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        | In Gonaives and other cities, Haiti, violent protests,
        peaceful protests, fast growing armed revolts, 'criminal Aristide must go,' murders and
        burning since uncommonly chief bandit Jean-Bertrand Aristide brutally murdered his
        notorious criminal Amiot Metayer - February 23-24, 2004 |  
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    | FINALLY, MOVING OUT - Haitian residents loot what remained in the house
    of a pro-government supporter before it is burned down in Cap-Haitien, Haiti, Tuesday, Feb
    24, 2004. (AP Photo/Pablo Aneli) | 
  
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    | Rebels patrol in Cap Haitian, Haiti's second largest city. Rebels now
    control half of the country and have vowed to seize the capital and oust President Jean
    Bertrand Aristide(AFP/Jamie Razuri) | 
  
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    | A Haitian police officer gestures at the entrance of the presidential
    palace in Port-au-Prince, Haiti Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2004. President Jean-Bertrand Aristide
    appealed for the world to come to Haiti's aid, warning that thousands of deaths and a wave
    of boat people could result from political chaos. (AP Photo/Ricardo Mazalan) | 
  
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    | Haitian residents loot what remained in the house of a pro-government
    supporter before it was burned down in Cap Haitien, Haiti, Tuesday, Feb 24, 2004. (AP
    Photo/Pablo Aneli) | 
  
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    | Haitian residents loot what remained in the house of a pro-government
    supporter before it was burned down in Cap Haitien, Haiti, Tuesday, Feb 24, 2004. (AP
    Photo/Pablo Aneli) | 
  
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    | A soldier (L) from the Haitian National Revolutionary Liberation Front
    talks to a security guard at the Labadie resort near Cap-Haitien, Haiti, after soldiers
    shot one of the guards in the legs by mistake when he ran away upon seeing five truck load
    of soldiers arriving on Feb. 24, 2004. The rebel soldiers were looking for members of the
    Haitian police they thought might be hiding at the site. (Reuters/Daniel Morel) | 
  
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    | A Haitian police officer stands guard inside the presidential palace in
    Port-au-Prince, Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2004. President Jean-Bertrand Aristide appealed for the
    world to come to Haiti's aid, warning that thousands of deaths and a wave of boat people
    could result from political chaos. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd) | 
  
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        | A U.S. Marine stand guard at U.S. Embassy in Port-Au-Prince, Haiti, Monday, February
        23, 2004. (Reuters/Daniel Aguilar) |  
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        | A U.S. Marine stands guard at U.S. Embassy in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Monday, February
        23, 2004. (Reuters/Daniel Aguilar) |  
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        | Soldiers from the Haitian National Revolutionary Liberation Front pass out ammunition
        in the parking lot of their makeshift headquarters at a hotel in Cap-Haitien, February 23,
        2004. (Daniel Morel/Reuters) |  
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        | U.S. Marines arriuve at an airport in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, February 23, 2004.
        (Reuters/Daniel Aguilar) |  
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        | U.S. Marines en route to the U.S. Embassy, in Port-au-Prince, after arriving at the
        city's airport from the U.S., February 23, 2004. (Reuters/Daniel Aguilar) |  
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