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  • 5th Sept, 2005. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. New Orleans. 'Here lies Vera - God help us.' The temporary grave of a resident of Uptown New Orleans lies at the crossroads of Magazine Street and Jackson Street in the ghost town that once was New Orleans.
    062-05sept05-062.JPG
  • 30 Jan, 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina.<br />
Five months after hurricane Katrina hit the city, the University of New Orleans welcomes some 12,000 students back to their Lakefront campus. Students listen in to Lecturer Dr Phyllis Raabe and her Introductory Sociology to students in a temporary tent as the facility looks to upgrade all its facilities.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    30jan06-uno-lakeview022.JPG
  • 30 Jan, 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina.<br />
Five months after hurricane Katrina hit the city, the University of New Orleans welcomes some 12,000 students back to their Lakefront campus. Students listen in to Lecturer Dr Phyllis Raabe and her Introductory Sociology to students in a temporary tent as the facility looks to upgrade all its facilities.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    30jan06-uno-lakeview021.JPG
  • 30 Jan, 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina.<br />
Five months after hurricane Katrina hit the city, the University of New Orleans welcomes some 12,000 students back to their Lakefront campus. Students listen in to Lecturer Dr Phyllis Raabe and her Introductory Sociology to students in a temporary tent as the facility looks to upgrade all its facilities.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    30jan06-uno-lakeview020.JPG
  • 30 Jan, 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina.<br />
Five months after hurricane Katrina hit the city, the University of New Orleans welcomes some 12,000 students back to their Lakefront campus. Students listen in to Lecturer Dr Phyllis Raabe and her Introductory Sociology to students in a temporary tent as the facility looks to upgrade all its facilities.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    30jan06-uno-lakeview003.JPG
  • 30 Jan, 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina.<br />
Five months after hurricane Katrina hit the city, the University of New Orleans welcomes some 12,000 students back to their Lakefront campus. Students listen in to Lecturer Dr Phyllis Raabe and her Introductory Sociology to students in a temporary tent as the facility looks to upgrade all its facilities.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    30jan06-uno-lakeview019.JPG
  • 30 Jan, 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina.<br />
Five months after hurricane Katrina hit the city, the University of New Orleans welcomes some 12,000 students back to their Lakefront campus. Students listen in to Lecturer Dr Phyllis Raabe and her Introductory Sociology to students in a temporary tent as the facility looks to upgrade all its facilities.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    30jan06-uno-lakeview018.JPG
  • 30 Jan, 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina.<br />
Five months after hurricane Katrina hit the city, the University of New Orleans welcomes some 12,000 students back to their Lakefront campus. Students listen in to Lecturer Dr Phyllis Raabe and her Introductory Sociology to students in a temporary tent as the facility looks to upgrade all its facilities.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    30jan06-uno-lakeview002.JPG
  • 05 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
'Here lies Vera - God help us.' The temporary grave of a resident of Uptown New Orleans lies at the crossroads of Magazine Street and Jackson Street in the ghost town that once was New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    05sept05-post katrina15.JPG
  • 30 Jan, 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina.<br />
Five months after hurricane Katrina hit the city, the University of New Orleans welcomes some 12,000 students back to their Lakefront campus. Students listen in to Lecturer Dr Phyllis Raabe and her Introductory Sociology to students in a temporary tent as the facility looks to upgrade all its facilities.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    30jan06-uno-lakeview017.JPG
  • 30 Jan, 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina.<br />
Five months after hurricane Katrina hit the city, the University of New Orleans welcomes some 12,000 students back to their Lakefront campus. Students listen in to Lecturer Dr Phyllis Raabe and her Introductory Sociology to students in a temporary tent as the facility looks to upgrade all its facilities.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    30jan06-uno-lakeview016.JPG
  • 30 Jan, 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina.<br />
Five months after hurricane Katrina hit the city, the University of New Orleans welcomes some 12,000 students back to their Lakefront campus. Students listen in to Lecturer Dr Phyllis Raabe and her Introductory Sociology to students in a temporary tent as the facility looks to upgrade all its facilities.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    30jan06-uno-lakeview015.JPG
  • 10 December, 05. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
 3 1/2 months after the storm, an empty FEMA trailer park sits on what was once a baseball field in the Gentilly neighbourhood.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10Dec05-New Orleans023.JPG
  • 10 December, 05. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
 3 1/2 months after the storm, an empty FEMA trailer park sits on what was once a baseball field in the Gentilly neighbourhood.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10Dec05-New Orleans022.JPG
  • 10 December, 05. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
 3 1/2 months after the storm, an empty FEMA trailer park sits on what was once a baseball field in the Gentilly neighbourhood.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10Dec05-New Orleans021.JPG
  • 10 December, 05. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
 3 1/2 months after the storm, an empty FEMA trailer park sits on what was once a baseball field in the Gentilly neighbourhood.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10Dec05-New Orleans020.JPG
  • 10 December, 05. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
 3 1/2 months after the storm, an empty FEMA trailer park sits on what was once a baseball field in the Gentilly neighbourhood.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10Dec05-New Orleans019.JPG
  • 10 December, 05. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
 3 1/2 months after the storm, an empty FEMA trailer park sits on what was once a baseball field in the Gentilly neighbourhood.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10Dec05-New Orleans016.JPG
  • 10th December, 2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. 3 1/2 months after the storm, an empty FEMA trailer park sits on what was once a baseball field in the Gentilly neighbourhood.
    156-10dec05-156.JPG
  • 30 June 2020. South of Calais, France.<br />
Smuggler's Paradise. Interior of a seemingly deserted old caravan hidden in the sand dunes of a beach south of Calais where local police claim migrants often attempt the treacherous crossing to Great Britain. The caravan appears to have been recently used with cardboard laid on the ground for bedding and passport photos discovered on the sandy floor. The location is reasonably remote and backs onto farmland. A gravel access road makes this a prime location for ruthless criminal gangs to drop migrants paying as much as €5,000 for a ticket on an inflatable dinghy with a small outboard motor and less for surfboards and inflatable kayaks. Local police claim it is from here and other beaches in the region that migrants often set out to make desperate and dangerous attempts to cross one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world. Migrants are crossing the English Channel (La Manche) by boat, kayak, surf board and even inflatable paddling pools as numbers seeking asylum in the UK continue to rise. <br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    30june20-Calais migrants-Varley014.jpg
  • 30 June 2020. South of Calais, France.<br />
Smuggler's Paradise. Interior of a seemingly deserted old caravan hidden in the sand dunes of a beach south of Calais where local police claim migrants often attempt the treacherous crossing to Great Britain. The caravan appears to have been recently used with cardboard laid on the ground for bedding and passport photos discovered on the sandy floor. The location is reasonably remote and backs onto farmland. A gravel access road makes this a prime location for ruthless criminal gangs to drop migrants paying as much as €5,000 for a ticket on an inflatable dinghy with a small outboard motor and less for surfboards and inflatable kayaks. Local police claim it is from here and other beaches in the region that migrants often set out to make desperate and dangerous attempts to cross one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world. Migrants are crossing the English Channel (La Manche) by boat, kayak, surf board and even inflatable paddling pools as numbers seeking asylum in the UK continue to rise. <br />
Photo©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    30june20-Calais migrants-Varley012.jpg
  • 31st August, 2005. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
'Hell on earth.' The New Orleans Arena became a makeshift hospital. Tourists stuck at the Superdome were coming under increased pressure with threats of violence and were removed from the Superdome for their own safety. They were immediately put to work assisting at the makeshift hospital.  British tourists trapped by the storm talk to reporter Ryan Parry.<br />
Photo Credit: Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    31aug05-hurricane Katrina021.JPG
  • 10 December, 05. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
 3 1/2 months after the storm, an empty FEMA trailer park sits on what was once a baseball field in the Gentilly neighbourhood.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10Dec05-New Orleans018.JPG
  • 10 December, 05. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
 3 1/2 months after the storm, an empty FEMA trailer park sits on what was once a baseball field in the Gentilly neighbourhood.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10Dec05-New Orleans017.JPG
  • 26 July 2006 - New Orleans - Louisiana. Law and Order. <br />
2228 MP Company, Louisiana National Guard. Military Police patrol. 5th District. <br />
With crime beginning to pick up as people return to the city following the destruction of Hurricane Katrina, 300 Louisiana National Guardsmen returned to New Orleans to supplement local police and provide increased cover and back up in parts of the city that remain derelict and thinly populated since the devastating floods. Soldiers share the 3.00pm roll call and briefing in the temporary headquarters of the 5th district NOPD headquarters.
    317-26july06-317.JPG
  • 28 August 2014.  Merrick Cemetery, <br />
St Bernard Parish, Louisiana, USA. <br />
Hurricane Katrina 9 years later. <br />
A few miles south of the Orleans parish line, crumbling concrete tombs reveal their contents. Recovered remains were placed in new coffins FEMA paid to be reburied following their uprooting by Hurricane Katrina. Today the temporary tombs appear to have become the permanent resting place for many of the dead displaced by Hurricane Katrina. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    28aug14-Katrina+9 005.JPG
  • 28 August 2014.  Merrick Cemetery, <br />
St Bernard Parish, Louisiana, USA. <br />
Hurricane Katrina 9 years later. <br />
A few miles south of the Orleans parish line, crumbling concrete tombs reveal their contents. Recovered remains were placed in new coffins FEMA paid to be reburied following their uprooting by Hurricane Katrina. Today the temporary tombs appear to have become the permanent resting place for many of the dead displaced by Hurricane Katrina. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    28aug14-Katrina+9 012.JPG
  • 28 August 2014.  Merrick Cemetery, <br />
St Bernard Parish, Louisiana, USA. <br />
Hurricane Katrina 9 years later. <br />
A few miles south of the Orleans parish line, crumbling concrete tombs reveal their contents. Recovered remains were placed in new coffins FEMA paid to be reburied following their uprooting by Hurricane Katrina. Today the temporary tombs appear to have become the permanent resting place for many of the dead displaced by Hurricane Katrina. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    28aug14-Katrina+9 011.JPG
  • 28 August 2014.  Merrick Cemetery, <br />
St Bernard Parish, Louisiana, USA. <br />
Hurricane Katrina 9 years later. <br />
A few miles south of the Orleans parish line, crumbling concrete tombs reveal their contents. Recovered remains were placed in new coffins FEMA paid to be reburied following their uprooting by Hurricane Katrina. Today the temporary tombs appear to have become the permanent resting place for many of the dead displaced by Hurricane Katrina. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    28aug14-Katrina+9 009.JPG
  • 28 August 2014.  Merrick Cemetery, <br />
St Bernard Parish, Louisiana, USA. <br />
Hurricane Katrina 9 years later. <br />
A few miles south of the Orleans parish line, crumbling concrete tombs reveal their contents. Recovered remains were placed in new coffins FEMA paid to be reburied following their uprooting by Hurricane Katrina. Today the temporary tombs appear to have become the permanent resting place for many of the dead displaced by Hurricane Katrina. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    28aug14-Katrina+9 007.JPG
  • 28 August 2014.  Merrick Cemetery, <br />
St Bernard Parish, Louisiana, USA. <br />
Hurricane Katrina 9 years later. <br />
A few miles south of the Orleans parish line, crumbling concrete tombs reveal their contents. Recovered remains were placed in new coffins FEMA paid to be reburied following their uprooting by Hurricane Katrina. Today the temporary tombs appear to have become the permanent resting place for many of the dead displaced by Hurricane Katrina. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    28aug14-Katrina+9 008.JPG
  • 28 August 2014.  Merrick Cemetery, <br />
St Bernard Parish, Louisiana, USA. <br />
Hurricane Katrina 9 years later. <br />
A few miles south of the Orleans parish line, crumbling concrete tombs reveal their contents. Recovered remains were placed in new coffins FEMA paid to be reburied following their uprooting by Hurricane Katrina. Today the temporary tombs appear to have become the permanent resting place for many of the dead displaced by Hurricane Katrina. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    28aug14-Katrina+9 004.JPG
  • 28 August 2014.  Merrick Cemetery, <br />
St Bernard Parish, Louisiana, USA. <br />
Hurricane Katrina 9 years later. <br />
A few miles south of the Orleans parish line, crumbling concrete tombs reveal their contents. Recovered remains were placed in new coffins FEMA paid to be reburied following their uprooting by Hurricane Katrina. Today the temporary tombs appear to have become the permanent resting place for many of the dead displaced by Hurricane Katrina. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    28aug14-Katrina+9 003.JPG
  • 28 August 2014.  Merrick Cemetery, <br />
St Bernard Parish, Louisiana, USA. <br />
Hurricane Katrina 9 years later. <br />
A few miles south of the Orleans parish line, crumbling concrete tombs reveal their contents. Recovered remains were placed in new coffins FEMA paid to be reburied following their uprooting by Hurricane Katrina. Today the temporary tombs appear to have become the permanent resting place for many of the dead displaced by Hurricane Katrina. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    28aug14-Katrina+9 002.JPG
  • 19th Feb, 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. A man named Kenneth. Living in the back of a broken down van in the parking lot of the still closed Winn Dixie supermarket parking lot close to the French Quarter. Kenneth took over the mattress which he found in the van. He came from Monroe, Louisiana looking for work, but spends most of his days listening to his small portable radio. He tries to keep a low profile, careful not to alert the police to his temporary home for fear of being moved on. The Salvation army have a soup kitchen nearby where he gets his food each day.
    197-19feb06-197.JPG
  • 28 August 2014.  Merrick Cemetery, <br />
St Bernard Parish, Louisiana, USA. <br />
Hurricane Katrina 9 years later. <br />
A few miles south of the Orleans parish line, crumbling concrete tombs reveal their contents. Recovered remains were placed in new coffins FEMA paid to be reburied following their uprooting by Hurricane Katrina. Today the temporary tombs appear to have become the permanent resting place for many of the dead displaced by Hurricane Katrina. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    28aug14-Katrina+9 010.JPG
  • 28 August 2014.  Merrick Cemetery, <br />
St Bernard Parish, Louisiana, USA. <br />
Hurricane Katrina 9 years later. <br />
A few miles south of the Orleans parish line, crumbling concrete tombs reveal their contents. Recovered remains were placed in new coffins FEMA paid to be reburied following their uprooting by Hurricane Katrina. Today the temporary tombs appear to have become the permanent resting place for many of the dead displaced by Hurricane Katrina. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    28aug14-Katrina+9 006.JPG
  • 24 February 2014. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
<br />
As reported in The Sun, London.<br />
<br />
Banksy ‘thieves’ busted cutting original grafitti art work from shop wall<br />
<br />
By JACK LOSH<br />
Last Updated: 24th February 2014<br />
<br />
A BOGUS construction crew were chased off after they were busted cutting an original Banksy from a wall.<br />
One of the gang, who called himself Chris, was caught holding a power drill half-way through extracting the work by the British street artist.<br />
<br />
Hidden by a temporary wall of plywood, he told snapper Charlie Varley that the 2008 artwork – dubbed “Umbrella Girl” – would be shipped to London for a Tate Modern retrospective of Banksy’s career.<br />
He added that it would be re-installed at its current location on the side of an abandoned store in New Orleans, US, once the exhibition had finished.<br />
<br />
But when local residents quizzed the men and ordered them to show a permit for the operation, they packed up their equipment and scarpered.<br />
A security guard was installed at the scene on Friday to make sure the suspected thieves did not return.<br />
Clay Lapeyrouse, who lives nearby, said: “They were cutting it out of the building. The story they gave me just seemed weird."<br />
<br />
Police are now hunting the suspects, aged between 25 and 35, following the incident.<br />
Banksy’s work fetches huge sums at auction, with his Kissing Coppers mural going under the hammer for £345,000 in the US last week.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    24feb14-Banksy cuts001.JPG
  • 04 Sept  2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. <br />
Post hurricane Katrina.<br />
Unisys Crisis Response Team. <br />
L/R; Juad Goday, Ed Minyard and (?) fly in to rebuild the city's critical communications infrastructure following discussions with the mayors office to secure communications for the Mayor's temporary HQ at the Hyatt hotel in New Orleans.<br />
Photo Credit ©: Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    04sept05-kat-oprah01.JPG
  • 24 February 2014. New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
<br />
As reported in The Sun, London.<br />
<br />
Banksy ‘thieves’ busted cutting original grafitti art work from shop wall<br />
<br />
By JACK LOSH<br />
Last Updated: 24th February 2014<br />
<br />
A BOGUS construction crew were chased off after they were busted cutting an original Banksy from a wall.<br />
One of the gang, who called himself Chris, was caught holding a power drill half-way through extracting the work by the British street artist.<br />
<br />
Hidden by a temporary wall of plywood, he told snapper Charlie Varley that the 2008 artwork – dubbed “Umbrella Girl” – would be shipped to London for a Tate Modern retrospective of Banksy’s career.<br />
He added that it would be re-installed at its current location on the side of an abandoned store in New Orleans, US, once the exhibition had finished.<br />
<br />
But when local residents quizzed the men and ordered them to show a permit for the operation, they packed up their equipment and scarpered.<br />
A security guard was installed at the scene on Friday to make sure the suspected thieves did not return.<br />
Clay Lapeyrouse, who lives nearby, said: “They were cutting it out of the building. The story they gave me just seemed weird."<br />
<br />
Police are now hunting the suspects, aged between 25 and 35, following the incident.<br />
Banksy’s work fetches huge sums at auction, with his Kissing Coppers mural going under the hammer for £345,000 in the US last week.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    24feb14-Banksy cuts003.JPG