The New York Times Agency May 2010

EN_00913897_1199
The New York Times Agency May 2010
(NYT23) JIBLA, Yemen -- Jan. 15, 2003 -- YEMEN-BAPTISTS -- On Dec. 28, 2002, a young preacher named Ahmed Ali Jarallah assassinated a leading secular politician, Jarallah Omar, according to the police. Two days later, one of Jarallah's followers, Abed Abdel Razzak Kamel, is said to have killed three Americans in the Jibla hospital, which provided medical care in the southern town of Jibla for 35 years. Jarallah had often preached in a mosque in Sana, the capital of Yemen, about the conversions at the hospital. The complaints were echoed in local mosques more often recently, with anger growing over the United States' support for Israel and the prospect, highly unpopular in Yemen, of a war against Iraq. Increased security at Jibla hospital, Friday, Jan. 10, 2003. (Ian Fisher/The New York Times) *LITE
CENA MINIMALNA - 100 USD
2003-01-15
EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
Ian Fisher/The New York Times/Redux
15814157
0,76MB
25cm x 19cm by 300dpi
10, 15, 2002, 2003, 28, 35, A, ABDEL, ABED, ABOUT, ACCORDING, AGAINST, AHMED, ALI, AMERICANS, AND, ANGER, ASSASSINATED, AT, CAPITAL, CARE, COMPLAINTS, CONVERSIONS, DAYS, ECHOED, FISHER, FOLLOWERS, FOR, FRIDAY, GROWING, HAD, HAVE, HIGHLY, HOSPITAL, IAN, IN, INCREASED, IRAQ, IS, ISRAEL, JAN, JARALLAH, JIBLA, KAMEL, KILLED, LATER, LEADING, LITE, LOCAL, MEDIAXPRESS, MEDICAL, MORE, MOSQUE, MOSQUES, NAMED, NEW, NYT23, OF, OFTEN, OMAR, ON, ONE, OVER, POLICE, POLITICIAN, PREACHED, PREACHER, PROSPECT, PROVIDED, RAZZAK, RECENTLY, REDUX, SAID, SANA, SECULAR, SECURITY, SOUTHERN, STATES, SUPPORT, THE, THREE, TIMES, TO, TOWN, TWO, UNITED, UNPOPULAR, WAR, WERE, WHICH, WIECK, WITH, YEARS, YEMEN, YEMEN-BAPTISTS, YORK, YOUNG,