arch7

EN_01085661_0014
arch7
(NYT52) KISMAYO, Somalia -- Jan. 5, 2007 -- SOMALIA-ETHIOPIA -- In January, women in Kismayo, Somalia were selling khat, a narcotic leaf that was outlawed by the Islamists who controlled most the country until last month. The State Department's top diplomat for Africa has been planning a trip to Mogadishu on Sunday, American officials said Friday. It would be the first time in more than a decade that a high-ranking United States official has set foot in the violence-scarred Somali capital. But Al Qaeda's second-in-command, Ayman al-Zawahiri, urged the world's Muslims on Friday to turn Somalia into a battlefield and use suicide attacks. (Michael Kamber/The New York Times)
MINIMALNA CENA 100USD!!!
arch7
2013-06-09
MICHAEL KAMBER/The New York Time/EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
MICHAEL KAMBER
h_06988489
0,68MB
25cm x 17cm przy 300dpi
2007, 5, A, AFRICA, AL, AL-ZAWAHIRI, AMERICAN, AND, ATTACKS, AYMAN, BATTLEFIELD, BE, BEEN, BUT, BY, CAPITAL, CONTROLLED, COUNTRY, DECADE, DEPARTMENT, DIPLOMAT, FIRST, FOOT, FOR, FRIDAY, HAS, HIGH-RANKING, IN, INTO, ISLAMISTS, IT, JAN, JANUARY, KAMBER, KHAT, KISMAYO, LAST, LEAF, MICHAEL, MOGADISHU, MONTH, MORE, MOST, MUSLIMS, NARCOTIC, NEW, NYT52, OFFICIAL, OFFICIALS, ON, OUTLAWED, PLANNING, QAEDA, SAID, SELLING, SET, SOMALI, SOMALIA, SOMALIA-ETHIOPIA, STATE, STATES, SUICIDE, SUNDAY, THAN, THAT, THE, TIME, TIMES, TO, TOP, TRIP, TURN, UNITED, UNTIL, URGED, USE, VIOLENCE-SCARRED, WAS, WERE, WHO, WOMEN, WORLD, WOULD, YORK,