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Selected and fresh photos from around the web.

  • Editor's pick
    • BASRA, IRAQ - OCTOBER 18:  People gather around a Land Rover as it arrives at the village Al Houta on October 18 2008 near Basra, Iraq. The trip by the 51 Sqn Royal Air Force Regiment Force Protection Wing was part of a 'key leader engagement' (KLE) visit to the village close to the Basra Airbase to recruit local labour and engage with the village shiek. Visits of this type are seen as key in efforts to continue winning the support of the local Iraqi population. Although improved security in the region has brought some benefits such as improved trade and commerce, much of the infrastructure remains in a poor state of repair. Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown has indicated that the number of UK troops could be scaled down - especially as the security situation in the south of the country continues to improve. From Getty Images.

      BASRA, IRAQ - OCTOBER 18: People gather around a Land Rover as it arrives at the village Al Houta on October 18 2008 near Basra, Iraq. The trip by the 51 Sqn Royal Air Force Regiment Force Protection Wing was part of a 'key leader engagement' (KLE) visit to the village close to the Basra Airbase to recruit local labour and engage with the village shiek. Visits of this type are seen as key in efforts to continue winning the support of the local Iraqi population. Although improved security in the region has brought some benefits such as improved trade and commerce, much of the infrastructure remains in a poor state of repair. Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown has indicated that the number of UK troops could be scaled down - especially as the security situation in the south of the country continues to improve.

    • Democratic presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) speaks during a campaign rally in the rain at the University of Mary Washington in Fredericksburg, Virginia, September 27, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by Reuters.

      Democratic presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) speaks during a campaign rally in the rain at the University of Mary Washington in Fredericksburg, Virginia, September 27, 2008.

    • A puppy stands on a truck carrying people to be evacuated from the area in preparation for the approach of Hurricane Gustav in Batabano, on the southern coast of Cuba, August 30, 2008. Powerful Hurricane Gustav roared toward western Cuba on Saturday with 125 mph (205 kph) winds on its way to the oil-rich Gulf of Mexico after a deadly pass through the Caribbean. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

      A puppy stands on a truck carrying people to be evacuated from the area in preparation for the approach of Hurricane Gustav in Batabano, on the southern coast of Cuba, August 30, 2008. Powerful Hurricane Gustav roared toward western Cuba on Saturday with 125 mph (205 kph) winds on its way to the oil-rich Gulf of Mexico after a deadly pass through the Caribbean.

    • BANGKOK, THAILAND - AUGUST 30:  A member of Anti-government People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) stands behind barbed wire outside Government on August 30, 2008, in Bangkok, Thailand. The protesters want to unseat the seven-month old coalition government lead by Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej. From Getty Images.

      BANGKOK, THAILAND - AUGUST 30: A member of Anti-government People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) stands behind barbed wire outside Government on August 30, 2008, in Bangkok, Thailand. The protesters want to unseat the seven-month old coalition government lead by Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej.

  • Hot off the wire
    • This undated photo released by the La Scala theater shows Giulio Bertola. The La Scala opera house says a long-time choir director Giulio Bertola has died after a long illness. La Scala on Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2008 confirmed Bertola's death Sunday. The Milanese opera house did not elaborate the cause of death. Bertola directed La Scala's choir from 1983-91 _ including eight opera premieres. From AP Photo by AP.

      This undated photo released by the La Scala theater shows Giulio Bertola. The La Scala opera house says a long-time choir director Giulio Bertola has died after a long illness. La Scala on Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2008 confirmed Bertola's death Sunday. The Milanese opera house did not elaborate the cause of death. Bertola directed La Scala's choir from 1983-91 _ including eight opera premieres.

    • Ultra-Orthodox Jews carry the body of Aryeh Leibish Teitelboim to burial during his funeral on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem December 2, 2008. Teitelboim was among the five hostages killed at the Jewish center and the more than 144 people dead in Mumbai after the attacks by Islamist militants on luxury hotels and other sites in India's financial capital. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

      Ultra-Orthodox Jews carry the body of Aryeh Leibish Teitelboim to burial during his funeral on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem December 2, 2008. Teitelboim was among the five hostages killed at the Jewish center and the more than 144 people dead in Mumbai after the attacks by Islamist militants on luxury hotels and other sites in India's financial capital.

    • BANGKOK, THAILAND - DECEMBER 2 :  Government supporters protest outside the Administrative Court where the Constitutional Court met in Bangkok on December 2, 2008 in Bangkok, Thailand. Thai Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat was banned from politics for five years and his party disbanded on Tuesday, plunging the country deeper into chaos and raising fears of a violent backlash by government supporters. From Getty Images.

      BANGKOK, THAILAND - DECEMBER 2 : Government supporters protest outside the Administrative Court where the Constitutional Court met in Bangkok on December 2, 2008 in Bangkok, Thailand. Thai Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat was banned from politics for five years and his party disbanded on Tuesday, plunging the country deeper into chaos and raising fears of a violent backlash by government supporters.

  • Recently starred
    • Actor Viggo Mortensen gestures during a news conference to promote his latest film "Alatriste" in Tokyo on December 1, 2008. The film will be on the screens on December 13. Alatriste, played in the film by 47 year old US actor, is a unscrupulous 17th century adventurer in the movie, set in Spain's "golden age" under King Philip IV which coincided with the emergence of artistic giants such as Velasquez and the development of the "New World." From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

      Actor Viggo Mortensen gestures during a news conference to promote his latest film "Alatriste" in Tokyo on December 1, 2008. The film will be on the screens on December 13. Alatriste, played in the film by 47 year old US actor, is a unscrupulous 17th century adventurer in the movie, set in Spain's "golden age" under King Philip IV which coincided with the emergence of artistic giants such as Velasquez and the development of the "New World."

    • Chelsea Clinton (L) and former US President Bill Clinton watch as US Democratic presidential candidate Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY) speaks at the National Building Museum in Washington June 7, 2008. Clinton endorsed presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) to be the Democratic U.S. presidential candidate on Saturday and suspended her own White House bid less than a week after the Illinois senator secured enough support to win the nomination. Clinton's endorsement of Obama in a speech at the National Building Museum marked the beginning of efforts to reunite the Democratic Party after a long and divisive campaign battle that ended on Tuesday when Obama won the support of enough delegates to clinch the nomination. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

      Chelsea Clinton (L) and former US President Bill Clinton watch as US Democratic presidential candidate Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY) speaks at the National Building Museum in Washington June 7, 2008. Clinton endorsed presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) to be the Democratic U.S. presidential candidate on Saturday and suspended her own White House bid less than a week after the Illinois senator secured enough support to win the nomination. Clinton's endorsement of Obama in a speech at the National Building Museum marked the beginning of efforts to reunite the Democratic Party after a long and divisive campaign battle that ended on Tuesday when Obama won the support of enough delegates to clinch the nomination.

    • A tear runs down the face of U.S. Democratic presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) as he speaks about his grandmother who died earlier on Monday, during a campaign rally in Charlotte, North Carolina,  November 3, 2008. On the eve of Tuesday's U.S. presidential election, Obama's grandmother Madelyn Dunham died after a battle with cancer. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

      A tear runs down the face of U.S. Democratic presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) as he speaks about his grandmother who died earlier on Monday, during a campaign rally in Charlotte, North Carolina, November 3, 2008. On the eve of Tuesday's U.S. presidential election, Obama's grandmother Madelyn Dunham died after a battle with cancer.

    • U.S. Democratic presidential candidates Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) and Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY) (R) share a hug at the conclusion of the CNN/Los Angeles Times Democratic presidential debate in Hollywood, California January 31, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

      U.S. Democratic presidential candidates Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) and Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY) (R) share a hug at the conclusion of the CNN/Los Angeles Times Democratic presidential debate in Hollywood, California January 31, 2008.

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Photo from Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images

Members of Hezbollah's music band stand in front of an image of the Shiite militant movement's fighters as they arrive to perform during a ceremony in Beirut marking Quds (Jerusalem) Day in solidarity with the Palestinian people on September 26, 2008. Quds Day was started by Iran's late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, founder of the Islamic republic, who called on the world's Muslims to show solidarity with Palestinians on the last Friday of the fasting month of Ramadan. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
2 months ago: Members of Hezbollah's music band stand in front of an image of the Shiite militant movement's fighters as they arrive to perform during a ceremony in Beirut marking Quds (Jerusalem) Day in solidarity with the Palestinian people on September 26, 2008. Quds Day was started by Iran's late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, founder of the Islamic republic, who called on the world's Muslims to show solidarity with Palestinians on the last Friday of the fasting month of Ramadan.
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  • Schoolchildren from the al Rida and al-Mahdy schools, founded by Hezbollah, paint their faces with Palestinian and Lebanese flags during a demonstration to protest the Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip in front of the United Nations headquarters in central Beirut December 2, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Schoolchildren from the al Rida and al-Mahdy schools, founded by Hezbollah, chant slogans against Israel during a demonstration against the Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip in front of the United Nations headquarters in central Beirut December 2, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Schoolchildren from the al Rida and al-Mahdy schools, founded by Hezbollah, chant slogans against Israel during a demonstration against the Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip in front of the United Nations headquarters in central Beirut December 2, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Schoolchildren from the al Rida and al-Mahdy schools, founded by Hezbollah, chant slogans against Israel during a demonstration against the Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip in front of the United Nations headquarters in central Beirut December 2, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Schoolchildren from the al Rida and al-Mahdy schools, founded by Hezbollah, wave Palestinian flags and banners during a demonstration against the Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip in front of the United Nations headquarters in central Beirut December 2, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Schoolchildren from the al Rida and al-Mahdy schools, founded by Hezbollah, wave Palestinian flags and banners during a demonstration against the Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip in front of the United Nations headquarters in central Beirut December 2, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Lebanese schoolchildren carry a giant Palestinian flag as they take part in a demonstration for Gaza organized by the Shiite Muslim Lebanese group, Hezbollah, outside the United Nations headoffices in downtown Beirut on December 2, 2008. Thousands of Lebanese schoolchildren protested today in support of the children of Gaza living under Israel's crippling blockade. The Jewish state sealed off its crossings with Gaza -- the impoverished territory's main gateway for food and humanitarian aid -- as well as its maritime borders after the Islamist movement Hamas violently seized power there in June 2007. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Richard Whitehead, a British disability activist who was born legless, visits disabled children in the town of Nabatiyeh, south Lebanon November 27, 2008. Some of the children are among more than 270 people maimed by cluster bombs since Israel's 2006 war with Hezbollah guerrillas. Whitehead plans to run in the Beirut marathon on Sunday. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Richard Whitehead, a British disability activist who was born legless, visits disabled children in the town of Nabatiyeh, south Lebanon November 27, 2008. Some of the children are among more than 270 people maimed by cluster bombs since Israel's 2006 war with Hezbollah guerrillas. Whitehead plans to run in the Beirut marathon on Sunday. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Richard Whitehead, a British disability activist who was born legless, demonstrates his artificial limbs to a boy who lost a leg in a cluster bomb blast during his visit to disabled children in the town of Nabatiyeh, south Lebanon November 27, 2008. Some of the children are among more than 270 people maimed by cluster bombs since Israel's 2006 war with Hezbollah guerrillas. Whitehead plans to run in the Beirut marathon on Sunday. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Members of an all-woman battle area clearance team, trained by Norwegian People's Aid, search for cluster bomblets in a field near the town of Tibnin in south Lebanon November 26, 2008. Israel inadvertently galvanised a campaign to ban cluster munitions by raining bomblets over south Lebanon in the last 72 hours of its 2006 war with Hezbollah fighters. A treaty banning cluster bombs is due to be signed in Norway next week. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Members of an all-woman battle area clearance team, trained by Norwegian People's Aid, search for cluster bomblets in a field near the town of Tibnin in south Lebanon November 26, 2008. Israel inadvertently galvanised a campaign to ban cluster munitions by raining bomblets over south Lebanon in the last 72 hours of its 2006 war with Hezbollah fighters. A treaty banning cluster bombs is due to be signed in Norway next week. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Members of an all-woman battle area clearance team, trained by Norwegian People's Aid, search for cluster bomblets in a field near the town of Tibnin in south Lebanon November 26, 2008. Israel inadvertently galvanised a campaign to ban cluster munitions by raining bomblets over south Lebanon in the last 72 hours of its 2006 war with Hezbollah fighters. A treaty banning cluster bombs is due to be signed in Norway next week. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Members of an all-woman battle area clearance team, trained by Norwegian People's Aid, prepare themselves to search for cluster bomblets in a field near the town of Tibnin in south Lebanon November 26, 2008. Israel inadvertently galvanised a campaign to ban cluster munitions by raining bomblets over south Lebanon in the last 72 hours of its 2006 war with Hezbollah fighters. A treaty banning cluster bombs is due to be signed in Norway next week. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Miki Goldwasser (L), the father of dead Israeli soldier Ehud Goldwasser whose remains were returned to Israel by the Lebanese Islamist movement Hezbollah in a prisoner swap on July 15, stands near Aviva Shalit, the mother of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit who was captured by Gaza militants in a June 2006 raid, during a demonstration calling for Gilad�s release on November 26, 2008 in Tel-Hashomer army base (Israeli army�s induction center) near Tel-Aviv. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Samir Kantar, right, the longest-held Lebanese prisoner in Israel who was freed in July in exchange for the bodies of two Israeli soldiers captured by the militant Hezbollah group in 2006, waves to Syrian people on Monday, Nov. 24, 2008 in the Ein al-Tineh village, about 65 kilometers (40 miles) southwest of the capital Damascus which Syria had recaptured from Israel in 1973 Middle East war. Kantar, who spent 29 years in Israeli jails, visited the Syrian Golan Heights in a show of solidarity with the Syrian prisoners who are still in Israeli jails. From AP Photo by Bassem Tellawi.
  • Samir Kantar the longest-held Lebanese prisoner in Israel who was freed in July in exchange for the bodies of two Israeli soldiers captured by the militant Hezbollah group in 2006, looks on during a visit to Ein al-Tineh village, Syria, about 65 kilometers (40 miles) southwest of the capital Damascus on Monday, Nov. 24, 2008. Syria recaptured  Ein al-Tineh from Israel in the 1973 Middle East war and seen background is the village of Majdel Shams in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights. Kantar, who spent 29 years in Israeli jails, visited the Syrian Golan Heights in a show of solidarity with the Syrian prisoners who are still in Israeli jails. From AP Photo by Bassem Tellawi.
  • Druse children hold a Syrian, left, and Lebanese flag as they look towards the Syrian controlled Golan Heights from the Israeli side of the border during a rally in honor of Lebanese militant Samir Kantar in the village of Majdel Shams in the Golan Heights, Monday, Nov. 24, 2008. Kantar, a Lebanese gunman convicted of one of the grisliest attacks in Israel's history was freed in July 2008 in an exchange for the bodies of two Israeli soldiers killed by Hezbollah guerrillas. From AP Photo by TARA TODRAS-WHITEHILL.
  • Druse men gather before a rally in honor of Lebanese militant Samir Kantar, not pictured, in the village of Majdel Shams in the Israeli controlled Golan Heights, Monday, Nov. 24, 2008. Kantar, a Lebanese gunman convicted of one of the grisliest attacks in Israel's history was freed in July 2008 in an exchange for the bodies of two Israeli soldiers killed by Hezbollah guerrillas. From AP Photo by TARA TODRAS-WHITEHILL.
  • A protester holds  a poster showing radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, right, and Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah as thousands converge on Firdous Square in central Baghdad, Iraq for a mass prayer and rally  to protest a proposed U.S.-Iraqi security pact, on Friday, Nov. 21, 2008. From AP Photo by KARIM KADIM.
  • Druse men stand in front of a Syrian flag and a picture of Syrian President Bashar Assad during a rally in honor of Lebanese militant Samir Kantar in the village of Majdel Shams in the Israeli controlled Golan Heights, Monday, Nov. 24, 2008. Kantar, a Lebanese gunman convicted of one of the grisliest attacks in Israel's history was freed in July 2008 in an exchange for the bodies of two Israeli soldiers killed by Hezbollah guerrillas. From AP Photo by TARA TODRAS-WHITEHILL.
  • Druse men gather before a rally in honor of Lebanese militant Samir Kantar, not pictured, in the village of Majdel Shams in the Israeli controlled Golan Heights, Monday, Nov. 24, 2008. Kantar, a Lebanese gunman convicted of one of the grisliest attacks in Israel's history was freed in July 2008 in an exchange for the bodies of two Israeli soldiers killed by Hezbollah guerrillas. From AP Photo by TARA TODRAS-WHITEHILL.
  • Lebanese Hezbollah representative in Iran, Hossein Safiadeen (L), sits next to the Syrian ambassador to Tehran Hamed Hassan as they attend the opening of the first Asian Mayors Forum in Tehran November 19, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Hossein Safiadeen, Lebanese Hezbollah representative in Iran, left, talks with Syria ambassador to Tehran Hamed Hassan, as Germany's ambassador to Iran Herbert Honsowitz, looks on in foreground, during Asian Mayors Forum in Tehran on Wednesday Oct, 19, 2008. From AP Photo by HASAN SARBAKHSHIAN.
  • Lebanese Hezbollah supporters listen to chief Hassan Nasrallah in a televised speech during a commemoration of Hezbollah's Martyrs Day in Beirut's southern suburb on November 11, 2008. Nasrallah cautioned his supporters against expecting a change in American foreign policy with the recent election of Senator Barack Obama. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • A Lebanese Hezbollah supporter uses his mobile phone to take a picture of leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah during his speech at a rally marking Hezbollah's Martyrs Day in Beirut's suburbs November 11, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • A foreign journalist takes picture during a rally marking Hezbollah's Martyrs Day in Beirut's suburbs November 11, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • A child holds a photograph of his father who died during the 2006 war with Israel, during a rally marking Hezbollah's Martyrs Day in Beirut's suburbs November 11, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Lebanon's Hezbollah members march during a rally marking Hezbollah's Martyrs Day in Beirut's suburbs November 11, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Lebanon's Hezbollah members march during a rally marking Hezbollah's Martyrs Day in Beirut's suburbs November 11, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah speaks to thousands of supporters via a huge television screen during a rally commemorating the militant group's Martyrs Day in Beirut's southern suburb on November 11, 2008. Nasrallah cautioned his supporters today against expecting a change in American foreign policy with the recent election of Senator Barack Obama. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Lebanese Hezbollah supporters listen to chief Hassan Nasrallah in a televised speech during a commemoration of Hezbollah's Martyrs Day in Beirut's southern suburb on November 11, 2008. Nasrallah cautioned his supporters against expecting a change in American foreign policy with the recent election of Senator Barack Obama. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • A Lebanese girl stands next to a poster of Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah during an exhibition to commemorate the militant group's 'Martyrs' Day' in the southern city of Tyre on November 11, 2008. On this day Hezbollah commemorates the �martyrdom� of Ahmed Kassir, the group's first suicide bomber who attacked an Israeli base in Tyre in 1982. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Lebanese people visit an exhibition organised by the Hezbollah in the southern city of Tyre on November 11, 2008 to commemorate the militant group's 'Martyrs' Day.' On November 11 Hezbollah commemorates the �martyrdom� of Ahmed Kassir, the group's first suicide bomber who attacked an Israeli base in Tyre in 1982. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Lebanese people look at a mannequin representing a Hezbollah fighter manipulating an anti-aircraft gun at an exhibition in the southern port city of Tyre, Lebanon, Tuesday, Nov. 11, 2008. The Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, renewed his pledge to fight Israel if it attacks Lebanon again saying his fighters have been training day and night to repulse any Israeli attack. From AP Photo by Mohammed Zaatari.
  • A Lebanese Hezbollah supporter holds a portrait of chief Hassan Nasrallah as he gives a televised speech during a rally commemorating Hezbollah's Martyrs Day in Beirut's southern suburb on November 11, 2008. Nasrallah cautioned his supporters against expecting a change in American foreign policy with the recent election of Senator Barack Obama. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Hezbollah fighters march with Lebanese national flags (L) and Hezbollah flags (yellow) during a rally commemorating the militant group's Martyrs Day in Beirut's southern suburb on November 11, 2008. Nasrallah cautioned his supporters against expecting a change in American foreign policy with the recent election of Senator Barack Obama. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • In a handout picture released by the Lebanese photo agency Dalati and Nohra on November 8, 2008, Lebanese President Michel Sleiman (L) walks with his Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak (R) during their meeting in Cairo. Sleiman travelled to Egypt to meet with his Egyptian counterpart Mubarak and other officials three days after Lebanon's rival political leaders met for a second round of talks on lingering disputes but no breakthrough was made given deep-seated differences, notably over Hezbollah's weapons. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak receives his Lebanese counterpart Michel Sleiman (R) with an honour guard in Cairo on November 8, 2008. Sleiman travelled to Egypt to meet with his Egyptian counterpart Mubarak three days after Lebanon's rival political leaders met for a second round of talks on lingering disputes but no breakthrough was made given deep-seated differences, notably over Hezbollah's weapons. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak receives his Lebanese counterpart Michel Sleiman (R) with an honour guard in Cairo on November 8, 2008. Sleiman travelled to Egypt to meet with his Egyptian counterpart Mubarak three days after Lebanon's rival political leaders met for a second round of talks on lingering disputes but no breakthrough was made given deep-seated differences, notably over Hezbollah's weapons. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Lebanese youths paint colourful graffiti on a barrier around a consturction site in Beirut's Hamra thoroughfare on November 8, 2008. Lebanon's rival political leaders met this week for a second round of talks on lingering disputes but no breakthrough was made given deep-seated differences, notably over Hezbollah's weapons. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Lebanese youths paint colourful graffiti on a barrier around a consturction site in Beirut's Hamra thoroughfare on November 8, 2008. Lebanon's rival political leaders met this week for a second round of talks on lingering disputes but no breakthrough was made given deep-seated differences, notably over Hezbollah's weapons. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.


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Polish women speak backrounded by of a power plant chimneys where several Greenpeace activists take their camp at one of the top platforms in Patnow, some 80 kilometers east of city of Poznan, on December 2, 2008. Greenpeace activists scaled a 150-metre (500 foot) high smokestack at a power plant in central Poland to urge the government to agree to European environment reforms. Poznan hosts UN Climate Change Conference between December 01-12. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

Polish women speak backrounded by of a power plant chimneys where several Greenpeace activists take their camp at one of the top platforms in Patnow, some 80 kilometers east of city of Poznan, on December 2, 2008. Greenpeace activists scaled a 150-metre (500 foot) high smokestack at a power plant in central Poland to urge the government to agree to European environment reforms. Poznan hosts UN Climate Change Conference between December 01-12.

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Constitutional Court chairman Valery Zorkin speaks at a congress of judges in Moscow on December 2, 2008. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said steps need to be taken to increase transparency in the nation's judiciary system. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

Constitutional Court chairman Valery Zorkin speaks at a congress of judges in Moscow on December 2, 2008. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said steps need to be taken to increase transparency in the nation's judiciary system.

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Kosovo Albanians wave the Albanian flag during a protest in Pristina on December 2, 2008. Several thousands Kosovars protested in the capital of Pristina against deployment of a European mission. The EU agreed in February to send the 2,000-strong EULEX mission to Kosovo to gradually replace a United Nations operation and oversee the police, judiciary and customs. The UN Security Council last week gave a green light to the planned EU mission which is likely to start its operation in Kosovo in next days under the UN umbrella. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

Kosovo Albanians wave the Albanian flag during a protest in Pristina on December 2, 2008. Several thousands Kosovars protested in the capital of Pristina against deployment of a European mission. The EU agreed in February to send the 2,000-strong EULEX mission to Kosovo to gradually replace a United Nations operation and oversee the police, judiciary and customs. The UN Security Council last week gave a green light to the planned EU mission which is likely to start its operation in Kosovo in next days under the UN umbrella.

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A combination of pictures made on December 2, 2008 shows (FromL) Equatorial Guinea's President Teodoro Obiang on February 16, 2008 in Havana, Congo's President Denis Sassou Nguesso on July 5, 2007 in Paris and Gabon's President Omar Bongo Ondimba on February 14, 2007 in Cannes. French anti-corruption activists on December 2, 2008 filed suit against the presidents of Gabon, Congo and Equatorial Guinea, accusing them of acquiring luxury homes in France with embezzled public money. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

A combination of pictures made on December 2, 2008 shows (FromL) Equatorial Guinea's President Teodoro Obiang on February 16, 2008 in Havana, Congo's President Denis Sassou Nguesso on July 5, 2007 in Paris and Gabon's President Omar Bongo Ondimba on February 14, 2007 in Cannes. French anti-corruption activists on December 2, 2008 filed suit against the presidents of Gabon, Congo and Equatorial Guinea, accusing them of acquiring luxury homes in France with embezzled public money.

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A vendor of boiled chickpeas called in Iraqi Arabic 'lablabeh' dishes out piping hot chickpeas to customers in central Baghdad on December 02 2008. Lablabeh a common dish across Iraq is eaten mainly in the winter and is garnished with lemon or orange juice and a dash of chilly pepper. It sells at 0.50 US cent a plate. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

A vendor of boiled chickpeas called in Iraqi Arabic 'lablabeh' dishes out piping hot chickpeas to customers in central Baghdad on December 02 2008. Lablabeh a common dish across Iraq is eaten mainly in the winter and is garnished with lemon or orange juice and a dash of chilly pepper. It sells at 0.50 US cent a plate.

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Black clad Israeli Orthodox Jews attend the funeral of Arieh Levish Teitelbaum, one of the Israeli victims of the Mumbai attacks, on December 2, 2008 in Jerusalem. Wailing and chanting psalms, thousands of people bid a final farewell today to the six Jews killed in last week's bloody Mumbai attacks and whose bodies were flown to Israel for burial. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

Black clad Israeli Orthodox Jews attend the funeral of Arieh Levish Teitelbaum, one of the Israeli victims of the Mumbai attacks, on December 2, 2008 in Jerusalem. Wailing and chanting psalms, thousands of people bid a final farewell today to the six Jews killed in last week's bloody Mumbai attacks and whose bodies were flown to Israel for burial.

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NEW YORK - DECEMBER 02:  Singer Britney Spears appears on ABC's "Good Morning America" at The Big Apple Circus tent at Lincoln Center on December 2, 2008 in New York City. From Getty Images.

NEW YORK - DECEMBER 02: Singer Britney Spears appears on ABC's "Good Morning America" at The Big Apple Circus tent at Lincoln Center on December 2, 2008 in New York City.

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