Born in Zimbabwe, I travelled extensively with my family while young, but my first trip alone was to Romania, following the fall of Ceausescu in 1991.

News of the horrific conditions in which Romania’s unwanted children were being kept had hit the British headlines and I decided to see if I could help. Arriving in Negru Voda orphanage, home to 360 severely disabled children in1992 after leaving school I was deeply moved. Many of the children had never left the confines of their wards where they were crammed three to a bed – beating their heads against the walls in violent frustration, or rocking silently to comfort themselves after years of neglect. At the age of 19 I had no idea the world could be so cruel. I worked there for a year and returned every summer while studying at university.

Realizing that aid work touched the tip of much bigger issues, I turned to journalism as a way to expose these to a wider audience, and those with power to make a difference. After leaving St Andrew’s University, I joined the BBC’s News and Current Affairs department and subsequently went on to study photojournalism at the London College of Printing.

Traveling to Albania in 1999, I documented the refugees who flooded over the border from Kosova. The post conflict environment of the Balkans fascinated me and I became aware that the most vulnerable people, primarily women and children, were slipping through the net of international aid, which opened them up to exploitation and abuse. Returning to Bosnia, I spent a year working for the Sunday Times and uncovering the exploding sex slave trade – young girls trafficked from Romania, Moldova and the Ukraine being bought and sold as commodities, primarily to service the sexual needs of the International Community. This was the first time the issue of women being trafficked from Eastern Europe for sexual use had been exposed.

Moving on to work in DR Congo in 2003 I uncovered extensive sexual abuse of young girls by UN peace keepers, as well as high level cover ups of the issue by UN personnel in New York. The findings of this story forced Kofi Annan, then Secretary General of the United Nations, to announce a “zero tolerance” policy within the UN to sexual exploitation.

Backed by The Independent Newspaper, I continued to investigate the issue, which eventually led to the forced resignation of the head of the UNHCR, Rudd Lubbers.

Nominated three times for the Amnesty Award for Humanitarian reporting I have worked extensively throughout Africa and Afghanistan for the last 15 years. As well as covering news events, like the Kenyan Election Crisis in 2008 and return to war in the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2008 and 2012, I have also committed to longer term projects in Somalia. In 2011 I was embedded with African Union Troops from Uganda and Burundi while they recaptured Mogadishu and trained the soldiers how to take photographs. I spent several years in Afghanistan, between 2009 and 2012 covering the elections and surge in military support by the coalition troops and was embedded with troops from both the UK and US.

I still work throughout Africa and the Middle East, with an increasing emphasis on training and building the capacity of others to tell their own stories. As a regular contributor to The Guardian I continue to document important stories that are often missed by mainstream media. I also work with soldiers who have served in both Afghanistan and Iraq, documenting their struggles with daily life after the frontline, and have become a Trustee of RE:ACT, an organisation that helps ex service men and women find purpose after leaving the military through volunteering for humanitarian work.

Awards and Nominations

In the News

06 April 2021 – Brilliant and versatile...

Tributes have been paid to Sarah Hughes, the Observer and Guardian journalist who has died from cancer… Continue reading…

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Born in Zimbabwe, I travelled extensively with my family while young, but my first trip alone was to Romania, following the fall of Ceausescu in 1991.

News of the horrific conditions in which Romania’s unwanted children were being kept had hit the British headlines and I decided to see if I could help. Arriving in Negru Voda orphanage, home to 360 severely disabled children in1992 after leaving school I was deeply moved. Many of the children had never left the confines of their wards where they were crammed three to a bed – beating their heads against the walls in violent frustration, or rocking silently to comfort themselves after years of neglect. At the age of 19 I had no idea the world could be so cruel. I worked there for a year and returned every summer while studying at university.

Realizing that aid work touched the tip of much bigger issues, I turned to journalism as a way to expose these to a wider audience, and those with power to make a difference. After leaving St Andrew’s University, I joined the BBC’s News and Current Affairs department and subsequently went on to study photojournalism at the London College of Printing.

Traveling to Albania in 1999, I documented the refugees who flooded over the border from Kosova. The post conflict environment of the Balkans fascinated me and I became aware that the most vulnerable people, primarily women and children, were slipping through the net of international aid, which opened them up to exploitation and abuse. Returning to Bosnia, I spent a year working for the Sunday Times and uncovering the exploding sex slave trade – young girls trafficked from Romania, Moldova and the Ukraine being bought and sold as commodities, primarily to service the sexual needs of the International Community. This was the first time the issue of women being trafficked from Eastern Europe for sexual use had been exposed.

Moving on to work in DR Congo in 2003 I uncovered extensive sexual abuse of young girls by UN peace keepers, as well as high level cover ups of the issue by UN personnel in New York. The findings of this story forced Kofi Annan, then Secretary General of the United Nations, to announce a “zero tolerance” policy within the UN to sexual exploitation.

Backed by The Independent Newspaper, I continued to investigate the issue, which eventually led to the forced resignation of the head of the UNHCR, Rudd Lubbers.

Nominated three times for the Amnesty Award for Humanitarian reporting I have worked extensively throughout Africa and Afghanistan for the last 15 years. As well as covering news events, like the Kenyan Election Crisis in 2008 and return to war in the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2008 and 2012, I have also committed to longer term projects in Somalia. In 2011 I was embedded with African Union Troops from Uganda and Burundi while they recaptured Mogadishu and trained the soldiers how to take photographs. I spent several years in Afghanistan, between 2009 and 2012 covering the elections and surge in military support by the coalition troops and was embedded with troops from both the UK and US.

I still work throughout Africa and the Middle East, with an increasing emphasis on training and building the capacity of others to tell their own stories. As a regular contributor to The Guardian I continue to document important stories that are often missed by mainstream media. I also work with soldiers who have served in both Afghanistan and Iraq, documenting their struggles with daily life after the frontline, and have become a Trustee of Team Rubicon UK, an organisation that helps ex service men and women find purpose after leaving the military.

Awards and Nominations

In the News

18th August 2018 – Funding alone is not enough we must give the brave girls of South Sudan every chance to succeed

Earlier this year, I flew to South Sudan with children’s rights charity Plan International UK to meet and photograph teenage girls caught up in the crisis there. continue reading…

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Special Commendation Amnesty Award for Humanitarian Photography 2012

For series of photographs documenting effects of drought and famine in Somalia

Nominated for the Prix Pictet Photographic Award 2010

For series of photographs documenting woman’s rights in Afghanistan

Short-listed Amnesty Award for Humanitarian Photography 2010

For series of photographs documenting the impact of the Economic Crisis in Zimbabwe on elderly people

Foreign Correspondents Association of East Africa, Photography Award, 2009

Short-listed Amnesty Award for Humanitarian Reporting 2005

For series of articles published in 2004 in the Independent entitled “When Peacemakers Become Predators” for exposing sexual exploitation and abuse by UN peace keepers in the DRC

Sunday Times Nominee – Amnesty Award 2001

For cover feature on the development of the Sex Slave Trade in Bosnia

Luis Valtuena Humanitarian Photographic Award 2001

Royal Geographical Society Runner Up

Travel photographer of the year 2000

Marks and Spencer University Award 1996

Awarded to a British University Student for demonstrating outstanding contributions to a community for work in Romania