Daylife

Selected and fresh photos from around the web.

  • Editor's pick
    • Georgian soldiers run near a blazing building after a Russian bombardment in Gori, 80 km (50 miles) from Tbilisi, August 9, 2008. A Russian warplane dropped a bomb on an apartment block in the Georgian town of Gori on Saturday, killing at least 5 people, a Reuters reporter said. The bomb hit the five-story building in Gori close to  Georgia's embattled breakaway province of South Ossetia when Russian warplanes carried out a raid against military targets around the town. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

      Georgian soldiers run near a blazing building after a Russian bombardment in Gori, 80 km (50 miles) from Tbilisi, August 9, 2008. A Russian warplane dropped a bomb on an apartment block in the Georgian town of Gori on Saturday, killing at least 5 people, a Reuters reporter said. The bomb hit the five-story building in Gori close to Georgia's embattled breakaway province of South Ossetia when Russian warplanes carried out a raid against military targets around the town.

    • CARSON, CA - JULY 31:  Andre Villa practices in the Moto X Freestyle during the summer X Games 14 at Home Depot Center on July 31, 2008 in Carson, California. From Getty Images.

      CARSON, CA - JULY 31: Andre Villa practices in the Moto X Freestyle during the summer X Games 14 at Home Depot Center on July 31, 2008 in Carson, California.

    • A woman collects drinking water from a tube well at the flooded village of Godadhar in Faridpur July 27, 2008. Several areas in north and northeastern Bangladesh remain inundated with floodwaters after the embankments of the rivers Jamuna and Padma collapsed due to heavy rainfall earlier this week. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

      A woman collects drinking water from a tube well at the flooded village of Godadhar in Faridpur July 27, 2008. Several areas in north and northeastern Bangladesh remain inundated with floodwaters after the embankments of the rivers Jamuna and Padma collapsed due to heavy rainfall earlier this week.

    • LONDON - JULY 25:  Reese Hoffa of United States competes in the Men's Shot Put Final during day 1 of the Norwich Union Aviva London Grand Prix at Crystal Palace Stadium on July 25, 2008 in London, England. From Getty Images.

      LONDON - JULY 25: Reese Hoffa of United States competes in the Men's Shot Put Final during day 1 of the Norwich Union Aviva London Grand Prix at Crystal Palace Stadium on July 25, 2008 in London, England.

  • Hot off the wire
    • Croatia's Blanka Vlasic makes an attempt in the qualification for the women's high jump during the athletics competitions in the National Stadium  at the Beijing 2008 Olympics in Beijing, Thursday, Aug. 21, 2008. From AP Photo by Thomas Kienzle.

      Croatia's Blanka Vlasic makes an attempt in the qualification for the women's high jump during the athletics competitions in the National Stadium at the Beijing 2008 Olympics in Beijing, Thursday, Aug. 21, 2008.

    • Tia Hellebaut of Belgium competes in the women's high jump qualifying round of the athletics competition in the National Stadium at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games August 21, 2008. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.

      Tia Hellebaut of Belgium competes in the women's high jump qualifying round of the athletics competition in the National Stadium at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games August 21, 2008.

    • Afghan President Hamed Karzai (R) shakes hands with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown ahead of a press conference at The Presidential Palace in Kabul on August 21, 2008. Brown flew into Kabul to meet President Hamid Karzai after a short visit with British troops fighting a Taliban-led insurgency in volatile southern Afghanistan. Brown arrived in the Afghan capital from the southern province of Helmand, where he met British soldiers at the sprawling Camp Bastion, an AFP correspondent travelling with him said. The British prime minister, whose visit was kept under wraps for security reasons, is en route to China for the Olympics closing ceremony in Beijing. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

      Afghan President Hamed Karzai (R) shakes hands with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown ahead of a press conference at The Presidential Palace in Kabul on August 21, 2008. Brown flew into Kabul to meet President Hamid Karzai after a short visit with British troops fighting a Taliban-led insurgency in volatile southern Afghanistan. Brown arrived in the Afghan capital from the southern province of Helmand, where he met British soldiers at the sprawling Camp Bastion, an AFP correspondent travelling with him said. The British prime minister, whose visit was kept under wraps for security reasons, is en route to China for the Olympics closing ceremony in Beijing.

  • Recently starred
    • Eighty-four year-old Georgian Shalva Khutsenashvili and his South Ossetian wife Misurat Khutayeva sit in a hospital room on August 16, 2008 in Tskhinvali. Russian troops have the right to patrol "a few kilometres" deeper inside Georgia beyond the conflict zone South Ossetia, Georgian and French officials said. This allowance was stipulated in a confidential letter from French President Nicolas Sarkozy to his Georgian counterpart shown to AFP here by a high-level Georgian source and later released in Paris by the Elysee Palace. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

      Eighty-four year-old Georgian Shalva Khutsenashvili and his South Ossetian wife Misurat Khutayeva sit in a hospital room on August 16, 2008 in Tskhinvali. Russian troops have the right to patrol "a few kilometres" deeper inside Georgia beyond the conflict zone South Ossetia, Georgian and French officials said. This allowance was stipulated in a confidential letter from French President Nicolas Sarkozy to his Georgian counterpart shown to AFP here by a high-level Georgian source and later released in Paris by the Elysee Palace.

    • A South Ossetian man holds an axe as he stands in his house on August 16, 2008 in Tskhinvali. Dozens of haggard Georgian captives were marched through the rebel city of South Ossetia, as separatists called on Tbilisi to recover the rotting corpses of its soldiers. The mostly elderly men -- apparently all civilians -- walked with their heads bowed and their hands behind their backs, escorted by armed guards. Locals stopped to take pictures on their mobile phones. Some pointed and laughed as the detainees marched through Tskhinvali. One woman said: "Those are the prisoners? But they're just old men!". From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

      A South Ossetian man holds an axe as he stands in his house on August 16, 2008 in Tskhinvali. Dozens of haggard Georgian captives were marched through the rebel city of South Ossetia, as separatists called on Tbilisi to recover the rotting corpses of its soldiers. The mostly elderly men -- apparently all civilians -- walked with their heads bowed and their hands behind their backs, escorted by armed guards. Locals stopped to take pictures on their mobile phones. Some pointed and laughed as the detainees marched through Tskhinvali. One woman said: "Those are the prisoners? But they're just old men!".

    • TBILISI, GEORGIA - AUGUST 16: A man smokes in a corridor as Georgian refugees, many of them from the breakaway province of South Ossetia, settle into a refugee shelter August 16, 2008 in Tbilisi, Georgia. Tens of thousands of Georgians and others have fled the areas of north Georgia affected by the stand off with Russian forces, and hundreds of them are taking shelter in this old Communist-era ministry building. U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice arrived in Tblisi yesterday to show support for Georgia and to try to firm up the recent peace initiative with the Russians instigated by French President Nicolas Sarkozy. From Getty Images.

      TBILISI, GEORGIA - AUGUST 16: A man smokes in a corridor as Georgian refugees, many of them from the breakaway province of South Ossetia, settle into a refugee shelter August 16, 2008 in Tbilisi, Georgia. Tens of thousands of Georgians and others have fled the areas of north Georgia affected by the stand off with Russian forces, and hundreds of them are taking shelter in this old Communist-era ministry building. U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice arrived in Tblisi yesterday to show support for Georgia and to try to firm up the recent peace initiative with the Russians instigated by French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

    • Manya Pleeva, a 76-year-old South Ossetian sits on the bed in her house on August 16, 2008 in Tskhinvali. Dozens of haggard Georgian captives were marched through the rebel city of South Ossetia, as separatists called on Tbilisi to recover the rotting corpses of its soldiers. The mostly elderly men -- apparently all civilians -- walked with their heads bowed and their hands behind their backs, escorted by armed guards. Locals stopped to take pictures on their mobile phones. Some pointed and laughed as the detainees marched through Tskhinvali. One woman said: "Those are the prisoners? But they're just old men!". From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

      Manya Pleeva, a 76-year-old South Ossetian sits on the bed in her house on August 16, 2008 in Tskhinvali. Dozens of haggard Georgian captives were marched through the rebel city of South Ossetia, as separatists called on Tbilisi to recover the rotting corpses of its soldiers. The mostly elderly men -- apparently all civilians -- walked with their heads bowed and their hands behind their backs, escorted by armed guards. Locals stopped to take pictures on their mobile phones. Some pointed and laughed as the detainees marched through Tskhinvali. One woman said: "Those are the prisoners? But they're just old men!".

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Photo from Getty Images

GAZA, GAZA STRIP - JUNE 30:  A Palestinian man flashes V-sign as he and his son hold pictures of Lebanese prisoner in Israeli jail, Samir Kantar, during a protest calling for the release of Palestinian and Arab prisoners from jails in Israel, in the courtyard of the International Red Cross offices June 30, 2008 in Gaza City, Gaza Strip. The Israeli cabinet yesterday approved a German-mediated deal to swap two captured Israeli soldiers by Hezbollah in a cross-Israeli-Lebanon border raid in July 2006, for 5 Lebanese being held in Israeli jails as well as the bodies of dead Hezbollah militia from the military campaign that Israel launched in a failed attempt to get the two reservists back. From Getty Images.
1 month ago: GAZA, GAZA STRIP - JUNE 30: A Palestinian man flashes V-sign as he and his son hold pictures of Lebanese prisoner in Israeli jail, Samir Kantar, during a protest calling for the release of Palestinian and Arab prisoners from jails in Israel, in the courtyard of the International Red Cross offices June 30, 2008 in Gaza City, Gaza Strip. The Israeli cabinet yesterday approved a German-mediated deal to swap two captured Israeli soldiers by Hezbollah in a cross-Israeli-Lebanon border raid in July 2006, for 5 Lebanese being held in Israeli jails as well as the bodies of dead Hezbollah militia from the military campaign that Israel launched in a failed attempt to get the two reservists back.
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  • Smadar Haran, the sole survivor of the 1979 attack in which Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar killed members of her family, leaves after a press conference in Tel Aviv on June 29, 2008. Haran's husband, Danny, and their 4-year-old daughter were murdered. Their 2-year-old daughter also died of suffocation when her mother tried to keep her quiet in their hiding place. Haran, said she hopes reports of hostage negotiations with Hezbollah that would include the release of Samir Kantar are true, "and not just spin for the media that will cause heartache for the hostages' families." Lebanese militant Samir Kantar, who is set to be freed from jail on July 16, has been serving a 542 jail sentence in Israel for a triple murder including the brutal killing of a four-year-old girl. Israel is freeing kantar and four other Lebanese prisoners in exchange for the bodies of two Israeli soldiers captured by Hezbollah in 2006. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Smadar Haran, the sole survivor of the 1979 attack in which Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar killed members of her family, leaves after a press conference in Tel Aviv on June 29, 2008. Haran's husband, Danny, and their 4-year-old daughter were murdered. Their 2-year-old daughter also died of suffocation when her mother tried to keep her quiet in their hiding place. Haran, said she hopes reports of hostage negotiations with Hezbollah that would include the release of Samir Kantar are true, "and not just spin for the media that will cause heartache for the hostages' families." Lebanese militant Samir Kantar, who is set to be freed from jail on July 16, has been serving a 542 jail sentence in Israel for a triple murder including the brutal killing of a four-year-old girl. Israel is freeing kantar and four other Lebanese prisoners in exchange for the bodies of two Israeli soldiers captured by Hezbollah in 2006. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Sami Kantar, the nephew of Samir Kantar, fixes a picture of his uncle, left, posing with imprisoned West Bank Fatah leader Marwan Barghouti at Kantar's home in the mountain town of Abey, 16 kilometers (10 miles) south of Beirut , Lebanon, Monday, July 14, 2008. The mother of Lebanon's longest held prisoner in Israel who is serving a multiple life terms said Monday she is counting the seconds for the moment she has been waiting for decades. The return of Samir Kantar after nearly 30 years in prison. From AP Photo by Ahmad Omar.
  • Freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar (C-L) waves to the crowd as he walks with Hezbollah's military chief in south Lebanon Sheikh Nabil Qawuq (C-R) during a welcoming ceremony for Kantar and four other prisoners in Naqura in southern Lebanon on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Siham (R), 69, mother of Druze Lebanese Samir Kantar, held in an Israel jail for the past 29 years, sits next to a portrait of Kantar as Kantar's brother Bassam looks on at their home in the village of Abai on July 1, 2008. Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Siniora said today an expected prisoner swap between Israel and Hezbollah was a "huge failure" for the Jewish state and a victory for the Shiite militant group. Among the prisoners to make a triumphant homecoming will be Samir Kantar, the longest-serving Arab prisoner in Israeli jails who was convicted in 1980 to serve 542 years for the murder of an Israeli civilian and his four-year-old daughter, as well as an Israeli policeman. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Siham Kantar, the mother of Samir Kantar, a Lebanese prisoner held in Israel, shows his pictures at her home in the mountain town of Abey, 16 kilometers (10 miles) south of Beirut, Lebanon, Monday, July 14, 2008. The mother of Lebanon's longest held prisoner in Israel who is serving a multiple life terms said Monday she is counting the seconds for the moment she has been waiting for decades. The return of Samir Kantar after nearly 30 years in prison. From AP Photo by Ahmad Omar.
  • Siham Kantar, the mother of Samir Kantar, a Lebanese prisoner held in Israel, smiles as she stands in front of a picture of Hezbollah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah at her home in the mountain town of Abey, 16 kilometers (10 miles) south of Beirut , Lebanon, Monday, July 14, 2008. The mother of Lebanon's longest held prisoner in Israel who is serving a multiple life terms said Monday she is counting the seconds for the moment she has been waiting for decades. The return of Samir Kantar after nearly 30 years in prison. From AP Photo by Ahmad Omar.
  • In this undated family photo made available by Israel's Maariv newspaper,Tuesday, July 15, 2008, Israeli Danny Haran, killed by Lebanese militant Samir Kantar on April 22, 1979,  is seen with his daughters Eynat,4, left, and Yael, 2, at the times of their deaths, in the coastal town of Nahariya, northern Israel. Kantar, then 16, was one of four militants who made their way in a rubber dinghy from Lebanon to Israel's northern shore in 1979 and attacked an apartment building in the coastal city of Nahariya, 5 miles (8 kilometers) from the Lebanese border. Danny Haran and his daughter Eynat were killed by Kantar, and Yael was accidently smothered to death  by her mother Smadar as the two were hiding from the attackers. From AP Photo by AP.
  • Bassam Kantar (R) kisses his brother, freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar, who is wearing Hezbollah military fatigues, as he arrives in his hometown of Abai, southeast of Beirut on July 17, 2008. Kantar arrived to his hometown to a hero's welcome after arriving home from Israel yesterday, after being held in an Israeli jail for 20 years, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Handoumeh Wisah, 72, the mother of Jaber Wisah, a former cellmate of Samir Kantar, kisses a pictures of Kantar at her house in Bureij camp in central Gaza Strip, Wednesday, July 16, 2008. Wishah's informally "adopted" Kantar, visiting him regularly while her son was in jail. Dozens of Palestinians on Wednesday handed out sweets and waved yellow Hezbollah flags to celebrate what they saw as a major victory for the Lebanese guerrillas, who were preparing a hero's welcome for five prisoners returning home in exchange for the bodies of two Israeli soldiers. From AP Photo by HATEM MOUSSA.
  • In this picture released by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar is greeted by wellwishers as he arrives in the coastal town of Naqoura, Lebanon, Wednesday, July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese militants arrived in Lebanon Wednesday shortly after being released by Israel as part of a prisoner exchange. The five include Samir Kantar, Lebanon's longest held prisoner in Israel. From AP Photo by Anwar Amro.
  • A man rolls a picture of Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar, who has beein held in an Israel jail for nearly 30-years, at a printing shop in the southern port city of Tyre, Lebanon, on Monday, July 14, 2008. Kantar is expected to be released in a prisoner swap on Wednesday. According to his lawyer, Kantar is "very excited" about his expected release after nearly 30 years in jail, and his mother said she is counting the seconds for the moment to see her son again. From AP Photo by Mohammed Zaatari.
  • In a pooled handout picture from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), freed Lebanese prisoners Samir Kantar (R), Maher Kurani (back-L) and Mohammed Sarur (back-R) arrive to the Israeli-Lebanese border to cross to Lebanon on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • In a pooled handout picture from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), Italian UN military police stand guard (back-R) as freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar gets into a van at the Israeli-Lebanese border to cross to Lebanon on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Handumeh Wushah, 72, the mother of Jaber Wushah, a former Palestinian cellmate of Samir Kantar, celebrates Kantar's release at her house in the Bureij camp in the central Gaza Strip on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed today by the Israeli authorities, among them triple murderer Kantar, have crossed into Lebanon, a Hezbollah official said. The prisoners were brought across the border in a convoy of four International Committee of the Red Cross vehicles. They were released in exchange for the bodies of two Israeli soldiers captured on July 12, 2006. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Siham (L), 69, mother of Druze Lebanese Samir Kantar, held in an Israel jail for the past 29 years, sits with Kantar's nephew next to a portrait of her son taken during his detention in Israel, at her home in the village of Abai on July 1, 2008. Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Siniora said today an expected prisoner swap between Israel and Hezbollah was a "huge failure" for the Jewish state and a victory for the Shiite militant group. Among the prisoners to make a triumphant homecoming will be Samir Kantar, the longest-serving Arab prisoner in Israeli jails who was convicted in 1980 to serve 542 years for the murder of an Israeli civilian and his four-year-old daughter, as well as an Israeli policeman. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Freed Lebanese prisoners (from L) Khaled Zidan, Maher Kurani, Mohammed Sarur, Hussein Suleiman and Samir Kantar, wearing Hezbollah milistary fatigues, pose at the airport in Beirut on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar (L), wearing Hezbollah military fatigues, arrives with his freed comrades (back) and Wafiq Safa (R), Hezbollah coordinator for the prisoner swap with Israel, to the airport in Beirut on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar (C) waves as he arrives to Naqura in southern Lebanon on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar (C), wearing Hezbollah military fatigues, shakes hands with Lebanese President Michel Sleiman (3rd-R) as Prime Minister Fuad Siniora (R) and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri stand nearby (2nd-R) upon the freed prisoners' arrival at the airport in Beirut on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • In a pooled handout picture from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar (front) gets into a van at the Lebanese-Israeli border to cross to Lebanon on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • In a pooled handout picture from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar (L) is greeted by wellwishers as he crosses to Lebanon on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • A pigeon flies as freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar (L), wearing Hezbollah military fatigues, breaks the bars of a mock prison upon his arrival with his freed comrades (back) to attend public celebrations at a stadium in Beirut's southern suburb on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • (From L) Hezbollah's military chief in south Lebanon Sheikh Nabil Qawuq, freed Lebanese prisoners Samir Kantar, Hussein Suleiman, Mohammed Sarur, Khaled Zidan and Maher Kurani, wearing Hezbollah military fatigues, raise their arms during a welcoming ceremony in Naqura in southern Lebanon on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar (L), wearing Hezbollah military fatigues, waves as he stands next to Hezbollah's military chief in south Lebanon Sheikh Nabil Qawuq (C) and freed Lebanese prisoner Hussein Suleiman (R) upon their arrival in Naqura in southern Lebanon on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • In a pooled handout picture from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), freed Lebanese prisoners Samir Kantar (R), Maher Kurani (back-L) and Mohammed Sarur (back-R) arrive to the Israeli-Lebanese border to cross to Lebanon on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • In a pooled handout picture from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), freed Lebanese prisoners Samir Kantar (C), Maher Kurani (C-L) and Mohammed Sarur (R) arrive to the Israeli-Lebanese border to cross to Lebanon on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • In a pooled handout picture from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar sits in a van as it leaves the Israeli-Lebanese border to cross to Lebanon on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Freed Lebanese prisoners (from L) Khaled Zidan, Maher Kurani, Mohammed Sarur, Hussein Suleiman and Samir Kantar, wearing Hezbollah milistary fatigues, pose at the airport in Beirut on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar (L) breaks the bars of a mock prison as he arrives to public celebrations at a stadium in Beirut's southern suburb on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar, wearing Hezbollah military fatigues, gestures as he arrives to Naqura in southern Lebanon on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar (2nd-R), wearing Hezbollah military fatigues, waves upon his arrival with his freed comrades to the airport in Beirut on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Freed Lebanese prisoners (from L) Hussein Suleiman, Khaled Zidan, Mohammed Sarur, Maher Kurani and Samir Kantar, wearing Hezbollah milistary fatigues, prepare to board a helicopter heading to Beirut following a welcoming ceremony in Naqura in southern Lebanon on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar adresses the crowd during public celebrations for the release of five Lebanese prisoners from Israel at a stadium in Beirut's southern suburbs on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar (C) waves as he arrives to Naqura in southern Lebanon on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar gestures as he arrives to Naqura in southern Lebanon on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • A Lebanese man displays posters of Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar at a printing press in the southern city of Tyre on July 14, 2008. Israel transferred today four Lebanese detainees, Khaled Zidan, Maher Kurani, Mohammed Sarur and Hussein Suleiman, to another prison joining Samir Kantar, ahead of an exchange with the Shiite militant group Hezbollah set for July 9, a prison spokesman said. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • In this photo dated April 22, 1979, made available by Israel's Maariv Tuesday, July 15, 2008,  Lebanese militant Samir Kantar is escorted by Israeli security forces on the coast near Nahariya, northern Israel. Kantar, then 16, was one of four militants who made their way in a rubber dinghy from Lebanon to Israel's northern shore in 1979 and attacked an apartment building in the coastal city of Nahariya, 5 miles (8 kilometers) from the Lebanese border. Israeli Danny Haran, 28, and his daughter Eynat, 4, were killed by Kantar, and Haran's younger daughter Yael, 2, was accidentally smothered to death  by her mother Smadar as the two were hiding from the attackers. From AP Photo by PAUL MELLING.
  • Freed Lebanese prisoner Samir Kantar waves as he arrives at the Naqura border point on the southern Lebanese border with Israel on July 16, 2008. Five Lebanese prisoners freed by the Israeli authorities arrived in Lebanon today, hours after Hezbollah handed over the bodies of two Israeli soldiers seized by its guerrillas two years ago. Among those freed in a prisoner swap greeted with triumph in Lebanon but anguish in Israel was Samir Kantar, who was sentenced to five life terms for a 1979 triple murder, including of a child. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.
  • Palestinians hold pictures of Samir Kantar, a Lebanese prisoner jailed in Israel, and other prisoners during a weekly protest calling for their release at the International Red Cross building in Gaza City, Monday, July 14, 2008. The Israeli prison service said that on Wednesday, it will free Samir Kantar, a Lebanese man serving multiple life terms for a 1979 attack. After infiltrating Israel, he killed a policeman, then kidnapped a man and his 4-year-old daughter and killed them outside their home. Israel's prison service said Israel would free five imprisoned Lebanese in exchange for two soldiers captured by Hezbollah in a cross-border raid that sparked the 2006 war. From AP Photo by ADEL HANA.
  • Israeli Moshe Sasson a survivor of Lebanese militant Samir Kantar's attack in 1979,reenacts part of the event outside the apartment building in the Israeli coastal city of Nahariya, Tuesday, July 15, 2008. Moshe Sasson felt the gun pressed against his head, a Lebanese assailant poised to shoot, when the lights in the hall of his apartment building suddenly went out, allowing him to flee to safety. The gunman, Samir Kuntar, went on to kill three other people in one of Israel's most notorious attacks. Three decades later, he is about to be freed in exchange for two Israeli soldiers whose capture set off a monthlong Mideast war. The Israelis are presumed dead. But Kantar, whose deadly rampage traumatizes Sasson to this day, is expected to return home to a hero's welcome. "I remember his face, the dark black eyes and murderous gaze," Sasson recalls."He was like the angel of death." From AP Photo by Ariel Schalit.
  • Israeli Moshe Sasson, a survivor of Lebanese militant Samir Kantar's attack in 1979, speaks to the Associated Press in the coastal city of Nahariya, Tuesday, July 15, 2008. Sasson felt the gun pressed against his head, a Lebanese assailant poised to shoot, when the lights in the hall of his apartment building suddenly went out, allowing him to flee to safety. The gunman, Samir Kuntar, went on to kill three other people in one of Israel's most notorious attacks. Three decades later, he is about to be freed in exchange for two Israeli soldiers whose capture set off a monthlong Mideast war. The Israelis are presumed dead. But Kantar, whose deadly rampage traumatizes Sasson to this day, is expected to return home to a hero's welcome. "I remember his face, the dark black eyes and murderous gaze," Sasson recalls."He was like the angel of death." From AP Photo by Ariel Schalit.


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British Prime Minister Gordon Brown (R) shakes hands with a British soldier of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) as he prepares to leave Camp Bastion in Helmand Province on August 21, 2008, ahead of a meeting with President Hamid Karzai after visiting British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, an AFP correspondent said. Brown's earlier visit with British soldiers fighting Taliban insurgents in volatile southern Afghanistan had been kept under wraps for security reasons. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown (R) shakes hands with a British soldier of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) as he prepares to leave Camp Bastion in Helmand Province on August 21, 2008, ahead of a meeting with President Hamid Karzai after visiting British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, an AFP correspondent said. Brown's earlier visit with British soldiers fighting Taliban insurgents in volatile southern Afghanistan had been kept under wraps for security reasons.

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British Prime Minister Gordon Brown walks boards an aircraft as he prepares to leave Camp Bastion in Afghanistan's Helmand Province on August 21, 2008. Brown flew into Kabul on August 21 for a meeting with President Hamid Karzai after visiting British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, an AFP correspondent said. Brown's earlier visit with British soldiers fighting Taliban insurgents in volatile southern Afghanistan had been kept under wraps for security reasons. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown walks boards an aircraft as he prepares to leave Camp Bastion in Afghanistan's Helmand Province on August 21, 2008. Brown flew into Kabul on August 21 for a meeting with President Hamid Karzai after visiting British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, an AFP correspondent said. Brown's earlier visit with British soldiers fighting Taliban insurgents in volatile southern Afghanistan had been kept under wraps for security reasons.

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British Prime Minister Gordon Brown walks boards an aircraft as he prepares to leave Camp Bastion in Afghanistan's Helmand Province on August 21, 2008. Brown flew into Kabul on August 21 for a meeting with President Hamid Karzai after visiting British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, an AFP correspondent said. Brown's earlier visit with British soldiers fighting Taliban insurgents in volatile southern Afghanistan had been kept under wraps for security reasons. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown walks boards an aircraft as he prepares to leave Camp Bastion in Afghanistan's Helmand Province on August 21, 2008. Brown flew into Kabul on August 21 for a meeting with President Hamid Karzai after visiting British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, an AFP correspondent said. Brown's earlier visit with British soldiers fighting Taliban insurgents in volatile southern Afghanistan had been kept under wraps for security reasons.

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British Prime Minister Gordon Brown (C) poses for a photograph with British troops as he prepares to leave Camp Bastion in Afghanistan's Helmand Province on August 21, 2008. Brown flew into Kabul on August 21 for a meeting with President Hamid Karzai after visiting British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, an AFP correspondent said. Brown's earlier visit with British soldiers fighting Taliban insurgents in volatile southern Afghanistan had been kept under wraps for security reasons. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown (C) poses for a photograph with British troops as he prepares to leave Camp Bastion in Afghanistan's Helmand Province on August 21, 2008. Brown flew into Kabul on August 21 for a meeting with President Hamid Karzai after visiting British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, an AFP correspondent said. Brown's earlier visit with British soldiers fighting Taliban insurgents in volatile southern Afghanistan had been kept under wraps for security reasons.

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British Prime Minister Gordon Brown (2-L) walks towards the aircraft as he prepares to leave Camp Bastion in Afghanistan's Helmand Province on August 21, 2008. Brown flew into Kabul on August 21 for a meeting with President Hamid Karzai after visiting British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, an AFP correspondent said. Brown's earlier visit with British soldiers fighting Taliban insurgents in volatile southern Afghanistan had been kept under wraps for security reasons. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown (2-L) walks towards the aircraft as he prepares to leave Camp Bastion in Afghanistan's Helmand Province on August 21, 2008. Brown flew into Kabul on August 21 for a meeting with President Hamid Karzai after visiting British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, an AFP correspondent said. Brown's earlier visit with British soldiers fighting Taliban insurgents in volatile southern Afghanistan had been kept under wraps for security reasons.

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British Prime Minister Gordon Brown walks towards the aircraft as he prepares to leave Camp Bastion in Afghanistan's Helmand Province on August 21, 2008. Brown flew into Kabul on August 21 for a meeting with President Hamid Karzai after visiting British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, an AFP correspondent said. Brown's earlier visit with British soldiers fighting Taliban insurgents in volatile southern Afghanistan had been kept under wraps for security reasons. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown walks towards the aircraft as he prepares to leave Camp Bastion in Afghanistan's Helmand Province on August 21, 2008. Brown flew into Kabul on August 21 for a meeting with President Hamid Karzai after visiting British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, an AFP correspondent said. Brown's earlier visit with British soldiers fighting Taliban insurgents in volatile southern Afghanistan had been kept under wraps for security reasons.

zoom
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown (2-L) talks with British soldiers of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) as he prepares to leave Camp Bastion in Helmand Province on August 21, 2008. Brown flew into Kabul on August 21 for a meeting with President Hamid Karzai after visiting British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, an AFP correspondent said. Brown's earlier visit with British soldiers fighting Taliban insurgents in volatile southern Afghanistan had been kept under wraps for security reasons. From Getty Images by AFP/Getty Images.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown (2-L) talks with British soldiers of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) as he prepares to leave Camp Bastion in Helmand Province on August 21, 2008. Brown flew into Kabul on August 21 for a meeting with President Hamid Karzai after visiting British soldiers in southern Afghanistan, an AFP correspondent said. Brown's earlier visit with British soldiers fighting Taliban insurgents in volatile southern Afghanistan had been kept under wraps for security reasons.

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