n18
CELEBS |PHotos 
   |
In.com User Rating
2 Ratings

2 0

Infiltration Photos


Young traders skew pieces of meat in Gao's main market on March 12, 2013. The market, which closed following a suicide bombing and infiltration by Islamic militants February 21, has just reopened, but is expected to close again for repair work.

Young traders skew

Getty Images

A woman plies her trade at Gao's main market on March 12, 2013. The market, which closed following a suicide bombing and infiltration by Islamic militants February 21, has just reopened, but is expected to close again for repair work.

A woman plies her

Getty Images

Traders crowd Gao's main market on March 12, 2013. The market, which closed following a suicide bombing and infiltration by Islamic militants February 21, has just reopened, but is expected to close again for repair work.

Traders crowd Gao's

Getty Images

Traders crowd Gao's main market, northern Mali, on March 12, 2013. The market, which closed following a suicide bombing and infiltration by Islamic militants February 21, has just reopened, but is expected to close again for repair work.

Traders crowd Gao's

Getty Images

Young traders work on March 12, 2013 in Gao's main market, northern Mali. The market, which closed following a suicide bombing and infiltration by Islamic militants February 21, has just reopened, but is expected to close again for repair work.

Young traders work

Getty Images

Traders crowd Gao's main market on March 12, 2013. The market, which closed following a suicide bombing and infiltration by Islamic militants February 21, has just reopened, but is expected to close again for repair work.

Traders crowd Gao's

Getty Images

A soldier of the Malian army traveling with Lieutenant-Colonel Nema Segara keeps watch as she visits Gao's main market on March 12, 2013. The market, which closed following a suicide bombing and infiltration by Islamic militants February 21, has just reopened, but is expected to close again for repair work.

A soldier of the

Getty Images

A soldier of the Malian army traveling with Lieutenant-Colonel Nema Segara keeps watches as she visits Gao's main market on March 12, 2013. The market, which closed following a suicide bombing and infiltration by Islamic militants February 21, has just reopened, but is expected to close again for repair work.

A soldier of the

Getty Images

Indian Border Security Force (BSF) soldiers stand guard along fencing near the India-Pakistan Chachwal border outpost some 65 km north from the North-Easter Indian city of Jammu on August 02, 2012. Indian authorities are investigating the nature of a tunnel believed to cross into Pakistan as border forces are on constant guard against infiltration attempts by Pakistani militant groups that target India. The India-Pakistan border dividing the two countries that have fought 3 wars since 1947 is one of the most militarised areas of world.

Indian Border

Getty Images

Indian Border Security Force (BSF) soldiers stand guard along fencing near the India-Pakistan Chachwal border outpost some 65 km north from the North-Easter Indian city of Jammu on August 02, 2012. Indian authorities are investigating the nature of a tunnel believed to cross into Pakistan as border forces are on constant guard against infiltration attempts by Pakistani militant groups that target India. The India-Pakistan border dividing the two countries that have fought 3 wars since 1947 is one of the most militarised areas of world.

Indian Border

Getty Images

Indian Border Security Force (BSF) soldiers stand guard along fencing near the India-Pakistan Chachwal border outpost some 65 km north from the North-Easter Indian city of Jammu on August 02, 2012. Indian authorities are investigating the nature of a tunnel believed to cross into Pakistan as border forces are on constant guard against infiltration attempts by Pakistani militant groups that target India. The India-Pakistan border dividing the two countries that have fought 3 wars since 1947 is one of the most militarised areas of world.

Indian Border

Getty Images

Indian Border Security Force (BSF) soldiers stand guard along fencing near the India-Pakistan Chachwal border outpost some 65 km north from the North-Easter Indian city of Jammu on August 02, 2012. Indian authorities are investigating the nature of a tunnel believed to cross into Pakistan as border forces are on constant guard against infiltration attempts by Pakistani militant groups that target India. The India-Pakistan border dividing the two countries that have fought 3 wars since 1947 is one of the most militarised areas of world.

Indian Border

Getty Images

Indian Border Security Force (BSF) soldiers, police, and members of the media stand at an opening of a large hole leading to a tunnel near the Chachwal border outpost some 65 km north from the North-Easter Indian city of Jammu on August 02, 2012. Indian authorities are investigating the nature of the tunnel believed to cross into Pakistan as border forces are on constant guard against infiltration attempts by Pakistani militant groups that target India. The India-Pakistan border dividing the two countries that have fought 3 wars since 1947 is one of the most militarised areas of world.

Indian Border

Getty Images

Indian Border Security Force (BSF) soldiers, police, and members of the media stand at an opening of a large hole leading to a tunnel near the Chachwal border outpost some 65 km north from the North-Easter Indian city of Jammu on August 02, 2012. Indian authorities are investigating the nature of the tunnel believed to cross into Pakistan as border forces are on constant guard against infiltration attempts by Pakistani militant groups that target India. The India-Pakistan border dividing the two countries that have fought 3 wars since 1947 is one of the most militarised areas of world.

Indian Border

Getty Images

Indian Border Security Force (BSF) soldier stands at an opening of a hole leading to a tunnel near the Chachwal border outpost some 65 km north from the North-Easter Indian city of Jammu on August 02, 2012. Indian authorities are investigating the nature of the tunnel believed to cross into Pakistan as border forces are on constant guard against infiltration attempts by Pakistani militant groups that target India. The India-Pakistan border dividing the two countries that have fought 3 wars since 1947 is one of the most militarised areas of world.

Indian Border

Getty Images

A girl holds a Hong Kong newspaper with an anti-mainland Chinese advertisement with a picture of a locust looking over the Hong Kong cityscape as Chinese mainlanders look on in the background on February 1, 2012. A group of Hong Kongers published a newspaper ad insulting mainland Chinese as 'locusts' and demanding the government take action to stop their 'infiltration' into the southern city. The full-page advertisement in widely-read Apple Daily is the latest in a slew of incidents suggesting mounting anger in Hong Kong about the political and economic influence of mainland China in local affairs. It features an enormous locust overlooking Hong Kong's skyline with the words 'Hong Kongers have had enough!' and 'This city is dying, you know?' Online group Golden Forum funded the page-11 ad with donations from users of its Internet chat service.

A girl holds a Hong

Getty Images

A girl holds a Hong Kong newspaper with an anti-mainland China advertisement with a picture of a locust looking over the Hong Kong cityscape as Chinese mainlanders pose for a picture in the background on February 1, 2012. A group of Hong Kongers published a newspaper ad insulting mainland Chinese as 'locusts' and demanding the government take action to stop their 'infiltration' into the southern city. The full-page advertisement in widely-read Apple Daily is the latest in a slew of incidents suggesting mounting anger in Hong Kong about the political and economic influence of mainland China in local affairs. It features an enormous locust overlooking Hong Kong's skyline with the words 'Hong Kongers have had enough!' and 'This city is dying, you know?' Online group Golden Forum funded the page-11 ad with donations from users of its Internet chat service.

A girl holds a Hong

Getty Images

An anti-mainland China advertisement is seen on a copy of the Apply Daily newspaper in Hong Kong on February 1, 2012. A group of Hong Kongers published a newspaper ad insulting mainland Chinese as 'locusts' and demanding the government take action to stop their 'infiltration' into the southern city. The full-page advertisement in widely-read Apple Daily is the latest in a slew of incidents suggesting mounting anger in Hong Kong about the political and economic influence of mainland China in local affairs. It features an enormous locust overlooking Hong Kong's skyline with the words 'Hong Kongers have had enough!' and 'This city is dying, you know?' Online group Golden Forum funded the page-11 ad with donations from users of its Internet chat service.

An anti-mainland

Getty Images