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Politics : Idea Of The Day

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To: Ann Corrigan who wrote (41613)11/14/2001 8:50:40 AM
From: Snowshoe  Read Replies (1) of 50167
 
>>Where are the women? Can't they celebrate as well?<<

dailynews.yahoo.com
A young Afghan woman shows her face in public for the first time after 5 years of Taliban law in Kabul November 14, 2001. The hard-line Islamic rule of Afghanistan's Taliban unraveled, as world leaders focused on a blueprint to restore peace and stability to a weary nation bloodied by two decades of civil war. (Yannis Behrakis/Reuters)

dailynews.yahoo.com
An Afghan woman, no longer dressed in the head-to-toe burqa required under Taliban rule, talks to a journalist on a street in Kabul, November 14, 2001, following the occupation of the city by opposition Northen Alliance troops on Tuesday. Afghan opposition forces consolidated their hold on the newly captured capital of Kabul and said new gains meant the Taliban now held less than 20 percent of the country as international calls intensified for a new broad-based government and more U.N. involvement. REUTERS/Reuters TV

dailynews.yahoo.com
An Afghan woman, no longer dressed in the head-to-toe burqa veil required under Taliban rule, walks with other veiled women along a street in Kabul, November 14, 2001, following the occupation of the city by opposition Northern Alliance troops on Tuesday. Afghan opposition forces consolidated their hold on the newly captured capital of Kabul and said new gains meant the Taliban now held less than 20 percent of the country as international calls intensified for a new broad-based government and more U.N. involvement. REUTERS/Reuters TV

dailynews.yahoo.com
Afghan women walk in central Kabul showing their faces for the first time after 5 years of Taliban Sharia law November 14, 2001. Under its strict interpretation of Islam, the Taliban ordered all women hidden behind head-to-toe burqas. Afghan opposition forces consolidated their hold on the newly captured capital of Kabul and said new gains meant the Taliban now held less than 20 percent of the country as international calls intensified for a new broad-based government and more U.N. involvement. REUTERS/Yannis Behrakis
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