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A spray-painted sign reading "Reject Racism Reject Iran" on a street in Sao Paulo, Brazil has been changed to read "Reject Racism Reject Israel." A poll from 2011 showed both Israel and Iran as the two least popular countries among Brazilians and Latin Americans, paradoxically putting  the two countries, at odd on the world political scene, into the same categorty. For Latin Americans, they seem to be mirror reflections of each other. (Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
A spray-painted sign reading "Reject Racism Reject Iran" on a street in Sao Paulo, Brazil has been changed to read "Reject Racism Reject Israel." A poll from 2011 showed both Israel and Iran as the two least popular countries among Brazilians and Latin Americans, paradoxically putting  the two countries, at odds on the world political scene, into the same categorty. For Latin Americans, they seem to be mirror reflections of each other. (Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
Iranian Kurd Nozad Azizi, 17, washes his hands at a tent city camp in the no-man's land between the Jordanian and Iraqi border stations. Thousands of Kurds, who fled Iran in 1979, also fled Iraq before the US led war in 2003, ending up in diplomatic limbo on the border.(Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
Thousands wave Iranian and Lebanese flags and Hezbollah banners during a rally in a stadium for Iranian President Mohammed Khatami, President of Iran, during an official visit to Beirut, Lebanon. Khatami, the first Iranian president to visit Lebanon since the 1979 Islamic revolution,  received a hero's welcome.(Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
Women hold a banners of the Hezbollah at a rally in a stadium for Iranian President Mohammed Khatami, President of Iran, during an official visit to Beirut, Lebanon. Khatami, the first Iranian president to visit Lebanon since the 1979 Islamic revolution,  received a hero's welcome.(Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
A girl holds a banner of the Hezbollah at a rally in a stadium for Iranian President Mohammed Khatami, President of Iran, during an official visit to Beirut, Lebanon. Khatami, the first Iranian president to visit Lebanon since the 1979 Islamic revolution,  received a hero's welcome.(Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
Spectators climb a light tower with a portrait of  Iranian President Mohammed Khatami, President of Iran, during an massive rally for him in Beirut, Lebanon. Khatami, the first Iranian president to visit Lebanon since the 1979 Islamic revolution,  received a hero's welcome.(Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
Thousands wave Iranian and Lebanese flags during a  rally in a stadium for Iranian President Mohammed Khatami, President of Iran, during an official visit to Beirut, Lebanon. Khatami, the first Iranian president to visit Lebanon since the 1979 Islamic revolution,  received a hero's welcome.(Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
Hezbollah supporters hang a banner welcoming Iranian President Mohammed Khatami in Southern Lebanon, a region occupied by Israeli forces until 2000, when the Hezbollah is credited with forcing its withdrawl. Khatami's visit is the first Iranian Presidential visit to Lebanon since the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran, which supports Lebanon's Hezbollah in ideologically and economically.(Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
A spray-painted sign reading "Reject Racism Reject Iran" on a street in Sao Paulo, Brazil has been changed to read "Reject Racism Reject Israel." A poll from 2011 showed both Israel and Iran as the two least popular countries among Brazilians and Latin Americans, paradoxically putting the two countries, at odd on the world political scene, into the same categorty. For Latin Americans, they seem to be mirror reflections of each other. (Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
A spray-painted sign reading "Reject Racism Reject Iran" on a street in Sao Paulo, Brazil has been changed to read "Reject Racism Reject Israel." A poll from 2011 showed both Israel and Iran as the two least popular countries among Brazilians and Latin Americans, paradoxically putting  the two countries, at odd on the world political scene, into the same categorty. For Latin Americans, they seem to be mirror reflections of each other. (Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
A spray-painted sign reading "Reject Racism Reject Iran" on a street in Sao Paulo, Brazil has been changed to read "Reject Racism Reject Israel." A poll from 2011 showed both Israel and Iran as the two least popular countries among Brazilians and Latin Americans, paradoxically putting the two countries, at odd on the world political scene, into the same categorty. For Latin Americans, they seem to be mirror reflections of each other. (Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
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