| Afghan Hazaras soldiers rest after a ceremony in the military compound in Bamiyan, some 130 kilometers (80 miles) northwest from Kabul, Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2003. New Zealand military took over Bamiyan's Provincial Reconstruction Team from U.S. troops. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko, POOL)
AP - Sep 23 10:03 AM |
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| Folding : US soldiers(R) and New Zealand soldiers(L) fold the US flag during the ceremony in the military compound in Bamiyan, Afghanistan . (AFP/POOL/Natasha Pisarenko)
AFP/POOL - Sep 23 9:59 AM |
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| Afghan Hazaras soldiers rest after a ceremony in the military compound in Bamiyan, about 130 kilometers (80 miles) northwest of Kabul, September 23, 2003. New Zealand military took over Bamiyan's Provincial Reconstruction Team from U.S. troops on Tuesday. REUTERS/Natacha Pisarenko/Pool
Reuters - Sep 23 9:13 AM |
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| New Zealand soldiers perform the traditional warrior dance or 'haka' at a ceremony in the military compound in Bamiyan, about 130 kilometers (80 miles) northwest of Kabul, September 23, 2003. New Zealand military took over Bamiyan's Provincial Reconstruction Team from U.S. troops on Tuesday. REUTERS/Natacha Pisarenko/Pool
Reuters - Sep 23 9:13 AM |
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| U.S. soldiers, center, walk to a helicopter while Afghan soldiers, right and left, stand by after a ceremony in the military compound in Bamiyan, some 130 kilometers (80 miles) northwest of Kabul, Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2003. New Zealand military took over Bamiyan's Provincial Reconstruction Team from U.S. troops. Caves that contained ancient statues of Buddha destroyed by hardline Taliban militia visible in the background. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko/POOL)
AP - Sep 23 9:03 AM |
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| New Zealand soldiers perform the traditional warrior dance or haka, during the ceremony in the military compound in Bamiyan, some 130 kilometers (80 miles) northwest from Kabul, Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2003. New Zealand military took over Bamiyan's Provincial Reconstruction Team from U.S. troops. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko, POOL)
AP - Sep 23 8:59 AM |
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| U.S. (R) and New Zealand soldiers (L) fold a U.S. flag during a ceremony at the military compound in Bamiyan, some 130 kilometers (80 miles) northwest of the Afghan capital Kabul September 23, 2003. The New Zealand military took over Bamiyan's Provincial Reconstruction Team from U.S. troops on Tuesday. REUTERS/Natacha Pisarenko/Pool
Reuters - Sep 23 8:53 AM |
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| A New Zealand soldier (L) and a U.S soldier raise the New Zealand flag at a ceremony in the military compound in Bamiyan, about 130 kilometers (80 miles) northwest of Kabul, September 23, 2003. New Zealand military took over Bamiyan's Provincial Reconstruction Team from U.S. troops on Tuesday. REUTERS/Natacha Pisarenko/Pool
Reuters - Sep 23 8:55 AM |
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| An Afghan woman looks at a poster of a giant Buddha in the Afghan capital Kabul, August 25, 2003. The Taliban regime destroyed two historic giant Buddha statues, one measuring 53 meters and the second one 48 meters, in central Bamiyan province in March, 2001. REUTERS/Ahmad Masood
Reuters - Aug 25 9:26 AM |
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