بالفيديو والصور ..حين يسكن الفقراء بجوار الأغنياء

أرشيف شبكة التأمل الإعلامية

نشر في: الأحد,12 مارس , 2017 2:13م

آخر تحديث: الأحد,12 مارس , 2017 11:26م

تضمن تحقيق مصور، أوردته صحيفة ديلي ميل البريطانية، الفروقات الشاسعة بين حياة الفقراء والأغنياء ممن يسكنون في أحياء واحدة، وذلك في بلدان عدة  من قارات مختلفة تشهد دولها نهضة اقتصادية كبيرة.

وفي مشاهد تحمل الكثير من التناقض والمفارقات العجيبة، وثقت عدسات مصورين صحفيين مشاهد من التداخل بين الأحياء الغنية والفقيرة في الكثير من دول العالم، حيث بينت هذه الصور مدى توسع الفجوة بين طبقات المجتمع عندما تكون بيوت الصفيح على بعد جدار فقط من القصور والشقق الفاخرة التي تحتوي على مسابح وجاكوزي، بينما يغرق جيران الأغنياء من الفقراء بمياه الأنهار والمجاري التي تخرب الخشب والصفيح الذي صنعت منه بيوتهم الخربة.

In Mexico, ramshackle slums (left) sit shoulder-to-shoulder with the pristine homes of wealthier residents just over the fence (right) - seen in this photo, which has not been digitally modified

Here in South Africa's Durban, the Papwa Sewgolum Golf Course (left) is located just a matter of feet away from a sprawling settlement of tin shacks (right), divided by a low-slung concrete fence

In the heaving Indian city of Mumbai, new apartments live adjacent to the typical makeshift homes of the poor working class

Sleek, modern buildings in Vietnam's Ho Chi Minh city rise up in the distance behind the wooden slums which line the Saigon river bank

This photo, taken in Egypt, captures the crumbling brick buildings populated by Cairo's poorest inhabitants (right) separated from a glitzy hotel complex (left) by panels of corrugated iron

The developers of this lavish block of apartments in Mexico have blocked off the view behind it - a mass of grey tumbledown flats

In this photo taken in October 2014, golfers play a carefree round at the Spanish enclave of Melilla as sub-Saharan migrants behind them attempt to break over the wall that divides it from Morocco

Paraisopolis (left), a slum consisting of some 60,000 residents, located right up against lavish pool-equipped apartments (right) in the Morumbi neighborhood of Sao Paulo, South America

In Bangkok, Thailand, waterside slums line the river as bleach-white high-rise buildings dominate the skyline behind them

In the foreground of this Brazilian region, the shabby shacks offer a stark contrast to the glass-fronted houses located further up the hill

Mumbai is one of the most divided cities in the world when it comes to the settlement of rich and poor in such close proximity 

Here in its Dharavi slum, everyday life is a far cry from the luxury of the palaces and temples which reach into the distance 

Dhobi Ghat, pictured, is a famous open air laundromat in Mumbai where clothes from the hotels, embassies and beauty parlours nearby are sent to be washed

Employees here work hard all through the day and night under extremely tough conditions amid this glittering backdrop 

In China's Shanghai, dilapidated houses are scattered on the outskirts of regions where modern infrastructure is shooting up at a rapid pace

Peru's ten-foot high contraversial 'Wall of Shame' topped with razor wire which divides the rich and poor to stop the less well-off stealing from the wealthy

The line divides the urbanisation of Las Casuarinas, where some of the country's richest inhabitants live, and the poor suburb of Vista Hermosa next door

Chongqing, located on the Yangtze river, has experienced rapid development in the recent years and is set to become the most economically important city in the west of China - but away from the skyscrapers, life remains a struggle

The Guryong shanty town pictured here is located a stone's throw from South Korea's wealthiest Gangnam district in Seoul

The illegal slum settlement was established in 1988 and is still home to thousands of impoverished and elderly South Koreans

A brand new glass-walled building situated right next to the sprawling slums of Bangalore in India, where a child is washing pots

On the left of the Gulshan Lake in Dhaka, Bangladesh, tall apartment blocks tower over the shacks on stilts seen on the right

The disparity is even more apparent in this aerial shot, which captures one of Dhaka's many urban slums  hugging the lake

Colourful illegal houses of the poor inhabitants of Luanda, Angola, front the high-rise buildings dominated by the wealthy

In the Philippines, the shiny skyscrapers of the Makati District of Metro Manila make a poignant contrast against the squalid shanty huts and open sewers of a poorer part of town

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