ASANKA BRENDON RATNAYAKE

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  • MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - MAY 13: A team of spotless cleaning service cleaners on the street on flinders street on May 13, 2020 in Melbourne, Australia. One of the amendments to the rules of social golf due to COVID-19 restrictions is that players are encouraged not to touch the flag stick or rakes in the bunkers. COVID-19 restrictions have eased slightly for Victorians in response to Australia's declining coronavirus (COVID-19) infection rate. From today, people in Victoria will be allowed to visit friends and family. A maximum gathering of up to ten outdoors is allowed, or up to five visitors inside a home. Golfing, hiking and fishing is also now permitted. Photo by Asanka Brendon Ratnayake
    Corona_20200513_87.jpg
  • MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - MAY 13:A police car drives down the quiet intersection of Elizabeth and Flinders street on May 13, 2020 in Melbourne, Australia. One of the amendments to the rules of social golf due to COVID-19 restrictions is that players are encouraged not to touch the flag stick or rakes in the bunkers. COVID-19 restrictions have eased slightly for Victorians in response to Australia's declining coronavirus (COVID-19) infection rate. From today, people in Victoria will be allowed to visit friends and family. A maximum gathering of up to ten outdoors is allowed, or up to five visitors inside a home. Golfing, hiking and fishing is also now permitted. Photo by Asanka Brendon Ratnayake
    Corona_20200513_92.jpg
  • MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - MAY 28: Former tour guide Paul Guley cleans play sanitizes play equipment at a childrens playground on May 28, 2020 in Melbourne, Australia. Paul Guley was a former tour guide previously worked with a tour operator taking predominantly international tourist, as a result of International travel restrictions he was without work. He finds his new employment "enjoyable as it provides a community service and an opportunity to still stay fit". COVID-19 cleansing teams have been dispatched throughout Victoria as part of an initiative funded by the state government. The Working for Victoria initiative was set up to re-employ those unemployed or unable to find work during the COVID-19 outbreak. With thousands of displaced workers ineligible for government financial support, hundreds of unemployed workers have taken up the opportunity to join the COVID-19 cleansing teams who have been tasked with disinfecting and cleansing council amenities. Displaced workers varying from international students, workers in the hospitality and tourism industry to locals unable to find work walk over 15km a day tasked with disinfecting and cleansing everything from park benches, light-poles, playgrounds, traffic light pedestrian crossing buttons and railings among other everyday council amenities in an effort to keep coronavirus transmissions down. (Photo by Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images)
    Corona_20200528_792_2020052915913802.jpg
  • Mission Australia Project Manager of social enterprise, Troy Crellin inside one of the dining rooms of Charcoal Lane a restaurant on Gertrude Street Melbourne, Australia, August 30, 2017. Troy Crellin operates a traineeship program for Aboriginals looking to get into the hospitality sector or to seek an opportunity for employment in safe and comfortable environment.  <br />
Asanka Brendon Ratnayake for the New York Times
    Ozday_12.JPG
  • MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - JUNE 01: Jeff O'Meara owner operator of the Elgin Inn Hotel in Hawthorn stands behind the bar on June 01, 2020 in Melbourne, Australia. He says that definitely without the Jobkeeper scheme he would not have been able to open and keep staff employed. His pub opened at midday today for patrons and is offering three sittings throughout the day for meals. Restrictions continue to ease around Australia in response to the country's declining COVID-19 infection rate. In Victoria, museums, zoos and galleries can reopen while restaurants, pubs and cafes can serve meals for up to 20 patrons. Beauty salons, spas and tattoo parlours can also open for up to 20 people. Gatherings of up 20 people in a home, overnight stays at private residences and tourist accommodations and greater numbers at weddings, funerals and religious ceremonies are also permitted as of 1 June 2020. In New South Wales, beauty salons, tanning salons and nail bars can reopen from 1 June, along with museums, zoos and galleries while pubs, clubs, cafes and restaurants will also be able to serve up to 50 customers at a time. Traveling to regional NSW for a holiday will be allowed again. Restrictions in South Australia also continue to ease from Monday June 1, with cinemas, theatres, galleries, museums, beauty salons, gyms and indoor fitness centres across the state able to reopen. Those venues, along with pubs, bars, restaurants and cafes, will be able to admit up to 80 patrons, provided they can contain them to groups of 20 or less. Any business opening to patrons must allow four square metres for every one person inside, and ensure 1.5-metre social distancing is observed. (Photo by Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images)
    200601_AR_297_2020060150631974.jpg
  • MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - JUNE 01: Jeff O'Meara owner operator of the Elgin Inn Hotel in Hawthorn stands behind the bar on June 01, 2020 in Melbourne, Australia. He says that definitely without the Jobkeeper scheme he would not have been able to open and keep staff employed. His pub opened at midday today for patrons and is offering three sittings throughout the day for meals. Restrictions continue to ease around Australia in response to the country's declining COVID-19 infection rate. In Victoria, museums, zoos and galleries can reopen while restaurants, pubs and cafes can serve meals for up to 20 patrons. Beauty salons, spas and tattoo parlours can also open for up to 20 people. Gatherings of up 20 people in a home, overnight stays at private residences and tourist accommodations and greater numbers at weddings, funerals and religious ceremonies are also permitted as of 1 June 2020. In New South Wales, beauty salons, tanning salons and nail bars can reopen from 1 June, along with museums, zoos and galleries while pubs, clubs, cafes and restaurants will also be able to serve up to 50 customers at a time. Traveling to regional NSW for a holiday will be allowed again. Restrictions in South Australia also continue to ease from Monday June 1, with cinemas, theatres, galleries, museums, beauty salons, gyms and indoor fitness centres across the state able to reopen. Those venues, along with pubs, bars, restaurants and cafes, will be able to admit up to 80 patrons, provided they can contain them to groups of 20 or less. Any business opening to patrons must allow four square metres for every one person inside, and ensure 1.5-metre social distancing is observed. (Photo by Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images)
    200601_AR_286_2020060150631974.jpg
  • A group of lobsters on display and for sale at the Apia Fish Market in the capital of Samoa, Apia. Two-thirds of the workforce is employed in the fishing and agricultural sector.
    samoa_1795.jpg
  • The Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall is a former reception hall within Dusit Palace in Bangkok, Thailand. It now serves as a museum and is from time to time employed for certain state occasions
    _BR30912.jpg
  • A samoan man wearing a orange Lava-lava or lavalava (sarong) looks at a variety of fish on sale at the Apia Fish Market in the capital of Samoa, Apia. Two-thirds of the workforce is employed in the fishing and agricultural sector.
    BO_Samoa_34.JPG
  • A samoan man wearing a orange Lava-lava or lavalava (sarong) looks at a variety of fish on sale at the Apia Fish Market in the capital of Samoa, Apia. Two-thirds of the workforce is employed in the fishing and agricultural sector.
    samoa_1817.jpg
  • Large tuna for sale and on display at the Apia Fish Market in the capital of Samoa, Apia. Two-thirds of the workforce is employed in the fishing and agricultural sector.
    samoa_1810.jpg
  • A variety of fish and tuna for sale and on display at the Apia Fish market in the capital of Samoa, Apia. Two-thirds of the workforce is employed in the fishing and agricultural sector.
    samoa_1811.jpg
  • A samoan man wearing a orange Lava-lava or lavalava (sarong) looks at a variety of fish on sale at the Apia Fish Market in the capital of Samoa, Apia. Two-thirds of the workforce is employed in the fishing and agricultural sector.
    samoa_1817.jpg
  • Large tuna for sale and on display at the Apia Fish Market in the capital of Samoa, Apia. Two-thirds of the workforce is employed in the fishing and agricultural sector.
    samoa_1807.jpg
  • Large tuna for sale and on display at the Apia Fish Market in the capital of Samoa, Apia. Two-thirds of the workforce is employed in the fishing and agricultural sector.
    samoa_1806.jpg
  • A woman selling fish at the Apia Fish market while waving A leaf to remove flies in the capital of Samoa, Apia. Two-thirds of the workforce is employed in the fishing and agricultural sector.
    samoa_1790.jpg
  • The blue parrotfish a  blue fish which is a member of the parrotfish genus Scarus and red fish or snapper for sale at the Apia Fish market in the capital of Samoa, Apia. Two-thirds of the workforce is employed in the fishing and agricultural sector.
    samoa_1799.jpg
  • A fisherman selling fish at the Apia Fish market while waving a large leaf to remove flies in the capital of Samoa, Apia. Two-thirds of the workforce is employed in the fishing and agricultural sector.
    samoa_1798.jpg
  • Fishing men and woman sell fish at the Apia Fish market while waving sticks to remove flies in the capital of Samoa, Apia. Two-thirds of the workforce is employed in the fishing and agricultural sector.
    samoa_1789.jpg
  • Fishing men and woman sell fish at the Apia Fish market while waving sticks to remove flies in the capital of Samoa, Apia. Two-thirds of the workforce is employed in the fishing and agricultural sector.
    samoa_1787.jpg
  • Restauranteur and creator of Muslim Speed Date, Hana Assafiri​ (Centre right wearing black vest) at the Moroccan Deli-cacy cafe in Brunswick, Melbourne, Australia, June 18, 2017. Hana often employs marginalised woman from the community in an effort to give them independence and an opportunity to grow. Asanka Brendon Ratnayake for The New York Times.
    Mspdate_05.JPG
  • The Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall is a former reception hall within Dusit Palace in Bangkok, Thailand. It now serves as a museum and is from time to time employed for certain state occasions
    _BR30915.jpg
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