• Facebook
  • Twitter
x

ALBERTO CEOLONI PHOTOGRAPHER

  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
Show Navigation
Cart Lightbox Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 20 images found }
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • IMG_0597_GEORGIA. Gurjaani. 2011. Boys of the parish church taking a rest after harvesting in the fruitful Alazani valley, in the region of Kakheti. Gurjaani is one of the most important centers for the production of wine in the country.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2011_IMG_0005.jpg
  • IMG 3741 GEORGIA. Ingiri. 2007. Woman cutting wood. Most of these lodgings are not supplied with drinking water, gas and heating. The refugees live in run-down buildings.The collective centers, where most refugees live, have become small islands apart from the rest of society, where people have jealously kept their identity and their set of values.<br />
The local population is indifferent and hostile to the fate of the refugees, who are considered as foreigners with special privileges who have come to steal housing and jobs.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_3741.jpg
  • IMG 1043 GEORGIA. Tbilisi. 2007. A teacher during the lesson. Prospects are better for young people than for the rest of the population. They have excellent vocational training and many of them go to school or university.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_1043.jpg
  • IMG 3278 GEORGIA. Ingiri. 2007. Refugees drawing water from a well. Most of the dwellings are not connected to drinking water or to gas supply for heating.The collective centers, where most refugees live, have become small islands apart from the rest of society, where people have jealously kept their identity and their set of values.<br />
The local population is indifferent and hostile to the fate of the refugees, who are considered as foreigners with special privileges who have come to steal housing and jobs.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_3728.jpg
  • IMG 1713 GEORGIA. Gori. 2007. Boys walking in a courtyard. Prospects are better for young people than for the rest of the population. The young people have excellent vocational training and many of them go to school or university.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_1713.jpg
  • IMG 0654 GEORGIA. Tskhneti. 2007. The wife of the sick man is crying. Free health care extends only to diagnosis and visits to the area polyclinic for the poorest refugees and children, medicines have to be bought. For urgent cases entailing hospitalisation, the State covers 75% of the cost of operations and the patient must pay 25%, and here too these sums are beyond the economic means of the refugees, while 100% of health care costs have to be borne by the rest of the population.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_0654.jpg
  • IMG_7762 IRAN. Zahedan. 2008. MSF’s visiting Afghan doctors taking a rest after a domiciliary visit, during the Summer the temperature in Sistan-Baluchistan may hit 45° C., the city of Zahedan is located near the Pakistan and Afghan border.
    CEOLONI_IRAN_2009_IMG_0027.jpg
  • IMG 2698 GEORGIA. Zugdidi. 2007. Ophthalmic consultation in a polyclinic, 75 doctors offer unpaid work in these structures for visits, diagnoses and vaccinations. Health care is free for the poorest refugees and children in a series of polyclinics but only as regards diagnosis, visits and vaccinations, medicines have to be bought. For urgent cases entailing hospitalisation, the State covers 75% of the cost of operations and the patient must pay 25%, and here too these sums are beyond the economic means of the refugees, while 100% of health care costs have to be borne by the rest of the population.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_2698.jpg
  • IMG 2572 GEORGIA. Tsqaltubo. 2007. A refugees family living in a collective center’s flat. Each apartment may house up to three or four families. Most of these lodgings are not supplied with drinking water, gas and heating, the refugees live in run-down buildings. The collective centers and the sanatoriums, where most refugees live, have become small islands apart from the rest of society, where people have jealously kept their identity and their set of values.The local population is indifferent and hostile to the fate of the refugees, who are considered as foreigners with special privileges who have come to steal housing and jobs.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_2572.jpg
  • IMG 3550 GEORGIA. Jvari. 2007. Boy drawing water from a well.  Most of the dwellings are not connected to a drinking water supply. The collective centers, where most refugees live, have become small islands apart from the rest of society, where people have jealously kept their identity and their set of values.<br />
The local population is indifferent and hostile to the fate of the refugees, who are considered as foreigners with special privileges who have come to steal housing and jobs.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_3550.jpg
  • IMG 3103 GEORGIA. Rukhi. 2007. Family of refugees in a collective center, each apartment may house as many as three or four family groups. <br />
Most of these lodgings are run-down buildings and are not supplied with drinking water, gas and heating. The collective centers, where most refugees live, have become small islands apart from the rest of society, where people have jealously kept their identity and their set of values.<br />
The local population is indifferent and hostile to the fate of the refugees, who are considered as foreigners with special privileges who have come to steal housing and jobs.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_3103.jpg
  • IMG 2039 GEORGIA. Tsqaltubo. 2007. A girl is making cakes in her flat. Most lodgings have no gas or drinking water supply, each apartment may house as many as three or four family groups. Prospects are better for young people than for the rest of the population, they have excellent vocational training and many of them go to school or university, but they have great difficulty in finding work, the unemployment rate among the refugees is very high;  the lack of better perspectives for the future has disoriented and demoralized them.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_2039.jpg
  • IMG 1222 GEORGIA. Tbilisi. 2007. Pupil in the corridor of a school. Prospects are better for young people than for the rest of the population.They have excellent vocational training and many of them go to school or university.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_1222.jpg
  • IMG 1167 GEORGIA. Tbilisi. 2007. View of the landscape from the window of a school taking in all ages, from the kindergarten to the upper classes. Prospects are better for young people than for the rest of the population. The young people have excellent vocational training and many of them go to school or university.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_1167.jpg
  • IMG_006 GEORGIA. Tbilisi. 2009. A young refugee playing in a collective center's courtyard. The perspective for the youngest are better than the rest of population, young people are very skilled, many of them go to school or attend the university. Unfortunately during the last war with Russia, many scholastic buildings have been destroyed, burnt and ransacked, the scholastic facilities and the surrounding grounds were mined and there are still cluster unexploded bombs, shed on the ground. Many students and their teachers are refugees themselves and they will not be able to attend regularly the lessons, this could jeopardize the regularity of the school year.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2009_IMG_006.jpg
  • IMG 0639 GEORGIA. Tskhneti. 2007. A sick man in bed.  Free health care extends only to diagnosis and visits to the area polyclinic, for the poorest refugees and children, medicines have to be bought. For urgent cases entailing hospitalisation, the State covers 75% of the cost of operations and the patient must pay 25%, and here too these sums are beyond the economic means of the refugees, while 100% of health care costs have to be borne by the rest of the population.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_0639.jpg
  • IMG 019 GEORGIA. Tbilisi. 2009. A teacher in a corridor of a school that hosts several class from kindergarten to High School, students coming from Abkhazia and South Ossetia. The perspective for the youngest are better than the rest of population, young people are very skilled, many of them go to school or attend the university but they can not to find a job, the lack of better perspectives for their future has left them bewildered and discouraged. The Russian invasion will also have series consequences on the Georgian educational system, in fact a lot of schools have been set on fire, ransacked or damaged, the buildings are not sure because mined and there are still cluster unexploded bombs in the same areas. Because of the war a lot of schools host Georgian refugees.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2009_IMG_020.jpg
  • IMG 2736 GEORGIA. Kutaisi. 2007.  Patients waiting in a polyclinic corridor. For urgent cases entailing hospitalisation, the State covers 75% of the cost of operations and the patient must pay 25% and here too these sums are beyond the economic means of the refugees, while 100% of health care costs have to be borne by the rest of the population.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_2736.jpg
  • IMG 3774 GEORGIA. Ingiri. 2007. A woman in a collective center's courtyard.  Only in 2007 did the government set up an action plan to create conditions for communities to return to normal life. The collective centers, where most refugees live, have become small islands apart from the rest of society, where people have jealously kept their identity and their set of values.<br />
The local population is indifferent and hostile to the fate of the refugees, who are considered as foreigners with special privileges who have come to steal housing and jobs.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_3774.jpg
  • IMG 3957 GEORGIA. Zugdidi. 2007. A mother attending pediatric examination for his child, 30% of refugees are children. Health care is free for the poorest refugees and children in a series of polyclinics but only as regards diagnosis, visits and vaccinations, medicines have to be bought. For urgent cases entailing hospitalisation, the State covers 75% of the cost of operations and the patient must pay 25%., and here too these sums are beyond the economic means of the refugees, while 100% of health care costs have to be borne by the rest of the population.
    CEOLONI_GEORGIA_2008_IMG_3957.jpg