var captionText = new Array()

captionText[11]="Slavica Eremic feeds her baby son Nikola while her husband Nebojsa sleeps. 21-year-old Slavica married Serbian Nebojsa when she was 19. Nebojsa had returned to Croatia after several years of exile in Serbia only to find his family home inhabited by a Bosnian refugee. The young family now live in what used to be Nebojsa’s grandmothers house. Jurga, Croatia.";
captionText[12]="Workers from the Croatian Red Cross measure the window and doorframes of Milan Calic’s destroyed home the day after he returned from 12 years of exile in Serbia. The fittings must be installed before his family can move into the house. Brgud, Croatia.";
captionText[13]="Slavica Eremic washes clothes in a trough in front of their house. The pump is their only source of running water but is undrinkable. Instead they must collect drinking water from their neighbour’s well down the road.";
captionText[14]="Maria Banic rests while cleaning out her dilapidated home. She and her husband Branko had returned to Croatia the previous day with the help of the UNHCR and Red Cross after living as refugees in Serbia for over a decade. However they were not eligible for any reconstruction aid from the government as they were to late in applying and were faced with rebuilding their home by themselves. Brgud, Croatia.";
captionText[15]="Milica Calic and her father Milan in their tiny rented room in Serbia two days before their move back to Milan's childhood home in Southern Croatia. Golobinci, Serbia";
captionText[16]="Jasna Brajilovic packs up her family’s belongings as they prepare to move to Croatia where her husband Milan is from. Jasna is from Serbia proper but met Milan while he was living as a refugee in her country. She is not worried about moving to Croatia despite having never gone further than Belgrade. Golobinci, Serbia.";
captionText[17]="37-year-old Peda Radic is from Knin in Southern Croatia but was displaced by Operation Storm in 1995. He now lives alone in Rtanj refugee centre in Serbia as his last remaining family abandoned him due to his alcoholism. Rtanj, Serbia.";
captionText[18]="Milan Calic says goodbye to friends and family before returning to his home in Croatia with his partner and their two children. Golobinci, Serbia.";
captionText[19]="Maria Banic returns to her destroyed home near the town of Benkovac in the South of Croatia for the first time in eleven years. She and her husband Branko were part of a returnee convoy from Serbia organised by the UNHCR and Croatian Red Cross. Brgud, Croatia";
captionText[110]="Branko Banic makes a customary cup of Turkish coffee in his newly rebuilt kitchen. When he and his wife Maria returned to Croatia their house was completely dilapidated. After 6 months of living with cousins nearby the elderly couple were gifted some help by the Norwegian refugee council and are today beginning to gain back their old lives. Brgud, Croatia.";
captionText[111]="Stana Davidovic is from Kostanica in central Croatia. Having survived WW2 she now lives as a refugee in Rtanj collective centre in Serbia. Although her sister has returned to their village in Croatia, Stana is to upset by the destruction in her home country to live there again. Rtanj, Serbia.";
captionText[112]="The Eremic family sits down for Sunday lunch. Nebojsa now works for a factory in the nearby city of Karlovac so has less time with his family.  Jurga, Croatia.";
captionText[113]="Mirko Gvoic catches the sun in a friend’s room at Rtanj refugee camp. 48-year-old Mirko lives alone in Rtanj having fled Croatia in 1995. Having served in the Serbian army during the war Mirko will not return to his home town for fear of reprisal attacks from Croats.";
captionText[114]="Branko and Maria Banic repair a chair in front of their newly rebuilt house in Brgud, Southern Croatia. ";
captionText[115]="The village of Rtanj used to be a thriving mining community of almost 3,000 people. These days the few remaining villagers share the valley with the 80 or so IDP’s and refugees that are housed in the old workers barracks. Rtanj, Serbia.";
captionText[116]="Milan and Jasna Calic continue to repair and clean Milan’s family home in Southern Croatia. They returned to his childhood home 4 months ago and have since been married and are expecting their third child. Brgud, Croatia.";
captionText[117]="Sava Samardzija cuts the hair of his friend Slavolub Kristic while his brother Duro drinks brandy. The Samardzija brothers live as refugees in Rtanj collective centre in Serbia since fleeing their home in Croatia in 1995. Rtanj, Serbia.";
captionText[118]="Milan is from Vost (Prior to war Virgmost) in central Croatia. He fled Operation Storm in ’95, first going to Kosovo as a refugee. There he met his third wife Danica, also from Croatia where they sustained the unrest and NATO bombing campaign in 1999.They now remain as refugees in Goranje Barbesh holding centre in Southern Serbia.";
captionText[119]="Nebojsa takes a break from fixing his blue Yugo to talk to wife Slavica. The young couple married against the wishes of Slavica’s parents who did not want their daughter to marry a Croatian Serb. They refused to attend the wedding and have not even come to see their grandson Nikola. Jurga, Croatia";
captionText[120]="Peda Radic takes a break from doing his mornings work in Rtanj refugee centre. Instead of money Peda is paid with cigarettes and booze. Rtanj, Serbia.";
captionText[121]="Janja Tisma rises at 6.30am to milk her cattle. Having fled Operation Storm Janja and her family returned to their farm in Tremusnjak, near the city of Sisak in 2001. Since returning they have not received any reconstruction grant. Despite such difficulties they are producing highly regarded milk for a distribution company in Sisak. Tremusnjak, Croatia.";
captionText[122]="Mirko Gvoic tends to the boiler that heats the rooms in Rtanj refugee camp. Mirko is employed as a handyman by the manager of the centre but has not been paid for over a year due to cash flow problems. Rtanj, Serbia.";
captionText[123]="Nebojsa and Slavica Eremic wash baby son Nikola in their newly rebuilt home. Although they failed to receive building aid from the state, ADRA (a German NGO) donated building materials and Nebojsa did the work himself. Jurga, Croatia";
captionText[124]="Jasna Calic looks out on the road from her kitchen window. The previous day while sitting in front of the house with her two young children a group of passing Croat youths shouted 'Fuck your Chetnik mother' at Jasna. This was the third racist incident the Calic family had experienced since moving back to Croatia 4 months ago. Brgud, Croatia.";
captionText[125]="Branko Banic and his cousin Douchin explore what is left of their neighbour’s homes in the village Brgud, Southern Croatia. They are the only to families to have returned to the village since the end of the war in Croatia. Brgud, Croatia.";
captionText[126]="Slavica with baby Nikola outside their small cottage in Jurga, Croatia.";
captionText[127]="Branko outside his house in Brgud. He was born here and lived here all his life until being displaced to Serbia in 1995 because of Operation Storm.";
captionText[128]="Nada plays with her Niece’s daughter Gorana. Gorana’s mother Volga returned to her partially destroyed flat in Knin town centre in 2001. With the help of the OSCE she secured state funded reconstruction and now lives there with Gorana and her Mother.";
captionText[129]="Mirko Gvoic cuts firewood for the boiler that heats the rooms at Rtanj refugee centre. Rtanj, Serbia.";
captionText[130]="Stana Davidovic walks back to her room after collecting fresh water from a well in the forest. She says the water that the refugees get in the barracks is contaminated. Rtanj, Serbia.";

captionText[21]="Lac Ilie guides his flock towards their pen for the evening milking session.";
captionText[22]="Bogdan Cotinghi sleeps while watching over his flock as they graze in the valleys around their camp.";
captionText[23]="Niculae Continghi takes a break from making yogurt";
captionText[24]="35-year-old Lac Ilie in the tiny one roomed shack where he and his friend Gheorghe live during the summer months. They will sleep, eat and make cheese here from late spring until the end of September.";
captionText[25]="Lac Ilie collects water from a natural spring";
captionText[26]="Aurel Continghi and his eldest son Ionuts milk some of the 300 sheep they manage during the summer months. The flock is borrowed from various livestock owners and the shepherds will pay them back with some of the cheese they make up in the mountains.";
captionText[27]="Aurel Cotinghi keeps 8 specially bred Romanian sheep dogs in order to fend off wolves and bears from attacking the livestock he shepherds during the summer. Two weeks before two wolves attacked in broad daylight, killing one sheep before being chased away by the dogs.";
captionText[28]="54 year old Gheorge Grozav prepares for a nights sleep under the stars with his flock by putting on a traditional sheep skin coat";
captionText[29]="Aurel Continghi and his eldest son Ionuts stuff pig’s bladders with some of the cheeses they have made over the past week. This keeps the cheese and allows for easier transportation.";
captionText[210]="Gheorghe Grozav carries a bucket of water back to the shack where he and his friend, Lac Ilie, live as shepherds during the summer months. Because of the remote location in the mountains they have no electricity or running water.";
captionText[211]="Niculae Continghi surveys his flock while they wait to be milked.";
captionText[212]="Fresh sheep's milk is sieved through a handkerchief before being turned into the highly regarded Telemea cheese.";
captionText[213]="During the summer months the village of Magura is mainly inhabited by women children and pensioners as the men of working age migrate up to higher pastures with their flocks of sheep. This allows the grass in the village to regrow and thus be cut for hay, which will sustain the flock during the winter months";
captionText[214]="Gheorghe Grozav eats lunch while watching over his flock outside.";
captionText[215]="Gheorghe Grozav is originally from the Moldavia region of Romania but now works with Lac Ilie as a shepherd in the Transylvanian region of the country.";

captionText[31]="A Ninja family pans their ore from a nearby dig that they located the previous evening. Word spreads quickly in the camp that a good deposit has been found and within hours their find was inundated with other Ninja.";
captionText[32]="The green steppes associated with the Mongolian landscape no longer exist in Zaamar. Instead, cratered valleys, useless to anyone but the Ninja, have replaced them.";
captionText[33]="Alag and his younger brother Ichtur check the earth they have just gathered from a freshly dug hole for gold.  They are using a homemade sieving machine that vibrates via a small petrol generator and separates the heavy sediment and rock from the gold flecks they are looking for.";
captionText[34]="Three young miners show off their day's rewards, totaling maybe o.3 grams, worth around two dollars.";
captionText[35]="Toga, a young Ninja, looks out over Zaamar. A prolific mining area, 100 miles West of Ulaanbaatar, where over 10,000 informal gold miners eek out an existence in modern day Mongolia.";
captionText[36]="Geo camp is a sprawling settlement of roughly 60 Gers housing almost 200 Ninja miners. They live on privately leased land mined by a small Mongolian company.";
captionText[37]="The owners of Geo Gold, a small Mongolian mining company, pose with their guns at their field station near Zaamar in Central Mongolia. The company allows the Ninja miners to scavenge their land but occasionally the private security guards will clash with the Ninja.";
captionText[38]="The intensive mining of Mongolia’s mineral deposits is having a devastating effect on its famous landscape. Craters are left unfilled and Mongolia’s main river was virtually dried up in 2002 thanks to the amount of water being pumped out by the big companies.";
captionText[39]="Baatga is hoisted out of a freshly dug hole by Toggi while Ichtur sleeps. Due to the physical nature of the work the ninja take it turns to work and rest throughout the day.";
captionText[310]="Alag leads his younger brothers Toggi and Ichtur to a new digging location.";
captionText[311]="Odu, a twenty one year old Ninja, prepares to travel too the capital and visit his family. He will give his mother twenty five US dollars that he has saved over the past month.";
captionText[312]="Petrol is found at random outposts in the midst of mining territory. It is essential for the running of mini generators used in the mining process during the day, then at night to light up the camp.";
captionText[313]="Byra is a twenty-year-old student from Ulaanbaatar. He had completed one year of his three-year degree in tourism when his family decided to move to Zaamar and dig for gold.";
captionText[314]="A nomadic herding family gather their flock before night falls in Zaamar.  Many of the Ninja are ex-herders who had been hit badly by a series of harsh winters. The nomadic way of life has also been disrupted by the advent of commercial mining in Mongolia as vast tracks of land became privatised and therefore restricted peoples freedom to herd.";
captionText[315]="A young Ninja miner id treated for a head wound he received while working down a hole. Batjargaal, the doctor, travels independently from Ulaanbaatar to treat the Ninja. Without his help most would not receive any medical care because of their Illegal status.";
captionText[316]="Toga’s wife gathers firewood in order to light their stove.";
captionText[317]="Toga and Odu talk of huge finds of gold as they sit high above Geo camp.";

captionText[41]="Isniga Selimi sits with two of her children, Greta and Sucreta aged two and four. This tiny barrack room in Kablare IDP camp has been their home for the past two years.";
captionText[42]="Vebbi Selimi and his wife Isniga haul a cart of rubbish through the snow in mid February when night-time temperatures reach as low as -25ºC.";
captionText[43]="Vebbi’s mother Nedmi and father Ellis, live across the hallway from their son.";
captionText[44]="Fabricka, Mitorvica’s Roma neighborhood, is situated on the Albanian South side of the river Ibar. Despite the promise of support from the authorities the Roma will not return to rebuild their homes for fear of more violent attacks.";
captionText[45]="This young Roma man supposedly lost a kidney when an Albanian terrorist launched an RPG into the camp two years after the war had ended.";
captionText[46]="The Roma people of Kablare and Cesmin Lug camps are sandwiched between the railway tracks and toxic slag heaps of Trepca mines.";
captionText[47]="Zyla and Ramadan are neighbors of the Selimis. Zyla is sixteen and already has two children with her husband. They are cleaning out their new room in the refugee camp so that they can paint it.";
captionText[48]="During the cold winter months the children of Kablare camp are confined to the small 6x10m barrack rooms.";
captionText[49]="Vebbi was a trained butcher. By helping a local Serb man slaughter animals he earned enough meat to feed his family, something many of the other Roma families struggled to do.";
captionText[410]="Kablare Camp as seen from the train that runs from North Mitrovica to Pristina, the capital.";
captionText[411]="Vebbi’s homemade tattoos and self harm scars, which he says he only does when he was drunk. Alcoholism is rife amongst the Roma Men and is often the cause of domestic violence.";
captionText[412]="Vebbi Selimi died of a brain tumor at the age of 27 caused by suspected lead poisoning. According to Muslim custom his burial was carried out 24 hours after his death.  No autopsy was ever conducted.";
captionText[413]="Ellis Selimi mourns the death of his son alone.";
captionText[414]="The Selimi family returns to Kablare camp after the customary seven days of mourning that follow a Muslim funeral.";

captionText[1001]="A female gold panner prepares to walk home as stormy weather approaches on the river Kupa. Ethical gold mining in Madagascar - Commissioned by the Saturday Telegraph magazine.";
captionText[1002]="Sharon Walker with a local gold dealer called Johnny. Ethical gold mining in Madagascar - Commissioned by the Saturday Telegraph magazine.";
captionText[1003]="Madame Delphine, a local shop owner, shows off her gold trading license. Ethical gold mining in Madagascar - Commissioned by the Saturday Telegraph magazine.";
captionText[1004]="Iraqi Refugees in London - Commissioned by the Saturday Telegraph magazine.";
captionText[1005]="Iraqi Refugees in London - Commissioned by the Saturday Telegraph magazine.";
captionText[1006]="Iraqi Refugees in London - Commissioned by the Saturday Telegraph magazine.";
captionText[1007]="Iraqi Refugees in London - Commissioned by the Saturday Telegraph magazine.";
captionText[1008]="Robert Wyatt photographed for Fader magazine.";
captionText[1009]="George Barnett of These New Puritans photographed for Fader magazine.";
captionText[10010]="Meera Sleight photographed for Fader magazine.";
captionText[10011]="Joe Calzaghe and his trainer father Enzo at their gym in Newbridge, South Wales. Photographed for the Sunday Times Magazine";
captionText[10012]="Ex-Spice Girl Geri Haliwell. Photographed for the Sunday Times Magazine.";
captionText[10013]="London Assembly member and BNP politician Richard Barnbrook in his tent at the BNP’s annual Red, White and Blue festival in Denby.";
captionText[10014]="Ratko Drakolic’s mother tends to newborn piglets on their farm in Jurga, Croatia. Commissioned by the OSCE mission to Croatia.";
captionText[10015]="Facing the Ban- Portraits of professional huntsmen in the UK as the ban on fox hunting was pushed through parliament in 2004.";
captionText[10016]="Facing the Ban- Portraits of professional huntsmen in the UK as the ban on fox hunting was pushed through parliament in 2004.";
captionText[10017]="Wood sculptor Lido Morini in his workshop in the forests of Chianti. Photographed for Valdarno on Move project in association with the University of Wales,Newport.";
captionText[10018]="Matt Gill photographed for the Guardian Weekend Magazine.";
captionText[10019]="Jamie Lachman of Clowns Without Borders USA rests between performances while travelling in South Western Haiti.";
captionText[10020]="Homeopath Fred Walker photographed in Co. Meath, Ireland.";
captionText[10021]="Raffaela Traversa tends to her families cattle on their cheese-making farm in Olmo Gentile, Piedmont, Italy. Photographed for the TPW Masterclass.";
captionText[10022]="Brian Madden, 56, runs the British Lawnmower Museum in Southport, Lancashire. Photographed for the UK at Home book project, sponsored by IKEA.";
captionText[10023]="Hip Hop artist The Earlyman photographed in Lewisham, South London.";

captionText[1011]="Ethical Gold mining in Madagascar - Commissioned by the Saturday Telegraph magazine.";
captionText[1012]="Ethical Gold mining in Madagascar - Commissioned by the Saturday Telegraph magazine.";
captionText[1013]="Ethical Gold mining in Madagascar - Commissioned by the Saturday Telegraph magazine.";
captionText[1014]="Iraqi Refugees in London - Commissioned by the Saturday Telegraph magazine.";
captionText[1015]="Iraqi Refugees in London - Commissioned by the Saturday Telegraph magazine.";
captionText[1016]="Iraqi Refugees in London - Commissioned by the Saturday Telegraph magazine.";
captionText[1017]="Kablare: Poisoned Earth – Published in Foto8 magazine V4No2";
captionText[1018]="Kablare: Poisoned Earth – Published in Foto8 magazine V4No2";
captionText[1019]="Kablare: Poisoned Earth – Published in Foto8 magazine V4No2";
captionText[10110]="Kablare: Poisoned Earth – Published in Foto8 magazine V4No2";
captionText[10111]="Published as winner of BJP/Nikon Endframe award – British Journal of Photography.";
captionText[10112]="Published as winner of BJP/Nikon Endframe award – British Journal of Photography.";
captionText[10113]="Published as winner of BJP/Nikon Endframe award – British Journal of Photography.";
captionText[10114]="Published as winner of BJP/Nikon Endframe award – British Journal of Photography.";
captionText[10115]="The Quiet after the Storm – Sunday Times Magazine";
captionText[10116]="The Ninja of Mongolia – Geographical magazine.";
captionText[10117]="The Ninja of Mongolia – Geographical magazine.";
captionText[10118]="The Ninja of Mongolia – Geographical magazine.";
