Photographs: Stoyan Nenov/Reuters
People stand on a memorial on the shore of Tyrifjorden lake overlooking Utoeya island on Monday, where anti-Islam extremist Anders Behring Breivik killed 68 people in a shooting rampage on July 22. Breivik has confessed to the attacks, as his lawyer said client wanted to attack Norwegian society in order to change it.
Most of the people killed on the island were teenagers attending a youth summer camp hosted by the ruling Labour Party.
Norwegians believe penalties for serious crimes in their country should be tightened in the wake of the shooting and a bomb attack that killed 77 people, an opinion poll showed on Monday.
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Photographs: Reuters
US President Barack Obama announces a deal on raising the debt ceiling by $2.1 trillion with Republican and Democratic congressional leaders. He urged the Congress to get behind the proposed legislation, but admits it is not the deal he 'would have preferred' but says the compromise allows the US to avoid default and avert crisis.
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Photographs: Ricardo Moraes/Reuters
Three thousand flowers, representing the 30,000 victims of violence in Rio de Janeiro from 2007 to present, were placed on the beach in an event staged to raise public awareness and to call for the attention of the authorities, according to the organisers.
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Photographs: Yuri Maltsev/Reuters
In Moscow, some 500 marines marked the day in parks. In Kaliningrad, where based the Baltic Fleet, a warship parade at the sea canal in Baltiysk Sunday theatrically reproduced the battle in which Soviet troops seized the Pillau fortress in the end of April 1945, reported Itar-Tass news agency.
In Russia, the Navy Day is traditionally celebrated on the last Sunday of July. Russia currently maintains five fleets: on the Pacific Ocean in the Far East, on the Arctic Ocean in the north, on the Baltic Sea in the westernmost Kaliningrad region, and in the Black and the Caspian Seas in the south.Around the word in the last 48 hours
Photographs: Eloy Alonso/Reuters
The hand of a volunteer is seen as he splashes water at a Hindu devotee taking part in the "Bol Bom" (or Say Shiva) pilgrimage in Kathmandu on Monday.
The faithful, chanting the name of Lord Shiva, run some 15 km barefooted to Pashupatinath temple seeking good health, wealth and happiness. Water is sprayed to help them cool down after the long distance run.
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Photographs: Dalati Nohra/Reuters
President Michel Sleiman urged Lebanese rival leaders to soften their political rhetoric, reiterating his call for the resumption of national dialogue as means to prevent future conflicts.
"Political leaders should work on toning down political rhetoric, which is growing stronger, and use the language of dialogue, which can be used to not only resolve contentious issues but also to prevent future conflicts," Sleiman said during a speech at the Army Day ceremony at Shukri Ghanem Barracks in Fayyadieh, east of Beirut.
Tensions between Lebanon's rival political factions have grown since the fall of former Prime Minister Saad Hariri's government in January after 8 ministers from the Hezbollah-led March 8 alliance resigned.
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China's factories struggled with their weakest activity in 28 months in July, a pair of surveys showed on Monday, as manufacturers grappled with credit shortages and softening global demand.
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Photographs: David Mercado/Reuters
According to Andean culture, the month of August is the time to give offerings to 'Pachamama'. For these rituals, the Aymaras make offerings with coca leaves, candies, animal fat, llama foetuses, some dry fruits, powdered minerals and alcohol. The indigenous give thanks for their farms and their health.
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Photographs: Marko Djurica/Reuters
Serbs vowed to press on with roadblocks and stop North Atlantic Treaty Organisation's KFOR peacekeeping force from proceeding until Kosovo agrees not to station its police and customs officers at the sensitive border posts.
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Photographs: Mikhail Voskresensky/Reuters
Russian police arrested dozens of protesters across several cities on Sunday as opposition groups took to the streets to demand freedom of assembly.
About a hundred people staged a sit-in in Triumfalnaya square in central Moscow as part of a campaign calling for the implementation of Article 31 of the Russian constitution which guarantees freedom of assembly.
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Photographs: Asmaa Waguih/Reuters
Egyptian forces swinging electrified batons and shouting the battle cry "God is great" swiftly chased off dozens of activists, who had refused to end four weeks of renewed protests at Tahrir Square to pressure the country's transitional military rulers. Some people in the crowd hurled stones at the police.
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For some elderly survivors of Japan's March earthquake and tsunami, comfort comes in the form of a small white robotic seal named Paro. The residents of the nursing home came back from a nearly two-month-long evacuation since the nuclear crisis in Fukushima.
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Taxi drivers blocked major roads across Greece on Monday, stepping up protests against EU/IMF-inspired reforms to their trade and disrupting tourism at the height of the summer season. Others blocked access roads to the Herakleion airport at the resort island of Crete, forcing tourists to walk 500 metres with their luggage to get on buses and other transport.
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Photographs: Ahmad Yusuf/Reuters
Muslims around the world abstain from eating, drinking and conducting sexual relations from sunrise to sunset during Ramadan, the holiest month in the Islamic calendar.
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Photographs: YouTube via Reuters
The government said troops had been sent in to Hama to remove barricades erected by the protesters. US President Barack Obama has said he is appalled by the brutal attacks by Syrian forces on civilian protesters.
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Photographs: Luke MacGregor/Reuters
The film based on the true story of Latif Yahia, an Iraqi soldier who was forced to become the body double of Uday Hussein, will hit the screens in India on August 12.
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Photographs: Mohamad Torokman/Reuters
Israeli soldiers shot and killed two Palestinians, one of them Khalifa, in the occupied West Bank on Monday after entering the refugee camp to make arrests, medical officials and the military said.
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