Editorial actual & illustrations

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Ahmedabad, Gujrat, India. 13th June, 2025. People mourn after their relatives were killed the previous day after Air India flight 171 crashed in a residential area near the airport, whilst waiting outside the hospital mortuary in Ahmedabad, India on June 13, 2025. Investigators recovered a black box recorder from the crash site on June 13 of a London-bound passenger jet that plowed into a residential area of India's Ahmedabad city, killing at least 265 people on board and on the ground. (Credit Image: © Basit Zargar/ZUMA Press Wire) EDITORIAL USAGE ONLY! Not for Commercial USAGE!-stock-photo
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File photo dated 15/02/11 John and Lorna Norgrove, the parents of aid worker Linda Norgrove, who was killed in Afghanistan during a botched rescue mission. John and Linda Norgrove, co-founders of the Linda Norgrove Foundation, have been made OBEs (Officer of the Order of the British Empire) in the King's Birthday Honours list, for services to Women and Children Abroad and in Scotland. Issue date: Friday June 13, 2025.-stock-photo
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File photo dated 12/10/04 of Patrick Magee, the convicted Brighton bomber, sits at a public meeting at St James's Church, Piccadilly, central London with Jo Berry, daughter of Sir Anthony Berry, who was killed in the bomb blast at The Grand Hotel in Brighton on October 12, 1984. o Berry, the daughter of an MP murdered in the Brighton bombing 40 years ago, and the founder of Building Bridges for Peace, has been made an CBE (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) in the King's Birthday Honours list, for services to Peace and Reconciliation. Issue date: Friday June 13, 2025.-stock-photo
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June 13, 2025, Budgam, Jammu And Kashmir, India: Kashmiri Shia Muslims carry placards and chant anti-Israel and pro-Palestine slogans during a protest in Budgam against Israel's strikes on Iran. The protest comes in the wake of Israel's June 13, 2025 wave of airstrikes that hit nearly 100 targets across Iran, including nuclear facilities and military command centers. Among those killed were senior officials such as the armed forces chief and Seyed Amir Hossein Feghhi, head of Iran's Nuclear Science and Technology Research Institute. Similar protests were also held in central Tehran. (Credit Im-stock-photo
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Orlando, Usa United States. 13th June, 2025. Orlando, on the eve of the 9th anniversary of the 2016 massacre that killed 49. 11th June, 2025. Christine Leinonen, the mother of Pulse victim Christopher Leinonen, talks to media after the touring the inside of the club at the site of the nightclub shooting in Orlando, on the eve of the 9th anniversary of the 2016 massacre that killed 49, Wednesday, June 11, 2025. Credit: Joe Burbank/Orlando Sentinel/TNS/Alamy Live News-stock-photo
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June 13, 2025, Peer Ki Gali, Jammu And Kashmir, India: A Kashmiri nomadic man grazes his sheep near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadi-stock-photo
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June 13, 2025, Peer Ki Gali, Jammu And Kashmir, India: A flock of sheep seen grazing near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families-stock-photo
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June 13, 2025, Peer Ki Gali, Jammu And Kashmir, India: A flock of sheep seen grazing near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families-stock-photo
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June 13, 2025, Peer Ki Gali, Jammu And Kashmir, India: A flock of sheep seen grazing near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families-stock-photo
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June 13, 2025, Peer Ki Gali, Jammu And Kashmir, India: A flock of sheep seen grazing near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families-stock-photo
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June 13, 2025, Peer Ki Gali, Jammu And Kashmir, India: A Kashmiri nomadic man grazes his sheep near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic-stock-photo
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June 13, 2025, Peer Ki Gali, Jammu And Kashmir, India: A flock of sheep seen grazing near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families-stock-photo
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June 13, 2025, Peer Ki Gali, Jammu And Kashmir, India: A Sheep grazes near the Pir Panjal Pass, south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families in the lowland-stock-photo
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A flock of sheep seen grazing near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families in the lowlands during their peak seasonal migration. T-stock-photo
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A Kashmiri nomadic man grazes his sheep near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar.. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families in the lowlands during their peak seasonal m-stock-photo
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A flock of sheep seen grazing near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families in the lowlands during their peak seasonal migration. T-stock-photo
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Kashmiri nomadic men graze their flock of sheep near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families in the lowlands during their peak sea-stock-photo
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A flock of sheep seen grazing near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families in the lowlands during their peak seasonal migration. T-stock-photo
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A Kashmiri nomadic man grazes his sheep near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families in the lowlands during their peak seasonal mi-stock-photo
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A flock of sheep seen grazing near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families in the lowlands during their peak seasonal migration. T-stock-photo
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A Sheep grazes near the Pir Panjal Pass, south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families in the lowlands during their peak seasonal migration. The closures th-stock-photo
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A flock of sheep seen grazing near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families in the lowlands during their peak seasonal migration. T-stock-photo
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A Kashmiri nomadic man grazes his sheep near the Pir Panjal Pass south of capital city Srinagar. The Gujjar and Bakarwal pastoralist community are among the most vulnerable secluded tribes in the region facing a crisis following the April 22 attack in Pahalgam that killed 26 Hindu tourists and triggered the worst military escalation between nuclear rivals, India and Pakistan in decades. Since then, authorities have closed 48 high-altitude locations including key grazing areas across Indian-administered Kashmir stranding hundreds of nomadic families in the lowlands during their peak seasonal mi-stock-photo
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Emma Webber, the mother of Barnaby Webber during a memorial walk to lay flowers in Nottingham, to mark the second anniversary of their murders. Barnaby, Ian and Grace were killed by Valdo Calocane in Nottingham in June 2023. He had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and killed three people - 19-year-old students Grace O'Malley-Kumar and Barnaby Webber and 65-year-old caretaker Ian Coates - and attempted to kill three more. Picture date: Friday June 13, 2025.-stock-photo
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Emma Webber, the mother of Barnaby Webber (centre left) and Dr Sanjoy Kumar, the father of Grace O'Malley Kumar (centre right) during a memorial walk to lay flowers in Nottingham, to mark the second anniversary of their murders. Barnaby, Ian and Grace were killed by Valdo Calocane in Nottingham in June 2023. He had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and killed three people - 19-year-old students Grace O'Malley-Kumar and Barnaby Webber and 65-year-old caretaker Ian Coates - and attempted to kill three more. Picture date: Friday June 13, 2025.-stock-photo
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Emma Webber, the mother of Barnaby Webber (centre left) and Dr Sanjoy Kumar, the father of Grace O'Malley Kumar (centre right) during a memorial walk to lay flowers in Nottingham, to mark the second anniversary of their murders. Barnaby, Ian and Grace were killed by Valdo Calocane in Nottingham in June 2023. He had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and killed three people - 19-year-old students Grace O'Malley-Kumar and Barnaby Webber and 65-year-old caretaker Ian Coates - and attempted to kill three more. Picture date: Friday June 13, 2025.-stock-photo
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Emma Webber, the mother of Barnaby Webber (centre left) and Dr Sanjoy Kumar, the father of Grace O'Malley Kumar (centre right) during a memorial walk to lay flowers in Nottingham, to mark the second anniversary of their murders. Barnaby, Ian and Grace were killed by Valdo Calocane in Nottingham in June 2023. He had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and killed three people - 19-year-old students Grace O'Malley-Kumar and Barnaby Webber and 65-year-old caretaker Ian Coates - and attempted to kill three more. Picture date: Friday June 13, 2025.-stock-photo
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Emma Webber, the mother of Barnaby Webber (centre left) and Dr Sanjoy Kumar, the father of Grace O'Malley Kumar (centre right) during a memorial walk to lay flowers in Nottingham, to mark the second anniversary of their murders. Barnaby, Ian and Grace were killed by Valdo Calocane in Nottingham in June 2023. He had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and killed three people - 19-year-old students Grace O'Malley-Kumar and Barnaby Webber and 65-year-old caretaker Ian Coates - and attempted to kill three more. Picture date: Friday June 13, 2025.-stock-photo
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Emma Webber, the mother of Barnaby Webber (centre left) and Dr Sanjoy Kumar, the father of Grace O'Malley Kumar (centre right) during a memorial walk to lay flowers in Nottingham, to mark the second anniversary of their murders. Barnaby, Ian and Grace were killed by Valdo Calocane in Nottingham in June 2023. He had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and killed three people - 19-year-old students Grace O'Malley-Kumar and Barnaby Webber and 65-year-old caretaker Ian Coates - and attempted to kill three more. Picture date: Friday June 13, 2025.-stock-photo
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Emma Webber, the mother of Barnaby Webber (left) and Dr Sanjoy Kumar, the father of Grace O'Malley Kumar (right) during a memorial walk to lay flowers in Nottingham, to mark the second anniversary of their murders. Barnaby, Ian and Grace were killed by Valdo Calocane in Nottingham in June 2023. He had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and killed three people - 19-year-old students Grace O'Malley-Kumar and Barnaby Webber and 65-year-old caretaker Ian Coates - and attempted to kill three more. Picture date: Friday June 13, 2025.-stock-photo
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Emma Webber, the mother of Barnaby Webber (left) and Dr Sanjoy Kumar, the father of Grace O'Malley Kumar (right) and James Coates, the son of Ian Coates (centre) during a memorial walk to lay flowers in Nottingham, to mark the second anniversary of their murders. Barnaby, Ian and Grace were killed by Valdo Calocane in Nottingham in June 2023. He had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and killed three people - 19-year-old students Grace O'Malley-Kumar and Barnaby Webber and 65-year-old caretaker Ian Coates - and attempted to kill three more. Picture date: Friday June 13, 2025.-stock-photo
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Emma Webber, the mother of Barnaby Webber (left) and Dr Sanjoy Kumar, the father of Grace O'Malley Kumar (right) and James Coates, the son of Ian Coates (centre) during a memorial walk to lay flowers in Nottingham, to mark the second anniversary of their murders. Barnaby, Ian and Grace were killed by Valdo Calocane in Nottingham in June 2023. He had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and killed three people - 19-year-old students Grace O'Malley-Kumar and Barnaby Webber and 65-year-old caretaker Ian Coates - and attempted to kill three more. Picture date: Friday June 13, 2025.-stock-photo
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Emma Webber, the mother of Barnaby Webber (left) and Dr Sanjoy Kumar, the father of Grace O'Malley Kumar (right) during a memorial walk to lay flowers in Nottingham, to mark the second anniversary of their murders. Barnaby, Ian and Grace were killed by Valdo Calocane in Nottingham in June 2023. He had been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and killed three people - 19-year-old students Grace O'Malley-Kumar and Barnaby Webber and 65-year-old caretaker Ian Coates - and attempted to kill three more. Picture date: Friday June 13, 2025.-stock-photo
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Budgam, Jammu And Kashmir, India. 13th June, 2025. Kashmiri Shia Muslims raise their hands and chant anti-Israel and pro-Palestine slogans during a protest in Budgam against Israel's strikes on Iran. The demonstration follows Israel's June 13, 2025 wave of airstrikes targeting nearly 100 sites across Iran, including nuclear facilities and military command centers. Among those killed were senior officials such as the armed forces chief and Seyed Amir Hossein Feghhi, head of Iran's Nuclear Science and Technology Research Institute. Similar protests were also held in central Tehran. (Credit Ima-stock-photo
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Budgam, Jammu And Kashmir, India. 13th June, 2025. A Kashmiri Muslim looks from behind a fence as protesters chant anti-Israel and pro-Palestine slogans during a demonstration in Budgam against Israel's strikes on Iran. The protest follows Israel's June 13, 2025 airstrikes targeting nearly 100 sites across Iran, including nuclear facilities and military command centers. Among those killed were senior officials such as the armed forces chief and Seyed Amir Hossein Feghhi, head of Iran's Nuclear Science and Technology Research Institute. Similar protests were also held in central Tehran. (Cred-stock-photo
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Budgam, Jammu And Kashmir, India. 13th June, 2025. Kashmiri Shia Muslims carry placards and chant anti-Israel and pro-Palestine slogans during a protest in Budgam against Israel's strikes on Iran. The protest comes in the wake of Israel's June 13, 2025 wave of airstrikes that hit nearly 100 targets across Iran, including nuclear facilities and military command centers. Among those killed were senior officials such as the armed forces chief and Seyed Amir Hossein Feghhi, head of Iran's Nuclear Science and Technology Research Institute. Similar protests were also held in central Tehran. (Credit-stock-photo
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Budgam, Jammu And Kashmir, India. 13th June, 2025. A Kashmiri Shia Muslim holds a placard reading ''Stop the genocide'' in Urdu and chants anti-Israel and pro-Palestine slogans during a protest in Budgam against Israel's strikes on Iran. The demonstration follows Israel's June 13, 2025 airstrikes that targeted nearly 100 sites across Iran, including nuclear facilities and military command centers. Among those killed were senior officials, including the armed forces chief and Seyed Amir Hossein Feghhi, head of Iran's Nuclear Science and Technology Research Institute. Similar protests were als-stock-photo
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Budgam, Jammu And Kashmir, India. 13th June, 2025. A Kashmiri Shia Muslim holds a placard reading ''Stop the genocide'' in Urdu and chants anti-Israel and pro-Palestine slogans during a protest in Budgam against Israel's strikes on Iran. The demonstration follows Israel's June 13, 2025 airstrikes that targeted nearly 100 sites across Iran, including nuclear facilities and military command centers. Among those killed were senior officials, including the armed forces chief and Seyed Amir Hossein Feghhi, head of Iran's Nuclear Science and Technology Research Institute. Similar protests were als-stock-photo
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Budgam, Jammu And Kashmir, India. 13th June, 2025. Kashmiri Shia Muslims carry placards and chant anti-Israel and pro-Palestine slogans during a protest in Budgam against Israel's strikes on Iran. The protest comes in the wake of Israel's June 13, 2025 wave of airstrikes that hit nearly 100 targets across Iran, including nuclear facilities and military command centers. Among those killed were senior officials such as the armed forces chief and Seyed Amir Hossein Feghhi, head of Iran's Nuclear Science and Technology Research Institute. Similar protests were also held in central Tehran. (Credit-stock-photo
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Budgam, Jammu And Kashmir, India. 13th June, 2025. Kashmiri Shia Muslims carry placards and chant anti-Israel and pro-Palestine slogans during a protest in Budgam against Israel's strikes on Iran. The protest comes in the wake of Israel's June 13, 2025 wave of airstrikes that hit nearly 100 targets across Iran, including nuclear facilities and military command centers. Among those killed were senior officials such as the armed forces chief and Seyed Amir Hossein Feghhi, head of Iran's Nuclear Science and Technology Research Institute. Similar protests were also held in central Tehran. (Credit-stock-photo