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Elizabeth Dalziel

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Elizabeth Dalziel

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  • Defaced picture images of Nepal's King Gyanendra and Queen Komal adorn a wall bearing advertisements for Noodles near the town of Sita Parthy, in southern Nepal Friday April 23, 2004. The nation of 26 million seems to offer laboratory conditions for a revolution: an undemocratic government under a feud-riven royal family; poverty exaerbated by a perceptiuon of government is remote and corrupt; a feudal system where a handful of rich landlords exploit millions of poor. In the mountains of Nepal, one of the world's last full-blown Maoist revolutions is thriving/forging ahead/gaining ground. (AP Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    NEPAL MAOIST 04
  • A statue of the late King Birendra of Nepal, who was murdered in alongside 10 other members of the royal family in 2001, stands in the a roadside town in the district of Dang, Saturday, April 24, 2004. Although more than 600 people have been injured in battles with the police and the street protestors, the five major political parties continue their demonstrations, demanding that King Gyanendra dismiss the government appointed by him, and allow new elections or form a government led by the major parties in the last Parliament.
    NEPAL MAOIST 08
  • Delegates head to a National People's Congress plenary session at the great Hall of the peopleBeijing, China, Monday, March 9, 2009. China's National People's Congress is a largely powerless body but it represents one of the country's last displays of old style communism. Ethnic minority delegates from around the country attend the meetings wearing traditional costumes, a conceit which allows the government to argue that the nation's different cultures co-exist harmoniously. Little is decided at these gatherings though. The NPC functions largely as a rubber stamp body for policies put forward by the Communist party's elite.
    CHINA GREAT HALL 04
  • Kaila Sah, a mother of 9, comforts her young child Sunil Kumar as he cries in pain from injuries suffered during an explosion set off in a market by Maoist rebels, at the Disaster ward in the Hospital of the southern Nepali town of Nepalganj Tuesday April 13, 2004. Although more than 600 people have been injured in battles with the police and the street protestors, the five major political parties continue their demonstrations, demanding that King Gyanendra dismiss the government appointed by him, and allow new elections or form a government led by the major parties in the last Parliament.
    NEPAL MAOISTS 02
  • Armed Troops from the 2nd Battalion dance alongside villagers after descending from the mountains in to the valley to take part in a cultural program and remembrance ceremony in the village of Kholagaun, in the Maoist heartland of Nepal, Thursday, April 22, 2004. Although more than 600 people have been injured in battles with the police and the street protestors, the five major political parties continue their demonstrations, demanding that King Gyanendra dismiss the government appointed by him, and allow new elections or form a government led by the major parties in the last Parliament.
    NEPAL MAOIST 10
  • Protesters show letters detailing their complaints and asking for justice as they are taken away by police outside of the Foreign Ministry  Beijing, China, Wednesday, Dec.10, 2008. Two dozen people held a bold protest using the 60th anniversary of the declaration of human rights to decry a myriad of alleged government abuses.
    CHINA CHASING JUSTICE 01
  • A woman garbed in a black robe, the traditional Muslim outfit worn by most women in the area walks past festive party dresses at a local shop in the town of Hindia, Iraq, Sunday June 8, 2003. A  strengthened  fundamentalist rule of Islamic law has filled the power vacum left by the toppled regime of Saddam Hussein, who during his government supressed opposition from the Shiite Muslim.
    IRAQ WOMEN
  • A Chinese Protester wrestles with police as she tries to retrieve  letters detailing her complaints and asks for justice outside of the Foreign Ministry  Beijing, China, Wednesday, Dec.10, 2008. Two dozen people held a bold protest using the 60th anniversary of the declaration of human rights to decry a myriad of alleged government abuses.(AP Photo/ Elizabeth Dalziel)
    CHINA CHASING JUSTICE 19
  • A Chinese Protester cries over the death of a relative as he shows letters detailing his complaints and asks for justice outside of the Foreign Ministry  Beijing, China, Wednesday, Dec.10, 2008. Two dozen people held a bold protest using the 60th anniversary of the declaration of human rights to decry a myriad of alleged government abuses.
    CHINA CHASING JUSTICE 20
  • Delegates attend a plenary session of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference at Beijing's Great Hall of the people Beijing, China, Saturday, March 7, 2009.China's National People's Congress is a largely powerless body but it represents one of the country's last displays of old style communism. Ethnic minority delegates from around the country attend the meetings wearing traditional costumes, a conceit which allows the government to argue that the nation's different cultures co-exist harmoniously. Little is decided at these gatherings though. The NPC functions largely as a rubber stamp body for policies put forward by the Communist party's elite.
    CHINA GREAT HALL 12
  • A monk sits among fellow delegates at a plenary session of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, at Beijing's Great Hall of the people Beijing, China, Saturday, March 7, 2009. China's National People's Congress is a largely powerless body but it represents one of the country's last displays of old style communism. Ethnic minority delegates from around the country attend the meetings wearing traditional costumes, a conceit which allows the government to argue that the nation's different cultures co-exist harmoniously. Little is decided at these gatherings though. The NPC functions largely as a rubber stamp body for policies put forward by the Communist party's elite.
    CHINA GREAT HALL 02
  • A Protester is approached by police after voicing his complaints and asking for justice outside of the Foreign Ministry  Beijing, China, Wednesday, Dec.10, 2008. Two dozen people held a bold protest using the 60th anniversary of the declaration of human rights to decry a myriad of alleged government abuses.
    CHINA CHASING JUSTICE 18
  • A Chinese Petitioners approach a car, blocking the vehicle's way, as they plead to show their grievances, near a local government office supposed to receive petitions in  Beijing, China, Friday, Feb.27, 2009. Police have taken away more than 1,000 petitioners looking to air their grievances ahead of the annual meeting of China's legislature, supporter of the petitioners said. Widespread frustration with the petition system is simmering and in several recent cases has boiled over, with a handful of people making desperate bids for attention. The peak season for the pilgrimages is the beginning of March, when China's lawmakers gather in the capital for their once-a-year legislative session. In an acknowledgement that the petition system is in crisis, China's Premier Wen Jiabao vowed to improve legal channels for grievances.
    CHINA CHASING JUSTICE 14
  • Chinese Petitioners kneel before a car, blocking the vehicle's way, as they beg to display their petition letters near a local government office supposed to receive grievances in  Beijing, China, Friday, Feb.27, 2009.  Police have taken away more than 1,000 petitioners looking to air their grievances ahead of the annual meeting of China's legislature. Widespread frustration with the petition system is simmering and in several recent cases has boiled over, with a handful of people making desperate bids for attention.The peak season for the pilgrimages is the beginning of March, when China's lawmakers gather in the capital for their once-a-year legislative session. In an acknowledgement that the petition system is in crisis, China's Premier Wen Jiabao vowed to improve legal channels for grievances.
    CHINA CHASING JUSTICE 11
  • Chinese soldiers stand guard in front of the Great Hall of the People at Tiananmen square in Beijing, China, Thursday, March 5, 2009. China's National People's Congress is a largely powerless body but it represents one of the country's last displays of old style communism. Ethnic minority delegates from around the country attend the meetings wearing traditional costumes, a conceit which allows the government to argue that the nation's different cultures co-exist harmoniously. Little is decided at these gatherings though. The NPC functions largely as a rubber stamp body for policies put forward by the Communist party's elite.
    CHINA GREAT HALL 10
  • Delegates have tea ahead of a plenary session of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, at Beijing's Great Hall of the people Beijing, China, Saturday, March 7, 2009. China's National People's Congress is a largely powerless body but it represents one of the country's last displays of old style communism. Ethnic minority delegates from around the country attend the meetings wearing traditional costumes, a conceit which allows the government to argue that the nation's different cultures co-exist harmoniously. Little is decided at these gatherings though. The NPC functions largely as a rubber stamp body for policies put forward by the Communist party's elite.
    CHINA GREAT HALL 06
  • A villager shows a picture of the late King Birendra of Nepal, who was murdered in alongside 10 other members of the royal family in 2001, is seen in  a heart shaped window in the wallet of a villager in the district of Rukum, viewed as the Maoist heartland Friday April 23, 2004. The Maoists, who say they are inspired by Chinese revolutionary leader Mao Zedong, have been battling since February 1996 to replace the monarchy with a communist state. The current Nepali King Gyanendra, faces besides tackling the insurgency, daily protests in the capital for dumping a democratically elected government in 2002.
    NEPAL MAOIST 11
  • A Nepali farmers rest under a tree as they treck their way along the narrow paths that lie between villages instead of roads in the Maoist controlled district of Rukum . Among the conditions that Nepal offers for a revolution, not only is there no democratically elected government, but farmers still have few roads or schools and live under a feudal systemwhere a handful of rich landlords exploit millions of poor. (AP Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)
    NEPAL MAOIST 05