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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)
A shepherd tends to sheep a field near Bent Jbail in Southern Lebanon, a region occupied by Israeli forces until 2000. The Hezbollah is credited with forcing its withdrawl.(Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
A horse grazes in a field near Israel, far mountain in background, in Southern Lebanon, a region occupied by Israeli forces until 2000, when the Hezbollah is credited with forcing its withdrawl.(Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
A shepherd tends to sheep a field near Bent Jbail in Southern Lebanon, a region occupied by Israeli forces until 2000. The Hezbollah is credited with forcing its withdrawl.(Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
A woman works a field of tobacco near Bent Jbail in Southern Lebanon, a region occupied by Israeli forces until 2000. The Hezbollah is credited with forcing its withdrawl.(Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
A guide shows photographs of victims of an Israeli bombing in Qana, Southern Lebanon, a region occupied by Israeli forces until 2000. Israeli planes bombed the United Nations base in 1996 killing 106, mostly civilians, in an attempt to rout the Hezbollah fighters. The Hezbollah is credited with forcing its withdrawl.(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 hezbollah supporter hangs 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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