEATURE-Climate threats drive India’s 'tiger widows' toward open jaws
Unable to make a living from farming, women are forced back into the forest where their husbands were killed
- Editorial Photographer / Photojournalist
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New Delhi, Delhi, India
15 reviews$300 - $600 / Day
Newslions Media, is an upstart multimedia news agency that produces stories from across Indis and distributes them to publications world over. Our clientele includes the titles like CNN, Earther, Gizmodo, Zinc, Aljazeera English, AJ+, Vice News, DW, Friday Magazine, and Digger. We are a team of VJs and documentary film-makers that strives to bring forth unheard of stories of people and places and issues affecting environment and humanity. Before starting Newslions in 2016, Sanjay worked as a multimedia producer/director/desk Editor with Reuters and The Telegraph. He is trained in writing, editing, planning and prioritizing content for online, broadcast, radio and print media. Newslions is probably only video news agency in India that takes up assignments from publications world and delivers them the top of the line content.
Unable to make a living from farming, women are forced back into the forest where their husbands were killed
Rajo Devi married at 12 and spent decades trying to have a baby. She became the world’s oldest first-time mother at an age when most women are grandmothers. Now, she tells Sanjay Pandey she is hoping to live long enough to see her daughter married
Rural cancer patients cram train for city medical treatment of illnesses many link to the use of pesticides in farming.
Nearly 2,500 children, including girls, have been taken by communist rebels with a new recruitment drive underway.
Eight hours of gruelling work every day for two years, Jalandhar Nayak has been single-handedly moving mountains to construct a 15-km road, connecting his village Gumsahi to the main road in Phulbani town of Odisha’s Kandhamal district. The district administration has now decided to honour and support Nayak’s efforts by paying him under the MGNREGS scheme.
Inspired from the roof-top gardens of housing societies and offices in Kolkata, a 40-year-old taxi driver has turned his vehicle into a sabuj rath or green chariot, transforming it a moving rooftop garden of sorts. Dhananjoy Chakroborty’s taxi resembles a miniature, mobile garden now.On the roof, Chakraborty has installed a metal container — laid with soil, white sand and stone chips that help the green grass-bed grow. Such is his love for the green cause, the driver with meager income didn’t hesitate to invest INR 22,000 to install the roof top garden which weighs 65 kg. The Kolkata cabbie, who doesn't even own the taxi, has planted eight potted plants in the trunk, of course, with the consent of the owner. The taxi has a green interior to promote the message: how preservation of greenery could help solve air pollution problem.
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