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CONGRESS-SWISSBANK
Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., speak to reporters in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 25, 2014, about allegations concerning Swiss bank Credit Suisse AG. (Photo by Kevin G. Hall/MCT/Sipa USA)
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CONGRESS-SWISSBANK
Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., speak to reporters in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 25, 2014, about allegations concerning Swiss bank Credit Suisse AG. (Photo by Kevin G. Hall/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Syria
A mother and her two children walk past a cinderblock wall built to protect civilians from snipers in the Islamist rebel-held half of Homs, Syria's third largest city. (Photo by Jonathan S. Landay/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Violence in Cairo
Wreckage and debris surrounded the el-Fateh Mosque in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, August 17, 2013, following clashes between supporters of ousted Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi and police. (Photo by Amina Ismail/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Afghan park offers solitude and beauty
Even the the water in swampy parts of Band-e Amir is clear. (Jay Price/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Afghan park offers solitude and beauty
The popular swan boats of Band-e Amir rest on the beach. Several families from 15 local village split the profits of the boat rental operation. (Jay Price/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Afghan park offers solitude and beauty
Band-e Amir has become the nation's soothing antidote to the daily horrors elsewhere of improvised bombs, suicide attacks and bribe-hungry police. Partly that's due to the peacefulness and startling beauty of the remote region, which is tucked away high in the Hindu Kush of Central Afghanistan, and partly because four years ago it became Afghanistan's first national park. (Photo by Jay Price/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Afghan park offers solitude and beauty
Band-e Amir has become the nation's soothing antidote to the daily horrors elsewhere of improvised bombs, suicide attacks and bribe-hungry police. Partly that's due to the peacefulness and startling beauty of the remote region, which is tucked away high in the Hindu Kush of Central Afghanistan, and partly because four years ago it became Afghanistan's first national park. (Photo by Jay Price/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Afghan park offers solitude and beauty
Afghan tourists stand on an overlook above the lakes. On a busy summer Friday, more than 5,000 people visit the park. (Photo by Jay Price/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Afghan park offers solitude and beauty
Band-e Amir park is popular with Afghans in part because it's one of only a few places in the country where women and children can enjoy themselves outside in safety. (Jay Price/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Afghan park offers solitude and beauty
Band-e Amir park is popular with Afghans in part because it's one of only a few places in the country where women and children can enjoy themselves outside in safety. (Jay Price/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Afghan park offers solitude and beauty
Band-e Amir park is popular with Afghans in part because it's one of only a few places in the country where women and children can enjoy themselves outside in safety. (Jay Price/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Afghan park offers solitude and beauty
Band-e Haibat is the lake which gets the most use at Band-e Amir National Park. On the far shore are the shrine to Hazrat Ali and the popular swan boats. (Jay Price/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Afghan park offers solitude and beauty
Many visitors believe the waters at Band-e Amir have healing powers. Women who take a dip in the lakes, usually seeking a cure for illness or to boost their fertility, bath fully clothed but still out of sight of the men for reasons of modesty. The park is building a special bathing area to protect that modesty. This woman is drying out some of her clothes after a dip. (Photo by Jay Price/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Afghan park offers solitude and beauty
Afghans partake of the popular swan boats of Band-e Amir. Several families from 15 local village split the profits of the boat rental operation. The park is a rare safe refuge where women and children can enjoy themselves outside in safety. (Jay Price/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Afghan park offers solitude and beauty
Afghans partake of the popular swan boats of Band-e Amir. Several families from 15 local village split the profits of the boat rental operation. The park is a rare safe refuge where women and children can enjoy themselves outside in safety. (Jay Price/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Afghan park offers solitude and beauty
Band-e Haibat is the lake which gets the most use at Band-e Amir National Park. On the far shore are the shrine to Hazrat Ali and the swan boats. (Photo by Jay Price/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Afghan park offers solitude and beauty
Afghans partake of the popular swan boats of Band-e Amir. Several families from 15 local village split the profits of the boat rental operation. The park is a rare safe refuge where women and children can enjoy themselves outside in safety. (Jay Price/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Egypt: Black market trade in dollars
A registered foreign exchange office in downtown Cairo, Egypt March 25, 2013. Business has dropped off at the registered current exchanges as more and more people turn to the black market to obtain dollars as Egyptian banks restrict the amount of dollrs they'll make available to clients. (Photo by Amina Ismail/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Egypt: Black market trade in dollars
A client pockets the U.S. currency he has just purchased as he leaves a registered house in downtown Cairo on March 25, 2013. Limitations on the amount of foreign currency banks are allowed to exchange for clients monthly have driven many people to exchange houses or black market dealers to exchange Egyptian pounds for dollars, even though such transactions cost more. (Photo by Amina Ismail/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Egypt: Black market trade in dollars
An employee at a registered foreign exchange office in downtown Cairo stamps dollars for a client. Banks restrict the amount of dollars a client can purchase each month to $5,000. That limitation has increased the number of people who use the exchange houses or black market dealers to get dollars they need for purchases and travel, even though both the exchange houses and the black market charge a premium to exchange Egyptian pounds for dollars. (Photo by Amina Ismail/MCT/Sipa USA)
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Egypt: Black market trade in dollars
An employee at a registered foreign exchange office in downtown Cairo handles a stack of U.S. currency on March 25, 2013. More and more Egyptians are avoiding the legal currency exchange houses in favor of black market currency dealers who will provide more U.S. money than banks are allowed under current regulation. The black market dealers charge a premium, however. (Photo by Amina Ismail/MCT/Sipa USA)
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