** FILE **A Jewish settler struggles with an Israeli security officer during clashes that erupted as authorities evacuated the West Bank settlement outpost of Amona, east of the Palestinian town of Ramallah, in this Feb. 1, 2006, file photo. Oded Balilty of The Associated Press has won the Pulitzer Prize for breaking news photography for his image of a lone Jewish woman defying Israeli security forces as they remove illegal settlers in the West Bank. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty/FILE)
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An Iraqi woman reacts while she waits outside Baghdad's Abu Ghraib prison for her loved one to be released Thursday Jan. 8 2004. Hundreds of people waited in frustration for hours, hoping relatives would be among the first detainees that coalition officials said would be freed under a much-publicized amnesty.This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen)
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Mohammed Saleem, age 18 months, lies in a coffin in a Sadr City morgue Sunday June 6, 2004 after he and four other members of his family were killed Saturday night when U.S. forces opened fire hitting the vehicle in which they were traveling, according to the family. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Karim Kadim)
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Iraqis chant anti-American slogans as charred bodies hang from a bridge over the Euphrates River in Fallujah, west of Baghdad, Wednesday, March 31 2004. Enraged Iraqis in this hotbed of anti-Americanism killed four foreigners Wednesday, including at least one U.S. national, took the charred bodies from a burning SUV, dragged them through the streets, and hung them from the bridge. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)
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A dove sits on the shoulder of a Mahdi army soldier standing guard near the ancient Imam Ali mosque Sunday Aug. 15, 2004. Negotiations to end the fighting in Najaf broke down Sunday, threatening to spark a resurgence of the fierce clashes between Shiite militants and a combined U.S.-Iraqi force that have plagued this holy city for more than a week. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)
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** FILE ** This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. Insurgents, using small arms and mortars, launch an attack on U.S. forces in Fallujah, Iraq, Monday, Nov. 8, 2004. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography, Monday April 4, 2005 for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)
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Displaced Iraqis watch American soldiers while waiting to pass through a U.S. military checkpoint to return home to Fallujah, Iraq Tuesday, April 27, 2004. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. .(AP Photo/John Moore)
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U.S. Marines pay their final respects at a memorial service for 1st Marine Division Combat Photographer Cpl. William Salazar, 26, of Las Vegas, NV, at Camp Blue Diamond, on the outskirts of Ramadi, Iraq, Monday, Oct. 18, 2004. Salazar was killed in action in Anbar Province on October 15th. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)
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A U.S. Marine of the 1st Division carries a mascot for good luck in his backpack as his unit pushed further into the western part of Fallujah, Iraq, Sunday, Nov. 14, 2004. The U.S. military's ground and air assault of Fallujah has gone quicker than expected, with the entire city occupied after six days of fighting, the Marine commander who planned the offensive said Sunday. The military said 31 Americans have been killed in the siege. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)
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A detainee in an outdoor solitary confinement cell talks with a military policeman at the Abu Ghraib prison on the outskirts of Baghdad, Iraq Tuesday, June 22, 2004. The American soldiers said that he had repeatedly got into fights with other inmates in the prison.This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/John Moore)
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An Iraqi man celebrates atop of a burning U.S. Army Humvee in the northern part of Baghdad, Iraq, Monday, April 26, 2004. An explosion leveled a building in northern Baghdad on Monday, setting four U.S. Humvees nearby on fire. At least one U.S. soldier and several Iraqis were wounded. The cause of the explosion was not immediately known. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen)
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A gunman, left, shoots and kills a man lying in Baghdad's Haifa Street after being pulled from a car Sunday, Dec. 19, 2004. The man at right on his knees was executed moments later, along with another man not shown in picture. About 30 militants hurling hand grenades and firing machine guns attacked a car carrying five people employed by the commission's Baghdad office and tried "to drag them out," said Adel al-Lami, a member of the Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Str)
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U.S. Marines pray over a fallen comrade at a first aid point after he died from wounds suffered in fighting in Fallujah, Iraq, Thursday, April 8, 2004. Hundreds of U.S. Marines have been fighting insurgents in several neighborhoods in the western Iraqi city of Fallujah in order to regain control of the city. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Murad Sezer)
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A U.S. Army soldier uses a dummy to draw a sniper into view in Najaf, Iraq, Friday, Aug. 20, 2004. Later on Friday, militiamen loyal to rebel Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr removed their weapons from the revered Imam Ali Shrine in Najaf as part of an effort to end 2-week-old uprising centered on the holy site. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)
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U.S. Army soldiers take cover in a fortified position in Najaf, Iraq, Friday, Aug. 20, 2004. Later on Friday, militiamen loyal to rebel Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr removed their weapons from the revered Imam Ali Shrine in Najaf as part of an effort to end 2-week-old uprising centered on the holy site. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan) This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)
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Relatives of Iraqi National Guard Ryaad Khudayar grieve the death of their relative killed in Monday's car blast, at the morgue in the Baqouba hospital, some 65 kms northeast of Baghdad, Iraq Tuesday Aug. 3, 2004. A car bomb exploded Tuesday at an Iraqi National Guard checkpoint outside the city of Baqouba, killing at least four guardsmen and wounding six others. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)
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Army Nurse supervisor Patrick McAndrew tries to save the life of an American soldier by giving him CPR upon arrival at a military hospital in Baghdad, Iraq Tuesday, Nov. 9, 2004 but the soldier died. The soldier was fatally wounded in a Baghdad firefight with insurgents. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/John Moore)
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Moments after the attacks, a youth runs past the victims and burning debris at the site of several bomb blasts which exploded in densely-occupied areas, during the holy day of Ashoura, a Shiite festival, in the holy city of Karbala, Iraq, Tuesday, March 2, 2004. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)
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The mother of Samah Hussein cries over his body lying in a Baghdad, Iraq, morgue after he was killed when a suicide attacker detonated a car bomb outside the U.S. military camp Cuervo in Baghdad Sunday, June 13, 2004 killing 12 people and wounding 13, the military said.This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Samir Mizban)
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A U.S. Marine leads away a captured Iraqi man in the center of Fallujah, Iraq, Nov. 12, 2004. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography, Monday April 4, 2005 for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)
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A crowd of Iraqis carry an injured man from a damaged building after a car bomb exploded in central Baghdad, Iraq, Monday, June 14, 2004. A car bomb tore through a convoy Monday in central Baghdad, killing at least 10 people, including three foreigners working to rebuild Iraq's power plants. This photograph is one in a portfolio of twenty taken by eleven different Associated Press photographers throughout 2004 in Iraq. The Associated Press won a Pulitzer prize in breaking news photography for the series of pictures of bloody combat in Iraq. The award was the AP's 48th Pulitzer. (AP Photo/Mohammed Uraibi)
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In this third of seven sequential photos, Elian Gonzalez is held in a closet by Donato Dalrymple, one of the two men who rescued the boy from the ocean, right, as government officials search the home of Lazaro Gonzalez for the young boy, early Saturday morning, April 22, 2000, in Miami. Armed federal agents seized Elian Gonzalez from the home of his Miami relatives before dawn Saturday, firing tear gas into an angry crowd as they left the scene with the weeping 6-year-old boy. (AP Photo/Alan Diaz)
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President Clinton, his daughter Chelsea, center, and wife Hillary walk with Buddy Tuesday, Aug. 18, 1998, from the White House toward a helicopter as they depart for vacation enroute to Martha's Vineyard, Mass. (AP Photo/Roberto Borea)
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House Judiciary Committee Chairman Rep. Henry Hyde, R-Ill., left, talks to Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., ranking Democrat on the Committee, center, and Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., right, before the start of the committee's consideration of an impeachment inquiry against President Clinton on Capitol Hill Monday Oct. 5, 1998. Man second from right is an unidentified aide. (AP Photo/Doug Mills)
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U.S. President Bill Clinton, wearing in traditional Senegalese clothing, and his wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, listen to ''griot'' or village storytellers of the Dal Diam village about 90 kilometers (56 miles) east of Dakar, during a tour of the area of sustained recovery from drought Wednesday April 1, 1998. Senegal is Clinton's last port of call on his six-nation tour of Africa, and he will return to the US on Thursday. (AP Photo/Greg Gibson)
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Rep. Bob Livingston, R-La., left, followed by outgoing House Speaker Newt Gingrich of Ga. and his wife Marianne, walks down the steps of Capitol Wednesday Nov. 18, 1998. The men were going to a meeting where Republicans will choose their leadership for the 106th Congress. Livingston is expected to succeed Gingrich as House Speaker. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)
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White House Deputy Press Secretary Joe Lockhart peers out of his office window while talking on the phone Monday, Aug. 17, 1998 shortly after President Clinton gave his testimony to independent counsel Ken Starr's grand jury regarding the Monica Lewinsky case. (AP Photo/Ruth Fremson)
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A technician in a cherry picker works on the screen of the giant video screen in New York's Times Square, Monday, Sept. 21, 1998, as NBC's Tim Russert comments on President Clinton's videotaped grand jury testimony from Aug. 17, 1998. On Monday morning Congress laid before a wary nation the president's testimony and 3,183 pages of evidence chronicling his relationship with Monica Lewinsky in explicit detail. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)
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President Clinton sits in his car after arriving on Martha's Vineyard Tuesday, Aug. 18, 1998, for a two-week family vacation. The president retreated from the tensions of Washington on Tuesday to try to reclaim a private life made uncomfortably public in recent days. (AP Photo/ Charles Krupa)
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Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr is sworn in on Capitol Hill Thursday, Nov. 19, 1998 prior to testifying before the House Judiciary Committee's impeachment hearing. (AP Photo/Doug Mills)
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President Clinton's personal secretary Betty Currie clutches her purse as she and her attorney, right, work their way through the crush of media outside the U.S. courthouse in Washington Tuesday, Jan. 27, 1998. Currie appeared before a grand jury that is looking into the charges concerning President Clinton and former White House intern Monica Lewinsky. (AP Photo/Stephen Savioa)
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Vernon Jordan, long-time confidant of President Clinton, leaves his Washington home in this Jan. 27, 1998 photo. Jordan has been subpoened to testify in grand jury proceedings involving the President Clinton's sex scandal. (AP Photo/Khue Bui)
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Television cameramen tape pictures of stacks of printed transcripts of President Clinton and Monica Lewinsky's grand jury testimony and other related documents that were being offered for sale at the Government Printing Office bookstore Monday, Sept. 21, 1998 in Washington .(AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
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White House Counsel David Kendall, back to camera, questions Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr, rear, left, during the House Judiciary Committee's impeachment hearing on Capitol Hill Thursday, Nov. 19, 1998. (AP Photo/Joe Marquette)
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An emotional Paula Jones takes a moment to compose herself as she addresses the media at a news conference in Dallas, Thursday, April 16, 1998. Jones and her attorneys will ask an appeals court to reverse a judge's dismissal of her lawsuit and force President Clinton to stand trial for sexual harassment. (AP Photo/Ron Heflin)
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Linda Tripp, the Pentagon employee whose secret tape recordings of former White House intern Monica Lewinsky triggered a criminal investigation of President Clinton, talks to reporters outside federal court in Washington Wednesday, July 29, 1998, after making her final appearance before the grand jury that's looking into allegations of a sexual relationship between Lewinsky and President Clinton. (AP Photo/Khue Bui)
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House Judiciary Committee member Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas gestures while returning to the House Chamber on Capitol Hill Saturday Dec. 19, 1998 after she and fellow House Democrats walked out of the chamber in protest when Republicans blocked their effort to force a vote on the lesser penalty of censure as an alternative to impeachment. The House later approved two of the four articles of impeachment lodged against President Clinton. (AP Photo/J.Scott Applewhite)
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Former White House intern Monica Lewinsky and her attorney William Ginsburg head to their car from the Wanamaker Building in Philadelphia Monday, April 6, 1998. Ginsburg was born in the Philadlephia area. (AP Photo/Dan Loh)
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President Clinton makes a statement as first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton looks on at the White House, Saturday, Dec. 19, 1998 thanking those Democratic members of the House of Representatives who voted against impeachment and vowing to complete his term. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
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President Clinton wipes his eyes after sharing a laugh with Vice President Al Gore and first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton as he prepares to speak outside the Oval Office at the White House following the historic impeachment vote by the House of Representatives, Saturday, Dec. 19, 1998. House Democrats came to the White House after the vote as a show of support for the embattled chief executive. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
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President Clinton walks to the podium to deliver a short statement on the impeachment inquiry in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington Friday, Dec. 11, 1998. Nearing a showdown over the fate of his presidency, President Clinton apologized to the country today for his conduct in the Monica Lewinsky affair and said he would accept a congressional censure or rebuke. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
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Democratic lawmakers, right, clap for President Clinton and first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, as they arrive to speak to the media outside the White House, Saturday afternoon, Dec. 19, 1998. With the President and first lady are from left, Vice President Gore, House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt and White House Chief of Staff John Podessta. The House of Representatives impeached Clinton on Saturday for obstructing justice and lying under oath about his sexual affair with Monica Lewinsky. (AP Photo/Doug Mills)
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Burned bodies lie beside damaged cars outside the American Embassy, seen in the background, in Nairobi, Kenya, Friday, Aug. 7, 1998. A Huge explosion ripped apart a building in downtown Nairobi, heavily damaging the adjacent embassy, and killing dozens. (AP Photo/Sayyid Azim)
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Thousands of Kenyans mourn and pray at the Uhuru Park in Nairobi Sunday, Aug. 9, 1998, for the victims of the bombing of the U.S. embassy last Friday. A car bomb detonated Friday near the embassy killing at least 190, including 11 Americans (1 American missing), and wounding more than 4,000, of whom 542 were hospitalized, 25 of them in critical condition. (AP Photos/Sayyid Azim)
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Shirley Wambui, 5, weeps during the burial of her aunt Alice Ndutu Gachiri in the Nairobi Langata cemetery Saturday August 15, 1998. Gachiri died on Friday Aug. 7 in the building next to the US embassy destroyed by a car bomb. The blast killed 247 and injured more than 5,500 people. (AP Photo/Jean-Marc Bouju)
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On the day of the burial of Bakari Nyumbu, a guard at the U.S. Embassy killed in last Friday's bombing, female family members say Muslim prayers for him in front of Nyumbu's house in the Tandale suburb of the capital Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, Monday, Aug. 10, 1998. On Monday afternoon, Nyumbu's body was released for burial by the FBI, who are analyzing the dead looking for clues into the bombing. Muslim tradition in Tanzania dictates that women not attend funeral ceremonies, thus women must reserve mourning and praying for the home. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)
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The coffin containing the body of Bakari Nyumbu, who was killed in last Friday's U.S. Embassy bombing while he was on duty as an embassy guard, is passed into a grave beneath a blanket inscibed with Koranic writing, during a traditional Muslim burial ceremony, in the Tandale suburb of the capital Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, Monday, Aug. 10, 1998. United States medical examiners began releasing the bodies of the 10 Tanzanians killed to their families Monday. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)
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Nurses at a Nairobi Hospital walk in a hallway blinfloded as the experience what it feels like to be blind, Oct. 29, 1998. The nurses were going through a training session to learn about the particular needs a blind mother like Catherine Bwire, blinded in the bombing of the U.S. Embassy last August. (AP Photo/Jean-Marc Bouju)
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Catherine Bwire is handed her daughter Jean Bahati Lukhoba for the first time from social worker Pauline Ngatia, at Nairobi Hospital, Oct. 28, 1998. Bwire had to wait 24 hours after her ceasarian delivery to hold her child. The 25-year-old woman was blinded in the terrorist bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi on Aug. 7, 1998. (AP Photo/Jean-Marc Bouju)
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Catherinje Bwire, 25, sits in her home in Nairobi, Kenya, Oct. 8, 1998, with her husband Henri Lukhoba. Bwire, was pregnant when she was blinded in the terrorist bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi on August 7, 1998. Bwire gave birth to her daughter Jean Bahati Lukhoba on Oct. 27. (AP Photo/Jean-Marc Bouju)
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Kenyans walk in a line through the Nairobi city morgue trying to identify relatives and friends Saturday, Aug. 8, 1998. A powerful bomb detonated Friday next to the US embassy in Nairobi, provoking the collapse of the building next to the embassy. Over 130 people have died, and over 2,200 were wounded in the Kenyan explosion and an almost simultaneous blast in Tanzania. The morgue here contains about 80 bodies. (AP Photo/Jean-Marc Bouju)
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Lawrence Irungu, the husband of Rose Wanjiku waits by the collapsed building near the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi in the early hours of Wednesday Aug. 12, 1998, hours before the dead body of his wife Rose Wanjiku was found. Rescuer found the body of Wanjiku who fought for days to stay alive in the rubble. Irungu said at the time of the picture that he is "hoping that she's still alive." The bomb blast killed more than 240 including 12 Americans and wounded nearly 5,000. (AP Photo/Jean-Marc Bouju)
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Orie Rogo-Manduli weeps during a memorial service for victims on the site of the U.S. embassy bombing Friday, Aug. 14, 1998. With rescue operations wrapped up, and the death toll at 257, the focus was on cleanup work and the all-out push to learn who perpetrated the nearly simultaneous bombings in Nairobi and in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, a week ago. (AP Photo/Jean-Marc Bouju)
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U.S. Ambassador Prudence Bushnell, right, is helped by an unidentified man with blood in his face, as she is evacuated from the area of the U.S. Embassy following an explosion in downtown Nairobi, Friday, Aug. 7, 1998. Terrorist bombs exploded minutes apart outside the U.S. embassies in both Kenya and Tanzania Friday, killing more than 67 people, injuring 1,100 and turning buildings into mountains of shattered concrete. At least eight Americans were among the dead in Kenya and seven more were missing.Bushnell, was cut on the lip and helped from Cooperative Bank House, near the embassy, where she had just given a news conference. (AP Photo/Sayyid Azim)
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Members of the Red Cross and Kenyan military remove a body from the collapsed building next to the US embassy in Nairobi Tuesday August 11, 1998. FBI and other US agencies are still working on collecting evidence from the embassy site where a bomb went off Friday.The car bomb's toll so far is 203 dead including 12 Americans, and nearly 5,000 wounded. (AP Photo/Sayyid Azim)
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Rescue workers carry Susan Francisca Murianki, a U.S. Embassy office worker, over the rubble of a collapsed building next to the embassy, Friday, Aug. 7, 1998 in Nairobi, Kenya. Terrorist bombs exploded minutes apart outside the U.S. embassies in the Kenyan and Tanzanian capitals Friday. Americans were among the dead, and the U.S. ambassador to Kenya was injured, the State Department said. More than 40 people were killed and 1,000 wounded in Nairobi alone. (AP PHOTO/KHALIL SENOSI)
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The injured are helped to an ambulance after an explosion ripped apart a building and heavily damaged the United States Embassy in downtown Nairobi killing more than 40 Friday, Aug. 7, 1998. (AP Photo/Sayyid Azim)
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Young Kenyans join in a peace vigil in Central Nairobi Monday, Aug. 10, 1998, near the American Embassy and the Ufundi House which were both devastated by Friday's bombing. The blasts Friday at the American embassies in Nairobi and in Dar es Salaam, the capital of Tanzania, killed at least 202 people and injured nearly 5,000.(AP Photo/John McConnico)
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Kenyans scan the list bombing fatalities posted in Uhuru Park, Nairobi Thursday Aug.13, 1998. The search for survivors of nearly simultaneous bombings of the U.S. Embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, is over and at least 257 people are confirmed dead. (AP Photo/Jean-Marc Bouju)
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A Kenyan soldier prepares to raise the United States flag outside Ufundi House, central Nairobi, Wednesday Aug. 12, 1998, where a short ceremony was held to commemorate the victims of the embassy bombing that devastated the area on Friday. More than 250 people were killed and more than 5,500 were wounded in the twin bombings Friday in Kenya and Tanzania.(AP Photo/Dave Caulkin)
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