vmge Syrians trapped by ... 投稿者:Charlesteutend 投稿日:2024/12/29(Sun) 23:56 No.19966924
Nprs Kazakhstan Tries U.S. Image Makeover VIENTIANE, Laos --Phong Manithong was maimed and blinded at just 16 yearsold. A friend gave him what looked like a toy ball, but it was a bomb thatsuddenly exploded in his hands. Phong Manithong, left, was maimed and blinded by an unexploded American bomb CBS News I feel lots of pain on my body and I feel like Iwas in fire, Manithong said.His <a href=https://www.hokas.com.de>hoka winterschuhe</a> devastating injuries came from American munitionsdropped more than 40 years ago. During the war in neighboring Vietnam, U.S.warplanes unleashed 270 million cluster bombs on Laos to cut off enemy supplylines. Eighty million of them did not explode, resulting in morethan 20,000 casualties <a href=https://www.asicsgel.de>asics sneaker</a> since the war ended.U.S. bombs dropped decades ago in Laos still killing localsOn Wednesday, President Obama promised $90 million tohelp clear the ordinance from the country. We see the victims of bombs that were droppedbecause of decisions made half a century ago and we are reminded that warsalw <a href=https://www.salomons.com.es>salomon xt 6</a> ays carry tremendous costs, Obama said while surroundedby prosthetic limbs designed for the injured. U.S. cluster bombs still killing in Laos 24 photos Clearing the unexploded munitions is painst Nsgz Verdict on US hikers expected within a week An undated photo of Jalaluddin Haqqani, patriarch of the Haqqani network. CBS On Friday, the Obama administration announced its decision todeclare the Pakistan-based Haqqani network a terrorist body, subjecting all of its members to financial sanctions. This post was written by CBS News terrorism consultant Jere Van Dyk, who has worked in Afghanistan as a journalist over a 30-year period. He is the author of In Afghanistan, about his time living with Mujahideen in the 1980s, and Captive, about his time as a prisoner of the Taliban in 2008. He worked in Afghanistan and Pakistan for CBS News, off and on, from 2001 to 2008.In July 1973, the former Afghan Prime Minister Sardar Daoud Khan overthrew King Zahir Shah, who was his brother-in-law and first cousin, and established the Republic of Afghanistan. There was no sign of Islamic fundamentalism in Kabul then. School girls wore short skirts and long sock <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.ca>stanley mugs</a> s and laughed in the streets. There were outdoor restaurants, Russian movies, hippies, the smell of hashish, garbage and wood burning stoves. Long <a href=https://www.stanleycups.at>stanley cup</a> camel caravans moved slowly through the city, silent in the afternoon sun.That same year Burhanuddin Rabbani, a professor at the Islamic Faculty, Kabul University, where he founded the Muslim Youth Organization MYO , sent a letter to Daoud, called by some Afghans the Red Prince for his liberal leanings. If you free yourself from the commu
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