Roger Arnold

Show Navigation
  • Video
  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Writing

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 174 images found }

Loading ()...

  • The morning after Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Sunday, April 11, 2010
    _DSC0664.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0227.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0039.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    1_03.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0472.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0282.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0128.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0120.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0069.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0006.jpg
  • The morning after Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Sunday, April 11, 2010
    _DSC0673.jpg
  • The morning after Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Sunday, April 11, 2010
    _DSC0628.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0540.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0330.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0235.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0063.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    1_02.jpg
  • Anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    Red Shirts_6.jpg
  • The morning after Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Sunday, April 11, 2010
    _DSC0603.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0224.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0222.jpg
  • The morning after Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Sunday, April 11, 2010
    _DSC0625.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0525.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0441.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0376.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0335.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0210.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0179.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0115.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0108.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    1_04.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0487.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0074.jpg
  • The morning after Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Sunday, April 11, 2010
    _DSC0701.jpg
  • The morning after Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Sunday, April 11, 2010
    _DSC0697.jpg
  • The morning after Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Sunday, April 11, 2010
    _DSC0684.jpg
  • The morning after Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Sunday, April 11, 2010
    _DSC0626.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0429.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0356.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0236.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0214.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0163.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0154.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0094.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    _DSC0050.jpg
  • Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday, April 10, 2010
    1_05.jpg
  • The morning after Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Sunday, April 11, 2010
    _DSC0559.jpg
  • The morning after Red Shirt anti government protestors clash with Army troops in Bangkok, Thailand on Sunday, April 11, 2010
    _DSC0553.jpg
  • Hmong General Vang Pao, holding hands with Thai Army Chief Of Staff, Surakij Mayalab, overlooking the famous Hmong/CIA headquarters, Long Tieng, Laos, Circa 1972/1973.  To the left of Surakij Mayalab with shaved head is CIA case officer, Burr Smith, AKA "Mr. Clean".  ....Third from the right, with the receding hairline, is Thai General Witoon Yasowarat, commander of Thai forces in Laos.  ....The rest of the men in the photo are Thai, from the elite CIA trained unit call PARU, or Police Aerial Reinforcement Unit, and Royal  Thai Army, both of which served in Laos with Lao-Hmong forces.  Fourth from the left, for example is Thai Police Colonel Rashane Kijjavej, an advisor to Vang Pao for many years.....The PARU worked directly with Vang Pao from 1961 to 1975 defending the Royal Lao Government from communist forces, most of whom were North Vietnamese Army.  The Royal Thai Army ran its wartime operations in Laos from Udorn Thani.  ....Thailand impletmented its Task Force Unity deploying approximately 24,000 Thai volunteers to Laos who fought along side the Hmong and other ethnic groups.  Approximately 2,200 Thai were killed defending the Kingdom of Laos from invading Lao and Vietnamese communists.  It is likely up to 50,000 Thai soldiers are veterans from the "secret war" in Laos.......
    Thai_Army_Laos.jpg
  • Mo Gee (left), age 32, Mr. Saw Taw (center), age 40, and Mr. Pahco (right), age 31, at the Karen Handicapped Welfare Association (KHWA), Mae La refugee camp, Thailand, Tuesday, March 27, 2007. ..Mo Gee lost his arms and eye sight in 1996 as a Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA) soldier on the front line trying to disarm a Burmese Army/SPDC landmine.  Came to Thailand in 1996-97 and treated at Mae Sot Hospital and by MSF...Saw Taw lost his arms and eye sight in November 2002 as a soldier in the KNLA trying to disarm a landmine...Mr. Pahco lost his hands and eyesight trying to disarm a Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA) landmine.  The accident happened 9 years ago when he was a soldier in the KNLA.  He has been at Karen Handicapped Welfare Association KHWA since it started in 2002.
    KWHA 05.jpg
  • A Red Shirt anti government protestor sleeps under the Democracy Monument in Bangkok, Thailand on Sunday, April 11, 2010
    _DSC0548.jpg
  • An AN-124 delivers two new Russian built Mi17 helicopters to the Afghan National Army Air Corps (ANAAC) at Kabul International Airport, Kabul, Afghanistan, on September 25, 2009.
    _DSC9100.jpg
  • An AN-124 delivers two new Russian built Mi17 helicopters to the Afghan National Army Air Corps (ANAAC) at Kabul International Airport, Kabul, Afghanistan, on September 25, 2009.
    _DSC9064.jpg
  • An AN-124 delivers two new Russian built Mi17 helicopters to the Afghan National Army Air Corps (ANAAC) at Kabul International Airport, Kabul, Afghanistan, on September 25, 2009.
    _DSC9086.jpg
  • An AN-124 delivers two new Russian built Mi17 helicopters to the Afghan National Army Air Corps (ANAAC) at Kabul International Airport, Kabul, Afghanistan, on September 25, 2009.
    _DSC9114.jpg
  • An AN-124 delivers two new Russian built Mi17 helicopters to the Afghan National Army Air Corps (ANAAC) at Kabul International Airport, Kabul, Afghanistan, on September 25, 2009.
    _DSC9047.jpg
  • An AN-124 delivers two new Russian built Mi17 helicopters to the Afghan National Army Air Corps (ANAAC) at Kabul International Airport, Kabul, Afghanistan, on September 25, 2009.
    _DSC8925.jpg
  • Dateline - Building and mentoring the Afghan National Army with US Marine Colonel Jeff Haynes.
    Dateline 3.jpg
  • Dateline - Building and mentoring the Afghan National Army with US Marine Colonel Jeff Haynes.
    Dateline 1.jpg
  • Dateline - Building and mentoring the Afghan National Army with US Marine Colonel Jeff Haynes.
    Dateline 2.jpg
  • Refugee, Zong Lee Lor, holding his UNHCR refugee certificate in Thailand. He was captured by the Lao Army in the jungles of Laos and claims he was tortured for one year in arm and leg stocks unable to move before he finally escaped.  He currently suffers from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.....Zong Lee Lor told a human rights advocate,  "When the Lao soldiers capture and detain us they say they?re not arresting its Lao citizens they?re arresting Americans. When they hit and beat us they say they don?t beat us but beat the Americans."....On January 30th, 2007, Thai authorities tried to forcibly deport Zong Lee Lor along with 152 other refugees.  The deportation was postponed after the Hmong men barricaded their jail cell and threatened mass suicide if they were forcibly sent back to Laos where they face possible torture and death.  ....The men reportedly declared, "We would rather die in Thailand than be sent back to Laos".  ....On May 16, 2007 the Thai Military Junta forced the UNHCR Bangkok refugee office to stop accepting applications from asylum seekers.  On Friday night June 8, 2007, after UNHCR and western diplomats had gone home for the weekend, Thai authorities forcibly deported a different group of 160 Hmong asylum seekers to back Laos.  The Lao Government called this group of 160 "Economic refugees"; however, they have vanished inside Laos.....Up to 1,000 Hmong jungle people surrendered to Lao authorities last year due to Lao Military pressure, an inability to defend themselves, and lack of food or medicine.   ..This includes jungle leader Blia Shoua Her?s group of 438 people who suffered the alleged massacre April 6, 2006.  All of these Hmong have vanished and the Lao Government has made no account of their whereabouts or condition despite requests from the UN, Amnesty International, diplomats and human rights groups.....Deporting recognized refugees is an illegal act against a principle of international law called non refoulment.  ..**Exclusive**
    Hmong Nong Khai 30.jpg
  • Dateline - Building and mentoring the Afghan National Army with US Marine Colonel Jeff Haynes.
    Dateline 4.jpg
  • Tong Her in an ambulance during tense scenes at the Nong Khai Immigration Detention Center as authorities threatened to deport 152 Hmong refugees back to Laos, Nong Khai, Thailand, on Tuesday January 30th, 2007. Tong has been recieving reconstructive surgery in Thailand and was being taken from the Dention Center to Nong Khai Hospital for treatment. Half of Tong's face was shot off by Lao Army forces in the jungles of Laos.  ....The deportation was postponed after the Hmong men, including Tong's father Blia Shoua Her, barricaded their jail cell and threatened mass suicide if they were forcibly sent back to Laos where they face possible torture and death.  ....The men reportedly declared, "We would rather die in Thailand than be sent back to Laos".  ....On May 16, 2007 the Thai Military Junta forced the UNHCR Bangkok refugee office to stop accepting applications from asylum seekers.  On Friday night June 8, 2007, after UNHCR and western diplomats had gone home for the weekend, Thai authorities forcibly deported a different group of 160 Hmong asylum seekers to back Laos.....Up to 1,000 Hmong jungle people surrendered to Lao authorities last year due to Lao Military pressure, an inability to defend themselves, and lack of food or medicine.   This includes Blia Shoua Her's group of 438 people who suffered the massacre April 6, 2006.  All of these Hmong have vanished and the Lao Government has made no account of their whereabouts or condition despite requests from humanitarian groups.
    Tong Her 1 01Copy.jpg
  • Tong Her in an ambulance during tense scenes at the Nong Khai Immigration Detention Center as authorities threatened to deport 152 Hmong refugees back to Laos, Nong Khai, Thailand, on Tuesday January 30th, 2007. Tong has been recieving reconstructive surgery in Thailand and was being taken from the Dention Center to Nong Khai Hospital for treatment. Half of Tong's face was shot off by Lao Army forces in the jungles of Laos.  ..The deportation was postponed after the Hmong men, including Tong's father, Blia Shoua Her, barricaded their jail cell and threatened mass suicide if they were forcibly sent back to Laos where they face possible torture and death.  ..The men reportedly declared, "We would rather die in Thailand than be sent back to Laos".  ..On May 16, 2007 the Thai Military Junta forced the UNHCR Bangkok refugee office to stop accepting applications from asylum seekers.  On Friday night June 8, 2007, after UNHCR and western diplomats had gone home for the weekend, Thai authorities forcibly deported a different group of 160 Hmong asylum seekers to back Laos...Up to 1,000 Hmong jungle people surrendered to Lao authorities last year due to Lao Military pressure, an inability to defend themselves, and lack of food or medicine.   This includes Blia Shoua Her's group of 438 people who suffered the massacre April 6, 2006.  All of these Hmong have vanished and the Lao Government has made no account of their whereabouts or condition despite requests from humanitarian groups.
    Tong Her 301Copy.jpg
  • The 16th century Buddha at Wat Phia Wat is almost all that is left of the ancient capital of Xieng Khuang, Laos.  The Buddha is missing part of its right arm and is scared by bomb scrapnel.  The temple that once covered it was blown up.  In 1969 between 1,500 and 2,500 structures were flattened in the town and surrounding area by fierce air to ground fighting in US Operation "Rain Dance."  The town and temple was reported to be occupied by communist insurgents mostly comprised of large heavily armed concentrations of North Vietnamese Army invading Laos.
    Laos Der Spiegel Images_7.jpg
  • Tong Her in an ambulance during tense scenes at the Nong Khai Immigration Detention Center as authorities threatened to deport 152 Hmong refugees back to Laos, Nong Khai, Thailand, on Tuesday January 30th, 2007. Tong has been recieving reconstructive surgery in Thailand and was being taken from the Dention Center to Nong Khai Hospital for treatment. Half of Tong's face was shot off by Lao Army forces in the jungles of Laos.  ..The deportation was postponed after the Hmong men, including Tong's father, Blia Shoua Her, barricaded their jail cell and threatened mass suicide if they were forcibly sent back to Laos where they face possible torture and death.  ..The men reportedly declared, "We would rather die in Thailand than be sent back to Laos".  ..On May 16, 2007 the Thai Military Junta forced the UNHCR Bangkok refugee office to stop accepting applications from asylum seekers.  On Friday night June 8, 2007, after UNHCR and western diplomats had gone home for the weekend, Thai authorities forcibly deported a different group of 160 Hmong asylum seekers to back Laos...Up to 1,000 Hmong jungle people surrendered to Lao authorities last year due to Lao Military pressure, an inability to defend themselves, and lack of food or medicine.   This includes Blia Shoua Her's group of 438 people who suffered the massacre April 6, 2006.  All of these Hmong have vanished and the Lao Government has made no account of their whereabouts or condition despite requests from humanitarian groups.
    Tong Her 4 02Copy.jpg
  • Dateline - Building and mentoring the Afghan National Army with US Marine Colonel Jeff Haynes.
    Dateline 5.jpg
  • Le Figaro - Hmong former CIA Secret Army hiding in the jungles of Laos more than 30 years after the US pulled out of the "Secret War."
    Le Figaro 1.jpg
  • Tong Her in an ambulance during tense scenes at the Nong Khai Immigration Detention Center as authorities threatened to deport 152 Hmong refugees back to Laos, Nong Khai, Thailand, on Tuesday January 30th, 2007. Tong has been recieving reconstructive surgery in Thailand and was being taken from the Dention Center to Nong Khai Hospital for treatment. Half of Tong's face was shot off by Lao Army forces in the jungles of Laos.  ..The deportation was postponed after the Hmong men, including Tong's father, Blia Shoua Her, barricaded their jail cell and threatened mass suicide if they were forcibly sent back to Laos where they face possible torture and death.  ..The men reportedly declared, "We would rather die in Thailand than be sent back to Laos".  ..On May 16, 2007 the Thai Military Junta forced the UNHCR Bangkok refugee office to stop accepting applications from asylum seekers.  On Friday night June 8, 2007, after UNHCR and western diplomats had gone home for the weekend, Thai authorities forcibly deported a different group of 160 Hmong asylum seekers to back Laos...Up to 1,000 Hmong jungle people surrendered to Lao authorities last year due to Lao Military pressure, an inability to defend themselves, and lack of food or medicine.   This includes Blia Shoua Her's group of 438 people who suffered the massacre April 6, 2006.  All of these Hmong have vanished and the Lao Government has made no account of their whereabouts or condition despite requests from humanitarian groups.
    Tong Her 201Copy.jpg
  • Refugee, Tong Her, holding his UNHCR refugee certificate in Thailand. He escaped from the jungles of Laos after half his face was shot off by the communist Lao Army.  ....His group of Hmong people report an attack against them April 6, 2006 by Lao and Vietnamese military forces near Vang Vieng, Laos.  26 people perished, 5 were injured, and 5 babies died shortly after because their dead mothers could not breast-feed them.  Only one adult male was killed, the other 25 victims were women and children (17 children).....On January 30th, 2007, Thai authorities tried to forcibly deport Tong Her along with 152 other refugees.  The deportation was postponed after the Hmong men barricaded their jail cell and threatened mass suicide if they were forcibly sent back to Laos where they face possible torture and death.  ....The men reportedly declared, "We would rather die in Thailand than be sent back to Laos".  ....On May 16, 2007 the Thai Military Junta forced the UNHCR Bangkok refugee office to stop accepting applications from asylum seekers.  On Friday night June 8, 2007, after UNHCR and western diplomats had gone home for the weekend, Thai authorities forcibly deported a different group of 160 Hmong asylum seekers to back Laos.  The Lao Government called this group of 160 "Economic refugees"; however, they have vanished inside Laos.....Up to 1,000 Hmong jungle people surrendered to Lao authorities last year due to Lao Military pressure, an inability to defend themselves, and lack of food or medicine.   ..This includes jungle leader Blia Shoua Her?s group of 438 people who suffered the alleged massacre April 6, 2006.  All of these Hmong have vanished and the Lao Government has made no account of their whereabouts or condition despite requests from the UN, Amnesty International, diplomats and human rights groups.....Deporting recognized refugees is an illegal act against a principle of international law called non refoulment.  ..**Exclusive**
    Hmong Nong Khai 28.1.jpg
  • Mr. Boonmi with his bomb compressor made from a US 750 lb framentation bomb left over from the US and Vietnamese secret war in Phou Vieng, Laos.  He dismantled the live bomb which uses a Russian rocket propelled grenade for a carburetor.  The invading North Vietnamese Army destroyed the historic town in nearby Muang Sui.
    Laos Der Spiegel Images_5.jpg
  • Cover of Jane's Defence featuring development of the Afghan National Army, December 17, 2008.
    Janes Defence.jpg
  • Two young boys in front of their home sit on bombs left over from the US and Vietnamese secret war in Phou Vieng, Laos.  The boy are sitting on a 2,000 lb. bomb.  The other bomb is a 750 lb. bomb.  The invading North Vietnamese Army destroyed the historic town in nearby Muang Sui.
    Laos Der Spiegel Images_6.jpg
  • Le Figaro - Hmong former CIA Secret Army hiding in the jungles of Laos more than 30 years after the US pulled out of the "Secret War."
    Le Figaro 2.jpg
Prev
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x