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Eyeballing
UN Kills in Lebanon

Source of Hit Information: New York Times, 27 July 2006
Captions by Associated Press
[Image]

A Lebanese man shows his son a representation set up by Hezbollah, of the Fijian U.N base where Lebanese civilians were killed during the 10th anniversary of what is known in Lebanon as the "Qana massacre", in front the United Nations house in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday April 18, 2006. More than 100 Lebanese civilians were killed by an Israeli artillery bombardment of a U.N. base in the southern Lebanese village of Qana in April 1996. The victims, including women and children, had taken refuge in the U.N. base during an Israeli offensive against Hezbollah guerrillas. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

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A group of Lebanese scout girls wear wedding dresses and hold candles during a vigil on the 10th anniversary of what is known in Lebanon as the "Qana massacre", in front the United Nations house in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday April 18, 2006. The Qana massacre is a reference to the more than 100 Lebanese civilians killed by an Israeli artillery bombardment of a U.N. base in the southern Lebanese village of Qana in April 1996. The victims, including women and children, had taken refuge in the U.N. base during an Israeli offensive against Hezbollah guerrillas.(AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

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U.N. peacekeepers view a destroyed shelter at the headquaters of the Fijian UN battalion in the village of Qana, south Lebanon Thursday, April 18, 1996. The shelter, housing southern Lebanese refugees who were escaping Israeli attacks on the area, was hit by Israeli artillery Thursday. (AP Photo/Muhamed Zatari)

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Blood-stained blankets are left in the UN refugee camp which was destroyed by Israeli army artillery in the village of Qana, south Lebanon Thursday, April 18, 1996. According to a UN spokesman, 155mm artillery shells fired by Israel struck the headquarters of the Fijiian UN battalion in Qana killing scores of Lebanese refugees who had sought sanctuary there from an Israeli military offensive. (AP Photo/Muhamed Zatari)

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A U.N. peacekeeper, with his rifle pointed downwards, observes a minute of silence in front of the memorial of the 246 UNIFIL peacekeepers, (United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon) who have died in South Lebanon since the mission was established in 1978, in the coastal town of Naqoura, Southern Lebanon, Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2005. The International Day of Peace is devoted to commemorating and strengthening the ideals of peace both within and among all nations and people. UNIFIL was created in 1978 to confirm Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon, restore the international peace and security, and help the Lebanese Government restore its effective authority in the area. (AP Photo/Mohammad Zaatari)

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An United Nations soldier from China looks at the rubble of a destroyed building that was attacked by Israeli warplane missiles last week, as they search for the bodies of missing persons in the outskirts of the southern coastal city of Tyre, Lebanon Wednesday, July 26, 2006. China on Wednesday demanded that Israel apologize for another attack in Lebanon that killed a Chinese U.N. observer as President Hu Jintao offered his condolences. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

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A large plume of smoke billows in the town of Khiam, in southern Lebanon, Tuesday, July 25, 2006, after Israeli air raids targeted it. An Israeli bombardment hit a UN observer post in the village of Khiam, killing four UN observers. Israeli troops sealed off a Hezbollah stronghold and warplanes killed six people in a market city in southern Lebanon on Tuesday, while Beirut was pounded by new airstrikes. Guerrillas fired rockets at northern Israel, killing a girl. (AP Photo/Lotfallah Daher)

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Major Hess-von Kruedener is shown in an undated photo being presented with his jump certificate released by the Canadian Armed Forces. Hess-von Kruedener is missing and presumed dead after an Israeli bomb flattened a clearly marked UN post in southern Lebanon on Tuesday, July 25, 2006 killing three other observers. (AP PHOTO/CP, Canadian Armed Forces, G LeClair, HO)

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This photo released Thursday, July 27, 2006, taken on Wednesday, July 26, 2006, by the United Nations Interim Force In Lebanon, shows a U.N. observation post that was damaged after it was hit by an Israeli air strike Tuesday, killing four U.N. observers, in the town of Khiam, on the Lebanese Israeli border, southern Lebanon. The United States blocked the U.N. Security Council from issuing a statement that would have condemned Israel's bombing of the U.N. post, in which four military observers were killed. (AP Photo/UNIFIL)

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This photo released Thursday, July 27, 2006, and taken on Wednesday, July 26, 2006, by the United Nations Interim Force In Lebanon, shows a U.N. observation post that was damaged after it was hit by an Israeli airstrike on Tuesday, killing four U.N. observers inside, in the town of Khiam, on the Lebanese Israeli border, southern Lebanon. The United States blocked the U.N. Security Council from issuing a statement that would have condemned Israel's bombing of the U.N. post, in which four military observers were killed. (AP Photo/UNIFIL)

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In this undated handout photo provided by the United Nations, the U.N. observation post near Khiam, Lebanon is shown. U.N. observers in Lebanon telephoned the Israeli military 10 times in six hours to ask it to stop shelling near their position before an attack killed four observers and sparked international anger with Israel, U.N. officials said Wednesday, July 26, 2006. (AP Photo/United Nations)

[Image]

This undated photo released Thursday, July 27, 2006, by the United Nations Interim Force In Lebanon, shows a U.N. observation post in the town of Khiam, on the Lebanese Israeli border, southern Lebanon, before it was hit by an Israeli airstrike Tuesday, July 25, 2006, killing four U.N. observers inside. The United States blocked the U.N. Security Council from issuing a statement that would have condemned Israel's bombing of the U.N. post, in which four military observers were killed. (AP Photo/UNIFIL)

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U.N. troops, driving in their personnel armored vehicles, arrive at a hospital in the southern city of Marjayoun, Lebanon, Wednesday, July 26, 2006, as they transport the bodies of the three unarmed U.N. military observers who were killed by an Israeli bombardment on the southern Lebanese town of Khiam, Tuesday. An Israeli bomb destroyed a UN observation post in southern Lebanon, killing four unarmed military observers in what UN Secretary General Kofi Annan said appeared to be a deliberate attack. (AP Photo/Lotfallah Daher)

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UN personnel carry the body of one of the three unarmed UN military observers who was killed by an Israeli bombardment of the southern Lebanese town of Khiam Tuesday, at a hospital in the southern city of Marjayoun, Lebanon, Wednesday, July 26, 2006. An Israeli bomb destroyed a UN observation post in southern Lebanon, killing three unarmed military observers in what UN Secretary General Kofi Annan said appeared to be a deliberate attack. (AP Photo/Lotfallah Daher)

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U.N. troops carry the body of one of the three unarmed UN military observers who was killed by an Israeli bombardment on the southern Lebanese town of Khiam, late Tuesday, at a hospital in the southern city of Marjayoun, Lebanon, Wednesday, July 26, 2006. An Israeli bomb destroyed a U.N. observation post in southern Lebanon, killing three unarmed military observers in what U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan said appeared to be a deliberate attack. (AP Photo/Lotfallah Daher)

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Russia's ambassador to the United Nations Vitaly Churkin, left, talks with deputy U.N. ambassador Konstantin Dolgov in the United Nations Security Council consultation room, Wednesday July 26, 2006. China asked the U.N. Security Council on Wednesday to condemn Israel's bombing of a U.N. post on the Lebanon border that killed four military observers and demand that Israel stop attacking United Nations positions and personnel. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

[Image]

This undated handout image provided by CTV News shows Major Hess-von Kruedener, right, in South Lebanon in March, meeting with one of the Mouktars of a Druze village called Bourhoz. Hess-von Kruedener is missing and presumed dead after an Israeli bomb flattened a clearly marked UN post in southern Lebanon on Tuesday, July 25, 2006 killing three other observers. (AP PHOTO/CP, CTV News, HO) EDS NOTE: MANDATORY CREDIT TO CTV NEWS

[Image]

Cynthia Hess-von Kruedener, right, with her son Jonah Rosson, left, and Lt. Col Robin Steward, Commandant of the Peace Training Support Training Centre, rear, speaks at a press conference at Canadian Forces Base Kingston in Kingston, Ontario, Canada Thursday, July 27, 2006. Hess-von Kruedener, the wife of Canadian peacekeeper Maj. Paeta Hess-von Kruedner, who was killed in Lebanon, is demanding to know why Israeli missiles struck the UN site where her husband was stationed as a military observer. Cynthia Hess-von Kruedener said that her husband had told her the U.N. site had been fired upon for weeks, even though its vehicles and buildings were clearly marked. (AP PHOTO/Kingston Whig-Standard, Ian MacAlpine)

[Image]

Cynthia Hess-von Kruedener, right, with her son Jonah Rosson, speaks at a press conference at Canadian Forces Base Kingston in Kingston, Ontario, Canada Thursday, July 27, 2006. Hess-von Kruedener, the wife of Canadian peacekeeper Maj. Paeta Hess-von Kruedner, who was killed in Lebanon, is demanding to know why Israeli missiles struck the UN site where her husband was stationed as a military observer. Cynthia Hess-von Kruedener said that her husband had told her the U.N. site had been fired upon for weeks, even though its vehicles and buildings were clearly marked. (AP PHOTO/Kingston Whig-Standard, Ian MacAlpine)

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United Nations soldiers from China cover the body of a child at the rubble of a destroyed building that was attacked by Israeli warplane missiles last week, as they search for the bodies of missing persons in the outskirts of the southern coastal city of Tyre, Lebanon Wednesday, July 26, 2006. China on Wednesday demanded that Israel apologize for another attack in Lebanon that killed a Chinese U.N. observer as President Hu Jintao offered his condolences. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

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In this photo released by the United Nations Interim Force In Lebanon (UNIFIL) French and Indian U.N. peacekeepers treat a wounded Lebanese citizen on a stretcher in the southern town of Naqura, Lebanon, Monday, July 24, 2006. The top U.N. humanitarian chief Jan Egeland, issued an urgent call for US$150 million to help Lebanon through the next three months. (AP Photo/UNIFIL)

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In this photo released by the United Nations Interim Force In Lebanon (UNIFIL) French U.N. peacekeepers carry a wounded Lebanese citizen on a stretcher in the southern village of Chahine, Lebanon, Monday, July 24, 2006. The top U.N. humanitarian chief Jan Egeland, issued an urgent call for US$150 million to help Lebanon through the next three months. (AP Photo/UNIFIL)

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Israeli soldier operate a military artillery gun during an exchange of fire between Israeli troops and Hezbollah guerrillas near Chebaa Farms, a disputed area on the border between Israel and Lebanon Sunday Jan. 9, 2005. A French officer serving with the United Nations was killed in the shelling Sunday, shortly after a Hezbollah bomb attack killed an Israeli soldier and wounded three others near the border in southern Lebanon, Lebanese and U.N officials said.(AP Photo/Yaron Kaminsky) ** ISRAEL OUT **

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Brigadier General Elhadji Mouhamadou Kandji of Senegal, currently the Deputy Military Adviser in the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO), center, British Col. Ian Sinclair, currently Chief of Staff of the UN peacekeeping mission in Cyprus, right, and Commander Kari Olavi Makinen of Finland, currently in the DPKO Missions Operations Service, left, stand at the Lebanese border point of Masnaa in the Bekaa Valley, east of Beirut, Thursday April 28, 2005. The team will meet with Lebanese Defense Ministry officials on Saturday to discuss the Syrian withdrawal after they discussed the withdrawal with Syrian Defense Ministry officials in Damascus. The Syrians gave the team maps of the military positions they have vacated in Lebanon, which the U.N. officials will check. (AP Photo/Samer Husseini)

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A U.N. armoured personnel carrier carries Indian peacekeepers close to the village of Abbassiyeh, Lebanon, near the border with Israel on Saturday, April 6, 2002. Behind them is a poster of Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah looking at guerrillas carrying a Katyusha rocket. "At your orders," reads the banner in Arabic. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

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Israeli and U.N. soldiers look at maps on the Israel-Lebanon border Friday June 9 2000. Protesters on the Lebanese side of the border threw stones at a U.N. team on the Israeli side Friday, damaging two vehicles. Others cut through the fence and walked across, drawing warning shots from Israeli army guards. The unrest came hours after Lebanon made objections to a new U.N. map of the border, a dispute that threatened to hold up verification of the Israeli withdrawal until a compromise was reached. (AP Photo/Yaron Kaminsky) ISRAEL OUT

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U.N. peacekeepers patrol the Lebanese-Israeli border in the southern Lebanese village of Adeisseh Thursday, May 24, 2001. Lebanon is preparing to celebrate the first anniversary of Israel's withdrawal on Friday, May 25. In the background is the Israeli village of Metulla. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zatari)

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Two members of the Irish contingent of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) are seen during live ammunition exercises Wednesday, August 8, 2001 in Kawkaba, southern Lebanon. UNIFIL has been deployed for more than two decades along the border between Lebanon and Israel. (AP Photo/Mohammed Zaatari)

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U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, center, confers with the spokesman of the UN peacekeeping forces in Lebanon Timur Goskel after reviewing an honor guard upon his arrival at the headquarters of the United Nations Interim Forces in Lebanon (UNIFIL) Monday, June 19, 2000 in the village of Naqoura, some 100 kilometers (62 miles) south of Beirut, near the Israeli border. Annan said Monday that the world body would take firm action against any violations of a U.N.-certified border between Lebanon and Israel. (AP Photo/Enric Marti)

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The leaders of the UN and Lebanese border verification teams, Lebanese army Brig. Amin Hotiet, center, and Deputy Commander of the U.N. peacekeeping force in Lebanon Brig. Gen. James Seernan, right, try to ascertain from where two shots were fired from, at Abbassiyeh Gate in southern Lebanon on Thursday, June 15, 2000. Five warning shots rang out from an Israeli observation post as the U.N. team was at the fence. Several journalists had crossed the gate ahead of the team to try to enter the Lebanese village of Abbassiyeh behind the fence. It wasn't clear whether the warning was to journalists or the team. (AP Photo/Philip Mark)

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U.N. Finnish peacekeepers prepare for training on a rocket launcher in the Lebanese village of Qalawai, near the southern port city of Tyre, Monday July 24, 2000. U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan s envoy Terje Roed-Lasen told reporters after a meeting with Lebanese President Emile Lahoud that senior officers of the Lebanese army and the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon will discuss preparations for the deployment of peacekeepers on the Lebanese-Israeli border in south Lebanon. (AP Photo/Mohamed Zatari)

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In front of Hezbollah, left, and Lebanese flags, U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan shakes hands with the leader of the Hezbollah Sheik Hassan Nasrallah at his office in a suburb of Beirut Lebanon, Tuesday June 20, 2000. The meeting is the first between the leader of guerrillas and a senior international official and was a recognition of Hezbollah s influence over any arrangement the United Nations is trying to work out to bring peace to southern Lebanon. (AP PHOTO/MAHMOUD TAWIL)

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U.N. Ukrainian peacekeepers set up camp near the southern Lebanese village of Naqoura, Monday July 24, 2000. U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan s envoy Terje Roed-Lasen told reporters after a meeting with Lebanese president Emile Lahoud that senior officers of the Lebanese army and the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon will discuss preparations for the deployment of peacekeepers on the Lebanese-Israeli border in south Lebanon. (AP Photo/Mohamed Zatari)

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A U.N. soldier, left, observes an Israeli soldier marking the Israel Lebanon Border near Sassa Saturday June 17, 2000. Lebanon has rejected the U.N. verification of Israel's withdrawal from south Lebanon, insisting that Israeli troops still occupy some Lebanese territory. The rebuff Friday was a stinging setback for Secretary-General Kofi Annan, who had announced the U.N. confirmation of Israel's pullout from the long-occupied buffer zone earlier in the day. (AP Photo/Yaron Kamisky) ISRAEL OUT.