|
|
Right: Bangladeshi Muslims with a portrait of Saudi-born fugitive Osama bin Laden chant anti-U.S. slogans during a protest in Dhaka on November 2, 2001. Members of Bangladesh Islamic Law Implementation Committee, a radical muslim organization, took to the streets after Friday prayer to condemn attacks on Afghanistan and extend their support to bin Laden. REUTERS/Rafiqur Rahman.
|
|
Right: Bangladeshi Muslims with toy weapons chant anti-U.S. slogans during a protest outside the national mosque Baitul Mukarram in Dhaka, October 29, 2001. Bangladesh Islamic Constitution Movement, a radical organization arranged the protest to condemn U.S. led attacks on Afghanistan and extend their support to Saudi-born militant Osma bin Laden. REUTERS/Rafiqur Rahman.
|
Right: Bangladeshi Muslims march with dummy rocket launchers and posters of Osama bin Laden in Dhaka, Bangladesh, after Friday prayer Oct. 26, 2001. They demanded the the United Nations put a stop to U.S.-led military strikes in Afghanistan.(AP Photo/Pavel Rahman)
|
|
Right: Hundreds of Bangladeshi Muslims burn an effigy of President Bush after Friday prayers in Dhaka, Bangladesh Nov. 9, 2001, to protest the U.S. airstrikes in Afghanistan. (AP PHoto/Pavel Rahman)