Markus Marcetic

Location: Stockholm, Sweden

Markus Marcetic was born in 1972 and started as a commercial photographer in 1993.

After studying Media and Communications, Eastern European studies and African studies at Uppsala University, he has been working as a photojournalist in Stockholm since 1999.

Working for various newspapers, magazines and NGO’s, Markus has done extensive travelling, mainly Eastern Europe and Africa but also in Asia and the USA. He has been awarded prices in the Swedish picture of the year contest in 2004 and 2005.

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Markus Marcetic: Slideshow | Grid View
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080323/TREWQ/Miguel, svensk soldat i ISAF trupperna, Afghanistan.
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Afghanistan 2008. 
Over 50.000 NATO troops are currently in Afghanistan in the International Security Assistance Force, ISAF. Sweden, who is not a NATO member also have troops in the ISAF forces. Around 400 troops are based in and around Mazar-e-Sharif in the Balkh province in northern Afghanistan.
The tasks for the Swedish troops in Afghanistan is to watch and learn. The security around the forces is extremely tight and most of the time the troops spend in their camps.
Tobias, Swedish soldier in Afghanistan.
Photo: Markus Marcetic/MOMENT
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Carl Bildt, swedish foreign minister
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2008-04-15 Stockholm, Sweden. Swedish artists Robyn and Johan Renck. Photo: Markus Marcetic/MOMENT
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2009-01-24 Stockholm, Sweden. A Camp, singer Nina Persson. Photo: Markus Marcetic/MOMENT
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2006-04-11, Helsinki, Finland. Mika Stahlberg (center) and Mikko Hypponen (right), at F-Secure headquarters. Photo: Markus Marcetic/MOMENT
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Diakonia till kampanj - Thailand. Paret Abay YangJa (morfar) och Ahamimha YangJa (mormor). Photo: Markus Marcetic/MOMENT
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Diakonia till kampanj - Thailand. Naso Miso i Chiang Mai. Photo: Markus Marcetic/MOMENT
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080323/TREWQ/Kvinna i det nya Afghanistan. Under talibanstyret var det totalt otänkbart, men tiderna har ändrats. Sara är polisaspirant i Sheberghan i norra Afghanistan.
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Afghanistan 2008. 
In an orphange in Mazar-e-Sharif, run by the Red Cross, children are tought to make carpets and sew clothes.
Photo: Markus Marcetic/MOMENT
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080321/TREWQ/På säkert avstånd. Svenska soldater i Afghanistan solar på taket till förläggningen i Sheberghan. Det är svårt att få en känsla av att det pågår ett krig i landet, de svenska ISAF trupperna lever instängda, separerade från det Afghanska folket, i en slags säkerhetsbubbla med svensk TV, knäckebröd, kaviar och vapen. Ibland glömmer man att man är utomlands, det enda som avslöjar att  man är långt hemifrån är dammet, värmen och den starkt lysande solen.
Säkerhetsföreskrifterna är rigorösa för soldaterna. Man lämnar aldrig campen förutom på patrulleringsuppdrag, alltid tungt beväpnade. De flesta som tjänstgör i Afghanistan träffar aldrig den civila lokalbefolkningen, och många lämnar inte ens militärförläggningen under sin tid i landet.
  • West Bank
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Bilder till utställningen Bergmans Landskap. Langhammars. Photo: Markus Marcetic/MOMENT
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Bilder till utställningen Bergmans Landskap. Väderkvarn. Photo: Markus Marcetic/MOMENT
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Living positively - HIV/AIDS in Zambia.
Outside the urban areas Zambia is very sparsely populated, particularly the west and the northeast, and the majority of people make their living as subsistence farmers. Roads on the countryside are of poor quality making transport of people and goods hard and time consuming. HIV/AIDS is common also in the rural areas and here one of the major problems is access to healthcare. Hospitals and healthclinics are usually far away, usually too far away for many to reach.
Photo: Markus Marcetic/MOMENT
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Living positively, HIV/AIDS in Zambia. 
Outside the city morgue at UTH hospital in capital Lusaka, coffins are lined up as families come to collect their dead. A majority of the patients dying at the hospital does so in AIDS related illnesses. In some hospitals, more than 50% of beds are occupied by patients with AIDS-related illnesses.
Zambia's health system, having suffered years of under-investment, has now been brought to the brink of collapse. Almost all health facilities lack adequate personnel, drugs, and/or equipment. Under such conditions, carers must struggle to cope with the rise in demand, just as their own number is being depleted by illness and AIDS deaths. Photo: Markus Marcetic/MOMENT