October • 2023
Link provided excellent high quality footage as well as the exact type of MOS interview we asked for.
Phan Chu Trinh, Hoàn Kiếm, Hà Nội, Vietnam
5 reviews$300 - $500 / Day
Request QuoteLinh Pham is a Vietnamese photographer who explores human condition at personal level. His work has seen him document Kachin’s rebels in remote northern Burma, follow Cuban migrants to central Europe, examine social change on ethnic minorities in Vietnam’s highest mountain, and merge himself in a Guatemalan private Catholic group. He produces stories that attempt to give a voice to people who would not otherwise be heard. Although working internationally, Linh’s personal works often return to document the changes on everyday life in Vietnam where his root is planted in. He is currently based in Hanoi and and travels frequently throughout Vietnam. His work has been published in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Bloomberg, The Huffington Post amongst others.
October • 2023
Link provided excellent high quality footage as well as the exact type of MOS interview we asked for.
April • 2024
We received the best photos and videos from Linh.
According to the belief in northern Vietnam, cremating bodies would cause their loved ones to feel “heat” in the afterlife, while temporary burial would allow the dead body bodies to decompose coolly and naturally through the period of 3 years. After that all the bones will be carefully collected and reburied in the permanent tomb.
Laiza, home to the headquarters of the ethnic Kachin rebels in nothern Burma, was developed as an administrative and commercial center for rebel-controlled parts and is home to 20.000 civilians. Due to the conflict, around two third of these civilians are living in 4 camps around the town with the systemic lack of common needs.
Fansipan, Vietnam’s highest peak, challenge many explorers from around the world to conquer. As on-demands, hundreds of Hmong people of both genders make a living as porters and trekking guides there despite of the hard, risky and low paid work. For many Hmong people, being a porter is the only way that they can make money due to the lack of education and land to harvest.
As an isolated island on the reform, Cuban laws are complicated and contradictory including the one on citizenship and travel. A citizen who leaves the country and doesn’t return within eleven months, without making special arrangements to stay away longer, essentially forfeits their Cuban citizenship and is not legally entitled to return.
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