Daylife

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
    • An anti-goverment protester mans a barricade along the main highway to the Suvarnabhumi Airport  early Tuesday Dec. 2, 2008 in Bangkok Thailand. Anti-government protesters reinforced their siege of Bangkok's two airports Monday as the politically paralyzed country struggled with more than 300,000 stranded travelers. From AP Photo by Ed Wray.

      An anti-goverment protester mans a barricade along the main highway to the Suvarnabhumi Airport early Tuesday Dec. 2, 2008 in Bangkok Thailand. Anti-government protesters reinforced their siege of Bangkok's two airports Monday as the politically paralyzed country struggled with more than 300,000 stranded travelers.

    • Policemen block a member (C) from a progressive pro-unification group as an anti-North Korea group (unseen) prepares to release leaflets in Imjinkak pavilion near the demilitarised zone (DMZ) separating the two Koreas in Paju, about 55 km (34 miles) north of Seoul, December 2, 2008. An anti-North Korea group including former North Korean defectors living in the South demanded improvements of North Korea's human rights and the release of South Koreans abducted by the North. The group released anti-North Korean leaflets in a balloon towards the North on Tuesday as other protesters blocked them. North Korea has complained about the leaflets, threatened to attack the South and restricted entry to South Korean workers at an inter-Korean industrial enclave in the North. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

      Policemen block a member (C) from a progressive pro-unification group as an anti-North Korea group (unseen) prepares to release leaflets in Imjinkak pavilion near the demilitarised zone (DMZ) separating the two Koreas in Paju, about 55 km (34 miles) north of Seoul, December 2, 2008. An anti-North Korea group including former North Korean defectors living in the South demanded improvements of North Korea's human rights and the release of South Koreans abducted by the North. The group released anti-North Korean leaflets in a balloon towards the North on Tuesday as other protesters blocked them. North Korea has complained about the leaflets, threatened to attack the South and restricted entry to South Korean workers at an inter-Korean industrial enclave in the North.

    • Auctioneer Charles Leski inspects the 1948 'Baggy Green' cap worn by Australian cricketing legend Don Bradman in his last Test match and which is up for auction in Melbourne on December 2, 2008. The cap is to be auctioned on December 15 and is expected to fetch between 600-750,000 Australian dollars (390-487,000 USD).  It comes with a letter of authentication Bradman wrote to his godson who he gave the cap for his 12th birthday. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

      Auctioneer Charles Leski inspects the 1948 'Baggy Green' cap worn by Australian cricketing legend Don Bradman in his last Test match and which is up for auction in Melbourne on December 2, 2008. The cap is to be auctioned on December 15 and is expected to fetch between 600-750,000 Australian dollars (390-487,000 USD). It comes with a letter of authentication Bradman wrote to his godson who he gave the cap for his 12th birthday.

  • Recently starred
    • 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.

    • U.S. Republican presidential nominee Senator John McCain (R-AZ) (near) answers a question as Democratic presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) looks at him during their debate at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee October 7, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

      U.S. Republican presidential nominee Senator John McCain (R-AZ) (near) answers a question as Democratic presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) looks at him during their debate at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee October 7, 2008.

See more photos »

Our editor's pick, and topics with the most buzz in the last ten minutes.

See more topics »

As selected by our staff

See all covers »

My World is your personal collection of news within Daylife, where you can save stuff that you find interesting, or want to easily check up on later.

My World is for registered Daylife users. Login to see your starred items, or register to get started!

Photo from Reuters Pictures

Military veterans and relatives take part in a march to commemorate the fifth anniversary of the Association of Military Veterans in El Salvador September 7, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
2 months ago: Military veterans and relatives take part in a march to commemorate the fifth anniversary of the Association of Military Veterans in El Salvador September 7, 2008.
scroll left scroll right
  • Gustavo Fernandez Saavedra, left, Chief of the Organization of American States, OAS, observation mission for El Salvador's upcoming general elections in 2009, reads a document next to El Salvador's Foreign Minister Marisol Argueta de Barillas in San Salvador, Monday, Dec. 1, 2009. From AP Photo by Luis Romero.
  • Patty Rivas and other Taca airline passengers make their way through Los Angeles International Airport Monday, Dec 1, 2008. Nearly 200 passengers on a Taca flight from El Salvador finally landed in Los Angeles Monday after spending about nine hours in a grounded airplane that had been diverted to a smaller regional airport due to heavy fog. From AP Photo by Nick Ut.
  • Jose Reyes, left, and other Taca airline passengers make their way through Los Angeles International Airport Monday, Dec 1, 2008. Nearly 200 passengers on a Taca flight from El Salvador finally landed in Los Angeles Monday after spending about nine hours in a grounded airplane that had been diverted to a smaller regional airport due to heavy fog. From AP Photo by Nick Ut.
  • Taca Airline passenger Mirna Lopez rests after arriving at Los Angeles International Airport Monday, Dec 1, 2008. Nearly 200 passengers on a Taca flight from El Salvador finally landed in Los Angeles Monday after spending about nine hours in a grounded airplane that had been diverted to a smaller regional airport due to heavy fog. From AP Photo by Nick Ut.
  • Former Bolivian Minister of Forein Affairs, Gustavo Fernandez Saavedra (L), head of the mission of electoral observers of the Organization of American States (OAS), poses for a photo during a press conference with Salvadorean Minister of Foreign Affairs, Marisol Argueta de Barillas (R), in San Salvador, on December 1, 2008. The OAS started Monday the observation of the electoral process for next March, 2009 elections in El Salvador. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Former Bolivian Minister of Forein Affairs, Gustavo Fernandez Saavedra (L), head of the mission of electoral observers of the Organization of American States (OAS), poses for a photo during a press conference with his Salvadorean counterpart, Marisol Argueta de Barillas (R), in San Salvador, on December 1, 2008. The OAS started Monday the observation of the electoral process for next March, 2009 elections in El Salvador. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Former Bolivian Minister of Forein Affairs, Gustavo Fernandez Saavedra, head of the mission of electoral observers of the Organization of American States (OAS), delivers a press conference in San Salvador, on December 1, 2008. The OAS started Monday the observation of the electoral process for next March, 2009 elections in El Salvador. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Billy Escobar of El Salvador competes in the men's over-80 kg deadlift weightlifting event during the Central American and Caribbean Special Olympic Games in San Jose November 29, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Rafael Portillo of El Salvador competes in the men's over-53 kg deadlift weightlifting event during the Central American and Caribbean Special Olympic Games in San Jose November 29, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Adriana Centeno of El Salvador competes in the women's softball throw event during the Central American and Caribbean Special Olympic Games in San Jose November 27, 2008. More than 500 athletes are competing in the games, which will be held till Sunday. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Manuel Rivera of El Salvador competes in the 400m freestyle event during the Central American and Caribbean Special Olympic Games in San Jose November 27, 2008. More than 500 athletes are competing in the games which will be held till Sunday. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • Tatiana Venegas of El Salvador competes in the 100m backstroke heat event during the Central American and Caribbean Special Olympic Games in San Jose November 26, 2008. More than 500 athletes are competing in the games, which will be held till Sunday. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
  • El Salvador's Foreign Minister Marisol Argueta de Barillas, left, and her husband Carlos R. Barillas, pause after rekindling the eternal flame in the Hall of Remembrance, at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem, Monday, Nov. 24, 2008. Marisol Argueta de Barillas is on an official visit to the region. From AP Photo by Bernat Armangue.
  • El Salvador's Foreign Minister Marisol Argueta de Barillas pauses after laying a wreath in the Hall of Remembrance at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem, Monday, Nov. 24, 2008. Marisol Argueta de Barillas is on an official visit to the region. From AP Photo by Bernat Armangue.
  • El Salvador's Foreign Minister Marisol Argueta de Barillas reacts during her visit to the Hall of Names, at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem, Monday, Nov. 24, 2008. Marisol Argueta de Barillas is on an official visit to the region. From AP Photo by Bernat Armangue.
  • El Salvador's Foreign Minister Marisol Argueta de Barillas is seen in the Hall of Names, during her visit at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem, Monday, Nov. 24, 2008. Marisol Argueta de Barillas is on an official visit to the region. From AP Photo by Bernat Armangue.
  • El Salvador's Alejando Salazar (8) and Juan Jose Gomez fight for the ball with Costa Rica's Froylan Ledezma (11) during a World Cup 2010 qualifying soccer match in San Salvador, Wednesday Nov. 19 , 2008. From AP Photo by Luis Romero.
  • Costa Rica's Roy Myrie Medrano, left, celebrates with teammate Froylan Ledezma, after scoring during a World Cup 2010 qualifying soccer match against El Salvador in San Salvador, Wednesday Nov. 19 , 2008. From AP Photo by Luis Romero.
  • El Salvador's Ramon Flores (8) fights for the ball with Costa Rica's Froylan Ledezma, left, and William Sunsin during a World Cup 2010 qualifying soccer match against El Salvador in San Salvador, Wednesday Nov. 19 , 2008. From AP Photo by Luis Romero.
  • Mauricio Funes,  candidate for the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front , FMLN , in the upcoming  presidential elections in El Salvador, speaks during a interview with the international press at a restaurant in San Salvador , Nov. 19 , 2008. From AP Photo by LUIS ROMERO.
  • Costa Rican Roy Myrie celebrates his goal against El Salvador during their FIFA World Cup South Africa-2010 qualifying football match at the Cuscatlan stadium in San Salvador on November 19, 2008. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Costa Rican players celebrate their second goal against El Salvador during their FIFA World Cup South Africa-2010 qualifying football match at the Cuscatlan stadium in San Salvador on November 19, 2008. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Costa Rican Froylan Ledezma (C) celebrates his goal against El Salvador during their FIFA World Cup South Africa-2010 qualifying football match at the Cuscatlan stadium in San Salvador on November 19, 2008. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Costa Rican Froylan Ledezma (R) celebrate his goal against El Salvador with teammate Roy Myrie during their FIFA World Cup South Africa-2010 qualifying football match at the Cuscatlan stadium in San Salvador on November 19, 2008. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • The coach of the Salvadorean national football team, Carlos de Los Cobos (C), gives instructions to the players during a training session at Cuscatlan stadium in San Salvador, on November 18, 2008. El Salvador will face Costa Rica on November 19 in the CONCACAF qualifiers for the FIFA World Cup South Africa 2010. Both teams are already qualified for the final round of the qualifiers. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Salvadorean national football players pray before a training session at Cuscatlan stadium in San Salvador, on November 18, 2008. El Salvador will face Costa Rica on November 19 in the CONCACAF qualifiers for the FIFA World Cup South Africa 2010. Both teams are already qualified for the final round of the qualifiers. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Players of the Costa Rica national football team train at Cuscatlan Stadium in San Salvador, El Salvador on November 18, 2008. Costa Rica will face El Salvador on November 19 for a World Cup South Africa 2010 CONCACAF qualifier match. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Players of the Costa Rica national football team train at Cuscatlan Stadium in San Salvador, El Salvador on November 18, 2008. Costa Rica will face El Salvador on November 19 for a World Cup South Africa 2010 CONCACAF qualifier match. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Players of the Costa Rica national football team train at Cuscatlan Stadium in San Salvador, El Salvador on November 18, 2008. Costa Rica will face El Salvador on November 19 for a World Cup South Africa 2010 CONCACAF qualifier match. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Players of the Costa Rica national football team train at Cuscatlan Stadium in San Salvador, El Salvador on November 18, 2008. Costa Rica will face El Salvador on November 19 for a World Cup South Africa 2010 CONCACAF qualifier match. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Players of the Costa Rica national football team train at Cuscatlan Stadium in San Salvador, El Salvador on November 18, 2008. Costa Rica will face El Salvador on November 19 for a World Cup South Africa 2010 CONCACAF qualifier match. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Players of the Costa Rica national football team train at Cuscatlan Stadium in San Salvador, El Salvador on November 18, 2008. Costa Rica will face El Salvador on November 19 for a World Cup South Africa 2010 CONCACAF qualifier match. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Mauricio Funes, presidential candidate for El Salvador's Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front,FMNL,speaks during a rally in Sonsonate, El Salvador, Saturday, Nov. 15 , 2008. El Salvador will hold general elections in 2009. From AP Photo by Luis Romero.
  • Supporters of Rodrigo Avila, presidential candidate for El Salvador's Alianza Republicana Nacionalista party, ARENA, gesture during a meeting with women in San Salvador, Saturday, Nov. 15, 2008. El Salvador will hold  general elections in 2009. From AP Photo by Edgar Romero.
  • Rodrigo Avila, presidential candidate for El Salvador's Alianza Republicana Nacionalista party, ARENA, left, accompanied by his wife Celina de Avila, center, and Ana Vilma de Escobar, ARENA'S candidate for Vice President, gesture during a meeting with women in San Salvador, Saturday, Nov. 15, 2008. El Salvador will hold  general elections in 2009. From AP Photo by Edgar Romero.
  • Rodrigo Avila, presidential candidate for El Salvador's Alianza Republicana Nacionalista party, ARENA, center, waves accompanied by his wife Celina, right, and Arturo Zablah, ARENA'S candidate for Vice President, during a meeting with women in San Salvador, Saturday, Nov. 15, 2008. El Salvador will hold  general elections in 2009. From AP Photo by Edgar Romero.
  • Rodrigo Avila, presidential candidate for El Salvador's Alianza Republicana Nacionalista party, ARENA, left, accompanied by his wife Celina, points out during a meeting with women in San Salvador, Saturday, Nov. 15, 2008. El Salvador will hold  general elections in 2009. From AP Photo by Edgar Romero.
  • Mauricio Funes, right, presidential candidate for El Salvador's Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front party, FMLN, right, and Salvador Sanchez Ceren, FMLN's candidate for Vice President, wave to supporters during a campaign rally in San Salvador, Saturday, Nov. 15 , 2008. El Salvador will hold  general elections in 2009. From AP Photo by Luis Romero.
  • A student signs a banner, placed to honor the 19 th anniversary of the murder of six Jesuit priests killed during El Salvador's 1980-92 civil war, at the Catholic University in San Salvador, Friday, Nov. 14, 2009. Thursday Human Rights groups asked a Spanish court to indict former Salvadoran President Alfredo Cristiani Burkard for covering up the 1989 killing of the Jesuits, their housekeeper and her teenage daughter. From AP Photo by LUIS ROMERO.
  • Walter Araujo, president of El Salvador's Electoral Supreme Court, shows to the press the official ballots that will be used in El Salvador's 2009 general elections at the headquarters of the country's Electoral Supreme Court in San Salvador, Friday, Nov. 14, 2008. El Salvador's political parties were authorized Friday by the Electoral Court to begin campaigning for the upcoming elections. From AP Photo by Luis Romero.
  • Members of six different political parties check samples of the official ballots that will be used in El Salvador's 2009 general elections at the headquarters of the country's Electoral Supreme Court in San Salvador, Friday, Nov. 14, 2008. El Salvador's political parties were authorized Friday by the Electoral Court to begin campaigning for the upcoming elections. From AP Photo by Luis Romero.
  • Hondura's President Manuel Zelaya, right,  greets a group of Hondurean students attending  the 'Espacio Centro-America y Caribe 2008', an annual  forum for Central American and Caribbean students,  in San Salvador, El Salvador, Friday , Nov. 14 , 2008. From AP Photo by LUIS ROMERO.


Just in from Reuters Pictures

more
Policemen block a member (C) from a progressive pro-unification group as an anti-North Korea group (unseen) prepares to release leaflets in Imjinkak pavilion near the demilitarised zone (DMZ) separating the two Koreas in Paju, about 55 km (34 miles) north of Seoul, December 2, 2008. An anti-North Korea group including former North Korean defectors living in the South demanded improvements of North Korea's human rights and the release of South Koreans abducted by the North. The group released anti-North Korean leaflets in a balloon towards the North on Tuesday as other protesters blocked them. North Korea has complained about the leaflets, threatened to attack the South and restricted entry to South Korean workers at an inter-Korean industrial enclave in the North. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

Policemen block a member (C) from a progressive pro-unification group as an anti-North Korea group (unseen) prepares to release leaflets in Imjinkak pavilion near the demilitarised zone (DMZ) separating the two Koreas in Paju, about 55 km (34 miles) north of Seoul, December 2, 2008. An anti-North Korea group including former North Korean defectors living in the South demanded improvements of North Korea's human rights and the release of South Koreans abducted by the North. The group released anti-North Korean leaflets in a balloon towards the North on Tuesday as other protesters blocked them. North Korea has complained about the leaflets, threatened to attack the South and restricted entry to South Korean workers at an inter-Korean industrial enclave in the North.

zoom
Members from a progressive pro-unification group (L) block Choi Sung-yong, president of the South Korean People Representing Families Abducted by North Korea, in Imjinkak pavilion near the demilitarised zone (DMZ) separating the two Koreas in Paju, about 55 km (34 miles) north of Seoul, December 2, 2008. An anti-North Korea group, including former North Korean defectors living in the South demanded improvements of North Korea's human rights and the release of South Koreans abducted by the North. The group released anti-North Korean leaflets in a balloon towards the North on Tuesday as other protesters blocked them. North Korea has complained about the leaflets, threatened to attack the South and restricted entry to South Korean workers at an inter-Korean industrial enclave in the North. His vest reads, "Send back (Korean War prisoners and South Koreans abducted by the North to the South)". From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

Members from a progressive pro-unification group (L) block Choi Sung-yong, president of the South Korean People Representing Families Abducted by North Korea, in Imjinkak pavilion near the demilitarised zone (DMZ) separating the two Koreas in Paju, about 55 km (34 miles) north of Seoul, December 2, 2008. An anti-North Korea group, including former North Korean defectors living in the South demanded improvements of North Korea's human rights and the release of South Koreans abducted by the North. The group released anti-North Korean leaflets in a balloon towards the North on Tuesday as other protesters blocked them. North Korea has complained about the leaflets, threatened to attack the South and restricted entry to South Korean workers at an inter-Korean industrial enclave in the North. His vest reads, "Send back (Korean War prisoners and South Koreans abducted by the North to the South)".

zoom
Raul Castro, who has been running Cuba since his brother Fidel was sidelined by illness 19 months ago, gestures during a meeting of the National Assembly in Havana Feruary 24, 2008. Cuba's National Assembly met on Sunday to name a successor to Fidel Castro. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

Raul Castro, who has been running Cuba since his brother Fidel was sidelined by illness 19 months ago, gestures during a meeting of the National Assembly in Havana Feruary 24, 2008. Cuba's National Assembly met on Sunday to name a successor to Fidel Castro.

zoom
German chancellor Angela Merkel (R) and Liechtenstein's Head of Government Otmar Hasler leave after a welcome ceremony in Berlin February 20, 2008. Liechtenstein has come under fire in Germany after prosecutors announced last week they were investigating hundreds of people suspected of dodging German taxes by parking money in secret bank accounts in the principality. The probe, which has involved raids of homes and offices across Germany, has already led to the resignation of Deutsche Post Chief Executive Klaus Zumwinkel and threatens to claim other high-profile victims. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

German chancellor Angela Merkel (R) and Liechtenstein's Head of Government Otmar Hasler leave after a welcome ceremony in Berlin February 20, 2008. Liechtenstein has come under fire in Germany after prosecutors announced last week they were investigating hundreds of people suspected of dodging German taxes by parking money in secret bank accounts in the principality. The probe, which has involved raids of homes and offices across Germany, has already led to the resignation of Deutsche Post Chief Executive Klaus Zumwinkel and threatens to claim other high-profile victims.

zoom
Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown gestures as he shakes hands with his Lebanese counterpart Fouad Siniora outside 10 Downing Street in central London February 19, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown gestures as he shakes hands with his Lebanese counterpart Fouad Siniora outside 10 Downing Street in central London February 19, 2008.

zoom
Russia's President Vladimir Putin holds up a heart during an annual question and answer session at the Kremlin in Moscow February 14, 2008. Cupid's arrow struck Putin during his annual news conference on Thursday, St Valentine's Day, as he mixed fiery outbursts with flirtatious banter. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

Russia's President Vladimir Putin holds up a heart during an annual question and answer session at the Kremlin in Moscow February 14, 2008. Cupid's arrow struck Putin during his annual news conference on Thursday, St Valentine's Day, as he mixed fiery outbursts with flirtatious banter.

zoom
Tibetans attend their New Year celebrations at a monastery in Kathmandu February 9, 2008. The Tibetan New Year or "Losar" can be traced back to the pre-Buddhist period in Tibet. During the period when Tibetans practised the Bon religion, every winter a spiritual ceremony was held, in which people offered large quantities of incense to appease the local spirits, deities and protectors. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

Tibetans attend their New Year celebrations at a monastery in Kathmandu February 9, 2008. The Tibetan New Year or "Losar" can be traced back to the pre-Buddhist period in Tibet. During the period when Tibetans practised the Bon religion, every winter a spiritual ceremony was held, in which people offered large quantities of incense to appease the local spirits, deities and protectors.

zoom

Search all photos

Feedback

Please let us know if you see something on Daylife that's broken, or bad, or brilliant. Whatever's on your mind, we always want to hear from you. We can't reply to everyone, but we do read everything, and it helps us figure out what to do next.

If you'd like a reply, include your email address in your message.
Share your feedback:
Sending...
Thanks for your feedback, we really appreciate it!

There was an error. Please try again later.

OK, done

Suggest a publication

Use this form to let us know about a publication that you would like daylife to cover.
Enter the publication's URL:
Sending...
Thanks for your suggestion, we really appreciate it!

There was an error. Please try again later.

OK, done

Save the news that matters to you

To star items on Daylife, please login or join Daylife for free.

Sending...


There was an error. Please try again later.

OK, done