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Photos of the year – 2020 – Sydney Morning Herald

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Mogo’s former fire chief Michael Zeigler spent the day spotting his house in Mogo on the NSW South Coast, as his father’s home next door went up in flames. The bushfires that swept through on New Year's Eve turned much of the historic gold rush town of Mogo to charcoal. Credit:James Brickwood
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The Last Post on trumpet for a driveway dawn Anzac day service. It was a very different ANZAC Day this year with no mass gatherings for dawn services, no marches with bands and banners and clapping spectators, no handshakes or hugs outside families, no emotional service from Gallipoli to watch. But Australians still found ways to make Anzac Day more communal and less lonely.Credit:Cole Bennetts
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After schools re-opened following Sydney's first lockdown Sydney Boys High School student William Winter became anxious he could bring the virus home to his 82-year-old grandmother because he had no option but to use public transport from Blacktown to his school in the city. Some private schools added their own buses to Sydney’s roads in a bid to keep their students off public transport.Credit:James Alcock
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Talyna Smith is a nurse at St Vincent's Hospital emergency department's red zone, an area set aside to treat patients with COVID-19. On March 8 she treated a man would become the first confirmed COVID-19 patient to present at St Vincent's Hospital in Darlinghurst.Credit:Kate Geraghty
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Black Lives Matter protesters pause along with David Dungay’s nephew Paul Silva near Sydney Town Hall, watched by the media in June. David Dungay was a Dunghutti man who died in custody in 2015 after he was held down by Corrective Services officers while gasping "I can't breathe". On June the 6th tens of thousands of Australians took the streets, defying coronavirus restrictions, to show solidarity for the Black Lives Matter movement and call for an end to Aboriginal deaths in custody. Credit:James Brickwood
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Schoolies Mistie Mildenhall and Sav Smith from Ballina Coast High School celebrate finishing their school year in Byron Bay in late November. Despite the vast disruptions 2020 had thrown at school leavers in the form of lockdowns, remote learning and pared-back formals or graduations the time worn tradition of 'schoolies' held strong in the northern NSW town. Credit:Elise Derwin
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NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian and Minister for Transport and Roads Andrew Constance address the media about work starting on the Sydney Metro West mega project in November. The Premier admitted to ignoring NSW Health rules by not self-isolating while waiting on the results of a COVID-19 test.Credit:Rhett Wyman
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The body of a Coronavirus COVID-19 casualty is delivered to a Sydney Funeral Director service after being released from hospital. Because of fear or ignorance, some funeral homes have refused to provide some services to the families of those who have died with the virus, including a viewing of the body. To reduce the chance of funeral workers contracting the virus, the deceased had been "double bagged" for the trip from a Sydney hospital to the Maurer Family Funerals home in the north shore suburb of Chatswood. Credit:James Brickwood
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By mid-march toilet paper, hand sanitiser and rice had become precious commodities on shelves across the country, at times selling out within minutes of supermarkets opening their doors. Hoarders of toilet paper and canned goods delivered the biggest one-month surge in retail sales on record. Empty shelves in the Summer Hill IGA on March 18.Credit:Steven Siewert
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The drive through COVID-19 testing clinic at Bondi. In late July New South Wales was on a knife edge after recording more than 150 COVID-19 cases over 14 days, a sign the situation could spiral out of control. This was the same week the Queensland government closed its borders to arrivals from Greater Sydney after declaring the area a hot spot. The hours of this Bondi Beach drive-through testing clinic were extended at this time.Credit:Brook Mitchell
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With temperatures surpassing 43 degrees, grey-headed flying foxes descend from the safety of the tree canopy to find a cooler place at Yarra Bend Golf Course. Some 4,500 foxes, including many of these seen here, died over three days in the park. Credit:Douglas Gimesy
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Ambulance officers assess an elderly man with coughing and shortness of breath before transporting him to hospital in late May. From late May nurses, paramedics, teachers and other essential workers no longer had to prove they were infected with COVID-19 at work to make a workers compensation claim. Credit:Nick Moir
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Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Chief Medical Officer Professor Brendan Murphy sanitize their hands before entering a National Cabinet meeting to discuss COVID-19 coronavirus in Canberra in March. "I know more about viruses than I care to know and I'm shaking hands with everyone," the Prime Minister was heard to say in late March. Credit:Alex Ellinghausen
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The Ruby Princess with a crew of 1200 trapped on board off the coast near Coogee. A later inquiry found that in allowing about 2650 passengers to disembark when the ship docked in Sydney in March, NSW health authorities made "serious mistakes". Despite suspected cases aboard the passengers were not tested for the virus. The ship was ultimately linked to at least 900 infections and 28 deaths.Credit:Janie Barrett
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Firefighters from FBNSW run for safety as the Green Wattle Creek fire exploded from the bush in Orangeville filling the air with millions of embers. Moir says the blaze had appeared to quieten down, but a day of burning had built up gas in the atmosphere, which now had nowhere to escape to. Around 9pm, the wind changed, and, suddenly, the fire exploded. Moir recalls “I was with some fire and rescue guys, everyone just ran. The flames were 100m high. As we’re running I was taking photographs. I shoot manually, so you’re having to manually change all your exposures”. Credit:Nick Moir
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Shallow waters at Clovelly Beach as temperatures pushed 39 degrees on September 3rd. Temps were more than 10 degrees above the September average for Sydney as north-westerly winds carried a warm air mass across NSW, leaving the city with its balmiest early spring day since 1995.Credit:Brook Mitchell
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Brigette Leech and Matthew Selby are married at Sydney’s Garrison Church in March during the lockdown, when weddings were limited to 10 people. Well-wishers observe the nuptials at a distance, adding to the momentous occasion. More than 1000 wed in NSW during March (with less than 10 guests) despite the lockdown.Credit:Janie Barrett
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Cornelius Tobechukwu Azolibe with his family ahead of his Air Force Enlistment ceremony in October. Defence recruiting soared as Australians look for work amid downturn. Credit:Dominic Lorrimer
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Mercoria Farhoud and her friends leave to head to their school formal in late November. After a year of uncertainty Class of 2020 finally celebrated their formals under covid-safe protocol. Dancing was permitted although it came with caveats: dance floors had to be outdoors or in well-ventilated areas, and students' partners had to have an established relationship with the year group.Credit:Janie Barrett
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For about 20,000 people, the Black Lives Matter rally in Sydney on the June long weekend was three hours of peaceful protest. However within an hour of the rally officially ending, there were tense scenes as NSW Police pushed a group of up to 200 protesters into Central Station. For the protesters, the police tactics were a reminder of the reason for the rally, which was called to protest police brutality and Indigenous deaths in custody.Credit:James Brickwood
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On June 6, 2020 at least 20,000 protesters defied pleas by the NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian and police and marched through Sydney's CBD as part of the Black Lives Matter movement that has swept the world and reignited debate over the treatment of Indigenous Australians.Credit:James Brickwood
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Bondi Beach closed on the 21st of March due to overcrowding. NSW government announced earlier that day the number of people attending the beach would be capped at 500. Credit:Steven Siewert
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Karl Niehus unearths water dragon eggs from the ruins of his mother’s business in Mogo’s main street. It was destroyed by the fire that swept through the town. On New Year's Eve bushfires blazed around their NSW town of Mogo destroying the main street razing businesses and family homes to the ground.Credit:Kate Geraghty
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The extent of the devastation on the South Coast after the black summer is revealed from the air on board a Defence Force Taipan helicopter in February. This area, south of Lake Conjola, and the nearby suburb of Conjola Park, was hit in the ferocious New Year’s Eve bushfires that claimed three lives and destroyed 89 homes.Credit:James Brickwood
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Volunteer Firefighter Anika Craney at the burnt out remains of her home in Verona on January 9. Two years prior the Sydney arts graduate moved to the small town of Cobargo in search of a more sustainable life on the land. Her home was lost to the massive Badja Forest Road fire that claimed the lives of father and son Robert and Patrick Salway, destroyed a number of homes in the town and which has burnt through more than 236,000 hectares by the end of the first week of January.Credit:Kiran Ridley
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The general manager of Auburn Gallipoli mosque, Ergun Genel, prays in solitude on the first day of Ramadan due to restrictions brought about by COVID-19. Mosques remained closed during evening prayers and feasting became a more intimate affair, within the confines of family homes. Credit:Kate Geraghty
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A shelf cloud forms over Ben Buckler in Bondi. On November 13th dark clouds rolled into Sydney from the west bringing thunderstorms to parts of the city and surrounds. A shelf cloud is a low-hanging wedge-shaped formation that occurs along the leading edge of a gust front in a thunderstorm. Credit:Wolter Peeters
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St George Illawarra Dragons star Jack de Belin, one of the biggest talents in the NRL, arrives at Wollongong court facing five counts of aggravated sexual assault in November. A year prior the Australian Rugby League Commission announced that De Belin would be the first player targeted under its "no-fault stand-down" policy, sidelining players with serious criminal allegations over them in an attempt to force cultural change in the game.Credit:Kate Geraghty
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The Class of 2020 has had a difficult year but they are not the first to do their HSC in turbulent times; their predecessors faced wars, terrorist attacks and natural disasters. Teacher Fatma Hafda completed her HSC in the period after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. As a Muslim, she experienced racism in Sydney during this time. Credit:Janie Barrett
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A wave rears up, ready to wash over kids who are chain-surfing at Bronte rock pool in October. Credit:Brook Mitchell
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Local cowboy Lewis Benedetti from Buchan with a young colt brumby that he roped after a short chase in the Nunniong high planes in May. The brumby has long been a symbol of Australia’s high country, but as our wild horse population grows, it has become a political problem. In May 2018, NSW deputy premier John Barilaro introduced his “brumby bill” formally recognising the historical significance of the brumbies and protecting them from slaughter. According to surveys endorsed by the CSIRO, numbers in the Australian alps are now growing at a rate of 23 per cent a year and wreaking environmental damage to the fragile ecosystems.Credit:Josh Robenstone
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A swimmer in Clovelly Beach in April.Credit:James Brickwood
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Premier Gladys Berejiklian, Minister for Health Brad Hazzard, NSW Chief Health Officer Dr Kerry Chant at the State Emergency Operations Centre, Olympic Park in March. The ground zero of NSW's bushfire emergency response was commandeered in March to wage the state government's war against the coronavirus. Experts from more than 20 critical agencies were consolidated under one roof at Sydney's Olympic Park, including the Health, Police, Education and Transport departments to co-ordinate the state's response to the virus. RFS data was replaced by tables of confirmed COVID-19 cases, testing tallies and live news feeds. Credit:Steven Siewert
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A positive COVID-19 male patient in his 50s in an ICU at St Vincent's hospital. The hospital in the inner Sydney suburb of Darlinghurst granted photographer Kate Geraghty unparalleled access over several days in April and May to document the medical response to COVID-19 when communities were in lockdown.Credit:Kate Geraghty
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Prime Minister Scott Morrison takes a tour at the AstraZeneca laboratories in Macquarie Park in August after announcing an agreement with the British pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca to secure at least 25 million doses of a COVID-19 vaccine if it passes clinical trials. Credit:Nick Moir
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Passengers disembark from the Ruby Princess cruise ship at the Overseas Passenger Terminal in Circular Quay in March. The Ruby Princess would spawn Australia's biggest coronavirus cluster — a record that it held until July when it was eclipsed by Melbourne's hotel quarantine debacle. On March 20, NSW Health Minister Brad Hazzard revealed that 24 hours after the ship's 2647 passengers were allowed to disembark and travel home, three COVID-19 tests performed on board had returned positive. Potentially thousands of cases had been allowed to scatter like marbles to all corners of the country and around the world.Credit:Kate Geraghty
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On November 19 the Gospers Mountain Fire overran Colo Heights and was classified as an emergency zone. These scenes show Wheelbarrow Rd and Putty Road. Gospers Mountain became famous as Australia’s first “mega-blaze” burning for 79 days and over a million hectares burned on the fringes of Sydney. Sewell said " the hilly terrain and shifting winds created erratic and fast-running outbreaks along Wheelbarrow Road where multiple properties were being impacted". Credit:Dean Sewell
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Dayle celebrates her 10th birthday with siblings Quinne and Wrenne Hunt at their home during lockdown in Sydney in April. At that time Sydney was three weeks into the city's first lockdown and Prime Minister Scott Morrison advised that there are really only four acceptable reasons to go out: exercise, work, medical and childcare. The Hunt family were cooped up home schooling three children in a two bedroom flat. Credit:Steven Siewert
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As the bush regenerates, locals dive back into a favourite waterhole following the devastation of the volatile and swift moving Gospers Mountain Fire, which claimed more than 24 homes in Dargan and Clarence. Credit:Dean Sewell
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Five year old Mia Lee rides her pony on her family's property at Schofields. More than 1000 apartments are going up in the paddock next door, plus a Woolworths, and across the road is the new Schofields Station.Credit:Jessica Hromas
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Janie Barrett documented groups of school leavers across Sydney as they prepared for and celebrated their formals. Maleeha Naved is seen here at her St Georges High formal at Curzon Hall. Her year group had set up an Instagram account to monitor which girls had bought which dresses, so they had a rough idea of what to expect on the night.Credit:Janie Barrett
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Gladys Berejiklian says she is living a "personal nightmare" since discovering the alleged misconduct of her former partner Daryl Maguire. Berejiklian was drawn into the scandal in October when it was revealed she was in a “close personal relationship” with Maguire for several years, even after he was booted from parliament over his alleged corrupt conduct. Credit:Jessica Hromas
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Daryl Maguire enters The Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) ahead of another day of questioning in October. Maguire, who was the local member for Wagga Wagga from 1999 until he was ousted almost 20 years later, faced the ICAC over allegations he misused his position as a public official to broker business deals. Credit:Nick Moir
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A Waterloo social housing estate resident walk along Cooper Street followed by a flock of pigeons, he recalls that 'these birds are my friends' in July. Waterloo is a neighbourhood defined by disadvantage and a vulnerable community on the brink of an ambitious state-led upheaval that will alter more than 2000 lives and change the face of a vast swathe of the city.Credit:Louise Kennerley
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Stolen generations survivor Elly Chatfield in Katoomba in May. Elly Chatfield was 38 when she and her father, Cornelius, from the Gamilaroi people of northern NSW, saw each other for the first time in 2008 after being taken by state authorities from their Moree home as a toddler.Credit:Rhett Wyman
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The Ellinghausen sisters adjust to COVID-19 restrictions at their home in Canberra in March. Credit:Alex Ellinghausen
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Businesses were impacted during Covid-19 lockdown in Sydney, a runner passes the blacked-out entrance of Luna Park to her right in Milsons Point in May. Credit:James Brickwood
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NSW Minister for Planning Rob Stokes, Treasurer Dom Perrottet and Inner West Mayor Darcy Byrne tour the White Bay Power Station in Rozelle in November. The building is Sydney's longest-serving power station, it was built between 1912-17 to supply power to the Sydney railway and tramway system before being expanded to the Electricity Commission of NSW and was decommissioned in 1984. During question time on November 23 Treasurer Dominic Perrottet suggested the building be demolished; “What’s that building that’s behind it, the rave cave. Shocking building, it should be knocked down like the Sirius Building – I lost that one,” he said.Credit:Louie Douvis
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Father Greg Morgan preaches during a live service of up to 10 people at St Charles Church, Ryde in May. For seven Sundays, Father Greg Morgan preached to an empty church filled with photos of hundreds of his parishioners who watched from home. Before the lockdown, up to 350 people routinely attended the 10am Sunday Mass which by May attracted up to 800 views on social media. Credit:Jacky Ghossein
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Year 12 student Ring Kondok in May after lockdown says he felt unmotivated to study. "Socialising is one of the ways to reduce the stress and anxiety, but with all of the restrictions it's been hard to do that,". The challenges will shape the class of 2020, but they too will make their mark on history, says Professor Catherine Lumby from Macquarie University. "During times of adversity is often when you see a huge wave of creativity – when life isn't sweet, when people are given pause for reflection".Credit:Louise Kennerley
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Muscle-bound at Bondi beach on warm August day. Credit:Steven Siewert
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Looking down a deserted George Street during the pandemic in May. Credit:Louise Kennerley
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Social distancing becomes part of our lives, Circular Quay in April.Credit:Dominic Lorrimer
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Swimmers at Bondi Beach adhere to social distancing recommendations in December. Credit:Janie Barrett
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Sisters Grace and Florence comfort each other as they adjust to living with COVID-19 restrictions during Sydney's lockdown in March. Credit:Jacky Ghossein
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Former Sydney Swans AFL player, Brownlow Medallist and Australian of the Year Adam Goodes was shortlisted by the AFR Magazine as one of their 10 most culturally powerful Australians. Goodes who retired from AFL in 2015 after years of relentless booing and racism from the sporting public said “My love for the game died inside of me in those final years of … playing”.Credit:James Brickwood
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Students protest at the University of Sydney against widespread course and job cuts in the sector, as well as federal government legislation that will raise the cost of humanities and communications courses by 113 per cent. Multiple students were roughly handled or pushed by police. Credit:Rhett Wyman
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A former foster child, Vanessa Roberts is a passionate advocate for Indigenous rights – as an activist and a budding lawyer. The Closing the Gap strategy, revamped in July, has failed to eliminate Indigenous disadvantage in all but two target areas of seven since its launch in 2008. As such, the dominant narrative around Indigenous affairs is often centred on disadvantage. But that narrative obscures another story – less talked about, but equally compelling – of success.Credit:Rhett Wyman
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Vast lines of storms from central QLD to Victoria swept eastwards brought hail, strong winds and flash flooding in October. Credit:Nick Moir
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Climate activist Daisy Jeffrey was one of the organisers of the School Strike 4 Climate. This year she published a book 'On Hope' documenting how she became an activist.Credit:Dominic Lorrimer
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More employees returned to the office in August as COVID-19 restrictions eased.Credit:Louise Kennerley
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The Australian Museum's new blockbluster dinosaur exhibition opened in November and relaunches the museum. The fifth oldest natural history museum in the world has been shut down for 15 months for renovations, as luck would have it "if you're going to close a museum for so long, it might as well be the year when the entire world is shut by COVID-19".Credit:Louie Douvis
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Kamilaroi elder Polly Cutmore on the site that is believed to be where the Waterloo Creek massacre occurred. “It used to be beautiful here,” she says. “They destroyed it. They destroyed this place with killing”. In the summer of 1837-38, NSW policeman Major James Nunn and around 30 mounted soldiers and stockmen swept through the Gwydir region on an expedition to “repress” Aboriginal people, writes historian Paul Irish. They committed a series of atrocities in the area. The Waterloo Creek massacre on January 26, 1838, was among the most savage.Credit:Rhett Wyman
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The Dog Lovers Show at Sydney Olympic Park. Credit:Jacky Ghossein
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Chanel Miller has spent the last five years coming to terms with her alter ego. For most of that time, she’s been known to the world only as Emily Doe. She was even named Glamour’s Woman of the Year under the pseudonym, an identity the literature major and California native started to use after being sexually assaulted on Stanford University campus, outside San Francisco.Credit:Dean Sewell
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The Sydney Harbour at dusk in May. Credit:James Brickwood
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