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Kathmandu, Nepal: A Nepalese man whose head has been painted with the communist hammer and sickle symbol joins a procession to mark International Labour Day
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Benghazi, Libya: A Libyan woman gestures in support of rebel fighters as they undergo training near the courthouse
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Beijing, China: Visitors to Tiananmen Square pose for photos near a portrait of Sun Yat-sen, who is widely regarded as the founding father of modern China
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Malaga, Spain: A woman places a sticker for the CCOO, the largest trade union in Spain, on the cap of a demonstrator as he holds a pick before joining a May Day march
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Tokyo, Japan: Babies held by amateur sumo wrestlers burst into tears during the annual Nakizumo (crying sumo) festival at Sensoji temple. 80 babies participated in the event, believed to bring them good health
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Birmingham, Alabama, USA: Stuffed deer heads loaded into a car as people try to salvage their belongings in the tornado-ravaged neighbourhood of Pratt City
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Jerusalem: Tourists visit the Yad Vashem holocaust memorial museum, on the eve of Israel's Holocaust Remembrance Day
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Karachi, Pakistan: A labourer works on a construction site
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The Vatican: Prelates wait in St Peter's Square for Pope Benedict XVI to lead the beatification mass for the late Pope John Paul II, moving his predecessor one step closer to sainthood
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Arsenal v Manchester United
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Arsène Wenger's Arsenal may have fallen short in their bid for the title, but the Gunners know they can at least dent the prospects of United. Perhaps that's why Wenger is smiling so much before kick-off
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In one of the clearest chances of the half, Theo Walcott races on to a Robin van Persie whipped-in cross ...
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but the England international has to stretch beyond his capabilities, causing his shot to rise over the bar
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England team-mates Wayne Rooney and Jack Wilshere race for the ball on the left flank – the former fouling the latter in his desperation to claim possession
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Just after the half-hour mark, Nemanja Vidic handles a dangerous cross from Walcott as it flashes past him from the right wing. The Serbian defender clearly tips the ball out of the path of Robin van Persie, but the referee and linesman somehow fail to notice it
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Van Persie is incensed and gives the linesman an earful
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Arsenal eventually get the goal their play deserves when, in the 56th minute, Ramsey deftly steers a first-time shot into the far corner of the net following Van Persie's cute cut-back
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United are growing frustrated and, predictably, it leads to a bit of handbags
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Evra goes down in the box under a challenge from Theo Walcott
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But the referee makes it clear he's not interested
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Alex Ferguson is outraged three minutes from time when substitute Michael Owen is cut down by Gaël Clichy as he sprints into the box. That's another good penalty appeal which the ref has ignored – one apiece now
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The final whistle blows and Arsenal are victorious. But how much sweeter would this victory have been had they not fluffed their title chances in recent weeks?
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Meanwhile, Rooney wears a looks of concern. United's lead at the top of the table remains three points, but they no longer have games in hand over Chelsea. Worse still, defeat to Chelsea at Old Trafford next weekend would see the Londonders leapfrog them in the table. An anxious match awaits
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TRIPOLI, Libya — Vandals attacked the Italian and British embassies in the Libyan capital Sunday, hours after Moammar Gadhafi escaped a NATO missile strike that a government spokesman said killed one of his sons and three young grandchildren.
Britain responded to the attack on its embassy complex in Tripoli, which left the buildings badly burned, by announcing it was expelling the Libyan ambassador to London.
NATO's attack on a blast wall-ringed Gadhafi family compound in a residential area of Tripoli late Saturday signaled escalating pressure on the Libyan leader who has tried to crush an armed rebellion that erupted in mid-February. Libyan officials denounced the strike as an assassination attempt and a violation of international law.
The bombing also drew criticism from Russia, which cast doubt on NATO's assertion that the alliance is not targeting Gadhafi or members of his family.
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Man City 2 West Ham 1
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Nigel de Jong gets city's first when a corner isn't cleared
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Lars Jacobsen scores an own goal for city's second but Demba Ba reduces the arrears
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Balotelli hits the bar which was the only highlight of the second half
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Afghanistan: Suicide bomber 'aged 12' kills four
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A suicide bomber said to be aged 12 has killed four people in east Afghanistan, one of several attacks a day after the Taliban announced a spring offensive.
A dozen people were injured as the suicide bomber struck a crowded market in Paktika province, killing a local official, a woman and two other men.
In Ghazni City, a gunman opened fire at a police checkpoint, killing two police officers and two civilians.
A bicycle bomb near the city's police station wounded 13 civilians.
The BBC's Paul Wood in Kabul says some believe the suicide bomber, if he was 12, would be one of the youngest ever to have staged such an attack.
He says by one count there are more than 150 would-be suicide bombers between 13-17 years of age who have been intercepted by the Afghan security forces.
On Saturday the Taliban declared a new campaign to attack foreign troops, Afghan security forces and government officials.
International organisations, including the UN, have warned their staff not to go out unless it is absolutely necessary.
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Al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden dead - Barack Obama
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Al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden has been killed by US forces in Pakistan, President Barack Obama has said.
The al-Qaeda leader was killed in a ground operation outside Islamabad based on US intelligence, the first lead for which emerged last August.
Mr Obama said after "a firefight", US forces took possession of his body.
Bin Laden was accused of being behind a number of atrocities, including the attacks on New York and Washington on 11 September 2001.
He was top of the US' "most wanted" list.
Mr Obama said it was "the most significant achievement to date in our nation's effort to defeat al-Qaeda".
The US has put its embassies around the world on alert, warning Americans of the possibility of al-Qaeda reprisal attacks for Bin Laden's killing.
Crowds gathered outside the White House in Washington DC, chanting "USA, USA" after the news emerged.
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British boxing legend Sir Henry Cooper dies aged 76
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Heavyweight boxing legend Sir Henry Cooper has died at the age of 76 at his son's house in Oxted, Surrey.
The former British, Commonwealth and European champion fought 55 times and is revered for his 1963 knockdown of Muhammad Ali - then Cassius Clay.
In a statement, Ali said he would miss his "old friend", calling him "a great fighter and a gentleman".
London-born Cooper, who won the BBC Sports Personality of the Year award twice, was knighted in 2000.
Alongside Frank Bruno, Tommy Farr and Lennox Lewis, Cooper is considered one of the great British heavyweights.
Sir Henry's 5 most memorable fights:-
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Cooper v Brian London, 1959. The British title fight that announced Cooper’s arrival; it left the winner’s face a mask of blood after 15 rounds and London barely able to stand
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Cooper v Cassius Clay, 1963. Cooper was far lighter but he felled Clay near the end of the fourth round of the world title eliminator at Wembley with his famous left hook, ‘Enry’s ‘ammer’
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Cooper v Muhammad Ali, 1966. Two years after changing his name, Ali, now the world champion, was more wary of Cooper and wrapped him up in clinches at Highbury. Cooper suffered another bad cut to his left eye and the fight was stopped in the 6th round
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Cooper v Floyd Patterson, 1966. Four months after his second battle with Ali, Cooper was knocked out by the American former world champion in the fourth round
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Cooper v Joe Bugner, 1971. British, Commonwealth and European titles were at stake and after 15 well-contested rounds, Bugner, the young buck of British boxing, was awarded the decision by a quarter of a point. Many fight fans never forgave him. Cooper did not box again and refused to talk to referee Harry Gibbs, who scored the bout, for years afterwards
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Henry Cooper with his medal of investiture at Buckingham Palace, London in 2000
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Sir Henry Cooper at the Repton Boys Club in London 7 May 2009
''What a sad day. May your memory live on''
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Snooker commentator 'Whispering' Ted Lowe dies at 90
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Former snooker commentator Ted Lowe has died at 90, the BBC has learned.
Lowe, born in Berkshire, became a household name through the hit television show Pot Black in 1969 and retired after the 1996 world final.
He died on the morning of the first session of the 2011 Snooker World Championship final in Sheffield.
Lowe's unmistakable hushed tones earned him the popular nickname "Whispering Ted" and he was the BBC's lead commentator on many occasions.
His wife of 21 years, Jean, said: "His health had been deteriorating for the last 10 weeks. He went into a hospice a week ago and I never left his side. But I could see he was slowly going. He still loves snooker and was watching it on TV."
John Virgo, a former player before becoming a co-commentator alongside Lowe, said: "He set a standard for us all. He was wonderful, he had an impish sense of humour and while cricket had its John Arlott and Wimbledon had its Dan Maskell, we had Ted Lowe.
"He was one of the BBC greats. It's a sad day for snooker and he'll be sadly missed."
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Thousands protest in Sri Lanka against UN report
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Tens of thousands of Sri Lankans have used May Day rallies to reject a UN report calling for both sides in the country's civil war to be investigated over possible war crimes.
In the capital Colombo, government supporters carried placards criticising senior UN figures.
The report, released last week, said shelling by government forces killed tens of thousands of civilians.
It also said Tamil Tiger rebels had used civilians as human shields.
The Sri Lankan government has rejected the report.
Speaking at a rally, President Mahinda Rajapaksa told the crowd that Sri Lanka would not bow to external pressures.
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Students gather at the fence on the north side of the White House and sing the Star Spangled Banner May 1, in Washington, DC. US President Barack Obama announced the death of Osama Bin Laden during a late evening statement to the press in the East Room of the White House. Bin Laden was killed north of Islamabad, Pakistan, almost a decade after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, and his body is in possession of the United States.
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A fireman helps a little boy aim a firehose at a target of tin cans at the annual MyFest in Kreuzberg district on May 1, in Berlin, Germany. MyFest draws thousands of participants for a grand street party, though in years past it has ended in with violent clashes between left-wing demonstrators and police later in the evening.
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An Ultra Orthodox Jewish man visits the Hall of Names at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem, May 1. Israel will mark its annual Holocaust Memorial Day on Monday, May, 2.
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Rallies, Parades and Strikes mark May Day worldwide
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A woman greets Russian communist supporters from a window with a red cloth during the traditional May Day rally in central Moscow on May 1. May Day traditionally celebrates the rights of the proletariat in the former Soviet Union. Crowds waving balloons and blue or red flags gathered in cities from the Pacific port of Vladivostok to Moscow in carefully-choreographed rallies reminiscent of the Soviet era when May 1 was one of the most venerable holidays celebrating international socialism.
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Riot policemen stand beside fire flares as they clash with left-wing protestors during May Day demonstrations in the Kreuzberg district of Berlin, May 1.
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Cuban soldiers bearing their national flag march in the May Day parade at Revolution Square in Havana, Cuba, May 1. The demonstration is being touted as a massive show of support for economic changes recently approved by the Communist Party - even though the people holding placards and shouting slogans haven't seen the details yet.
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A man walks next a tied up ship at the port of Piraeus, near Athens, on Sunday, May 1, during a 24-hour port strike. Rail services in Greece, including the Athens suburban railway were suspended for 24 hours. Protesters gathered in central Athens and other Greek cities for May Day rallies to protest against the austere measures needed to secure rescue loans for near-bankrupt Greece.
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This combination picture shows the V8 Supercar of Australian driver Karl Reindler, right, bursting into flame after another race car, left, driven by Steve Owen collided with him during competition at Barbagallo Raceway in Perth May 1. Both drivers walked away from the crash with Reindler being taken to hospital with burns to his hands, local media reported.
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Alberta Baptist Church Buildings and Grounds chairperson Dan Turner takes a moment to pray in the demolished sanctuary of the church in Tuscaloosa, Ala. on Sunday, May 1. About 100 church members gathered outside the church Sunday morning for a brief service before helping their neighbors.
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Teressa Lambert, second from left, comforts her daughter Rachael Gaudio during a Sunday church service, May 1, at the site of the Phil Campbell Church of God, destroyed in a deadly tornado April 27, in Phil Campbell, Ala. Top government officials planned to survey the devastated landscape left by tornadoes in the South on May 1, as President Barack Obama's administration tries to show it is on top of the deadliest U.S. natural disaster since Hurricane Katrina
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Worshippers sign a makeshift crucifix folowing a Sunday church service at the site of the Phil Campbell Church of God, May 1.
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A volunteer salvages sports equipment from Alberta Elementary School in the Alberta City neighborhood of Tuscaloosa, Ala., May 1.
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Ruth Cole becomes emotional while digging through her destroyed business on May 1, in Tuscaloosa, Ala. Cole had no insurance on her business or her home, which was also destroyed in the storm. Alabama, the hardest-hit of six states, is reported to have been battered with at least an EF-4 rated tornado with the death toll across the South rising to over 300 as a result of the storms.
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In an April 30 photo, relatives of Kathy Gray Haney gather near the grave after her burial in Pisgah, Ala., with tornado-damaged trees in the background. The neighborhood where the Gray family lived was hit by two tornadoes within a 10-hour period, killing Gray Haney and two other relatives.
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Family and friends help roll a car upright at Ron Nichols' home, Saturday, April 30, in Hackleburg, Ala., following the massive tornado that leveled portions of the town Wednesday.
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Workers work on the roof of a damaged historic building with a mural in Cullman, Ala., April 30.
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Tracy Hannah paints a warning on the door of her destroyed home on April 30, in Tuscaloosa, Ala.
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Michael Glasgow, 37, shows the injuries he sustained from the tornado on Wednesday that took the lives of his three-month-old son Chase Zion Glasgow and his 42-year-old sister Tammi Glasgow at what is left of his home Saturday, April 29, in Cleveland, Tenn.
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International Labour Day: Egyptian quarry workers
Workers in the stone quarries of El Minia, in Egypt, earn low wages and face appalling health and safety conditions. They also lack legal protection of their rights, and don't qualify for health insurance
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In this stone quarry in El Minia, in Egypt, tens of thousands of Egyptians (including children) work in back-breaking conditions just to make ends meet. Ahmad, 11, works in one of the quarries, throwing chipped bricks into a stone crusher. The bricks are ground into powder for cement, which is used in dyes and pharmaceuticals
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The work is hazardous and badly paid. Workers get 20 to 30 Egyptian pounds per day ($3-$5), but they work on a demand basis so they may not get a full week’s work every week. The wage is similar to cleaners, security staff, bottom of the ladder civil servants and clerks. However, occupational hazards – such as the high risk of injury in the quarries and the irregularity of employment – make it a far more dangerous sector to work in. There are few alternative employment opportunities. Farming or fishing are the other main sources of income for poor families on the eastern bank of the Nile, but this only brings in between two to 12 Egyptian pounds per day, depending on the season
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Workers rights are routinely abused, but it’s the long-term and often devastating impact on health that is the biggest issue. The effort of bending and lifting stone blocks all day leaves workers prone to slipped disks and other back problems
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Asthma, lung and respiratory problems are an inevitable consequence of the dust that gets everywhere. There are no statistics of the number of people who get sick due to working in the quarries. But long-term illnesses are very common among quarry workers
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Exposed electric cables (to power the stone-cutting machines) can knock unconscious anyone who steps on them. Injuries from accidents in the quarries are very high (from electric shocks or from the cutting machines). Fatalities and major injuries occur almost daily in the 172 registered and 220 unregistered quarries in the area
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The manically rotating saws on the stone cutters can swing off without warning, cutting or maiming anyone nearby
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Although child labour is illegal, families who are short of cash send their boys to the quarries, either instead of school or at weekends and in the holidays. In 2008, Egypt amended its child protection law to raise the minimum working ages from 14 to 15 for regular employment and from 12 to 13 for seasonal employment. However, in some cases, children as young as seven are still working in the informal sector. Haytham is 13 and works in one of the stone quarries of El Minia. Wadi el Nil is working to protect children in the quarries. It runs programmes with families of child workers and with schools, to get children back into education
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White House crowds celebrate Bin Laden's death
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People gather outside the White House chanting and singing the Star-Spangled Banner following President Obama's announcement of the death of Osama bin Laden.
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A crowd of hundreds of people gather in Times Square, New York, to cheer the news of the death of the al-Qaida leader
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Actor Rob Lowe joins New York City firefighters in Times Square celebrating the news
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Arab-Americans celebrate the news in Dearborn, Michigan
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US marines of Regiment Combat Team 1 watch President Obama's announcement at Camp Dwyer in Helmand Province, Afghanistan
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Bin Laden's compound
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Surrounded in red fabric, a compound is seen where locals reported a firefight took place overnight in Abbotabad, located in Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, May 2, 2011.
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The compound, within which al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was killed, is seen in flames after it was attacked in Abbottabad in this still image taken from video footage from a mobile phone, May 2, 2011.
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A Pakistani soldier and policemen stand near a compound, where locals reported a firefight took place overnight in Abbotabad, located in Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, May 2, 2011.
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Pakistani soldiers remove the wreckage of a helicopter covered with it tarpaulin from a compound, where locals reported a firefight took place overnight in Abbotabad, located in Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, May 2, 2011.
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Soldiers patrol the city of Abbotabad in Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, May 2, 2011.
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Pakistani soldiers walk past a compound, surrounded in red fabric, where locals reported a firefight took place overnight in Abbotabad, located in Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, May 2, 2011.
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People carry an injured protester, shot by Ugandan military forces, in Kampala
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Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez arrives at a rally to commemorate Labour Day in Caracas May 1, 2011.
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Riot police stand guard outside a communications company office that was destroyed by protesters during May Day demonstrations in Cali May 1, 2011.
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Men try to push away rainwater from the bullring in the Maestranza bullring in Seville , 2011. Bullfights were finally suspended because of weather conditions.
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Palestinian youths throw stones towards a Jewish settler's car during clashes between Palestinian stone-throwers and Israeli border police officers in the mostly Arab neighbourhood of Silwan in East Jerusalem April 29, 2011.
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Visitors make their way amid a sandstorm at a scenic spot on the outskirts of Shijiazhuang, Hebei province April 30, 2011.
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Kayapo women dance for members of the "Expedicionarios da Saude" (Brazilian Health Expeditions) to show their appreciation during a ceremony on the last day of the medical expedition to the Kikretum community in Sao Felix, northern Brazil, April 29, 2011.
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Children stand at a damaged area, which the Libyan government said was from a coalition air strike, at the house of Saif Al-Arab Gaddafi, son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, in Tripoli May 1, 2011
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Nikolay Davydenko from Russia reacts after winning a BMW 1 after defeating Florian Mayer from Germany in the final of ATP tennis tournament "BMW Open" in Munich May 1, 2011.
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Honda MotoGP rider Marco Simoncelli of Italy loses control of his motorcycle during the Portuguese Grand Prix in Estoril May 1, 2011.
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Worshippers embrace during a Sunday church service at the site of the Phil Campbell Church of God, destroyed in a deadly tornado April 27, in Phil Campbell, Alabama May 1, 2011.
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A protester lies injured after clashes with police during protests on May Day in Bogota May 1, 2011.
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The coffin containing the body of Pope John Paul II is exhumed ahead of his beatification in the Vatican April 29, 2011.
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Left-wing protestors march surrounded by riot policemen during May Day demonstrations in Hamburg May 1, 2011.
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A mechanical arm, seen in this image published on the web site of France's BEA air accident inquiry office May 1, 2011, holds an orange cylindrical flight data recorder above the sand.
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A rebel fighter armed with a rocket propelled grenade (RPG), provides security from atop a building to thousands of comrades and civilians during Friday prayers in central Ajdabiyah April 29, 2011.
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Tunisian rescuers transport a wounded rebel fighter at a hospital near the Libyan and Tunisian border crossing of Dehiba April 29, 2011.
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Pro-Ouattara soldiers of FRCI (Republican forces of Ivory coast) guard with their weapons in Yopougon April 29, 2011.
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A man walks across an abandoned street during demonstrations in Kampala April 29, 2011.
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A crashed military helicopter is seen near the hideout of Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden after a ground operation by US Special Forces in Abbottabad on May 2.
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Pakistani army soldiers move pieces of a crashed helicopter near the hideout of Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden after a ground operation by US Special Forces in Abbottabad on May 2.