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 | Pakistan's opposition leader and anti-U.S. cleric Maulana Fazlur Rahman, third from left, leads a march with other parliamentarians in Islamabad, Pakistan to condemn the publications of cartoons depicting Islamic Prophet Muhammad, Sunday, Feb. 19, 2006. Pakistani police raided offices and homes of dozens of radical Islamic leaders, putting several under house arrest and detaining hundreds of their associates in a bid to foil a rally in the capital to protest the cartoons, officials said. click to open  |  | Supporters of Pakistan's religious party Jamat-e-Islami (Party of Islam) wave their flags and raise hands to condemn the publication of cartoons depict Islamic Prophet Muhammad, Sunday, Feb. 19, 2006 during a rally on a bridge in Attock near Peshawar, Pakistan. click to open  |  | A Pakistani police officer fires teargas on an angry Islamists gathered to protest the publication of cartoons depicting Islamic Prophet Mohammad in Islamabad February 19, 2006. Police fired teargas and rubber bullets to disperse hundreds of demonstrators in Pakistan's capital on Sunday, despite sealing the city to stop Islamists protesting against cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad. click to open  |  | Pakistani protesters throw stones at the police during a protest rally against the publication of cartoons depicting Islamic Prophet Mohammad in Islamabad February 19, 2006. Police fired tear gas and warning shots to disperse small groups of demonstrators in Islamabad on Sunday after earlier sealing the capital to stop Islamists protesting against cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad. click to open  |  | A Pakistani Islamist protester throws a stone at the police during a protest rally against the publication of cartoons depicting Islamic Prophet Mohammad in Islamabad February 19, 2006. Police fired tear gas and warning shots to disperse small groups of demonstrators in Islamabad on Sunday after earlier sealing the capital to stop Islamists protesting against cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad. click to open  |  | Troops of Pakistan's para-military forces stand guard during a rally called by the opposition in Islamabad, Pakistan, to condemn the publications of cartoons depicting Islamic Prophet Muhammad, Sunday, Feb. 19, 2006. Pakistani police raided offices and homes of dozens of radical Islamic leaders, putting several under house arrest and detaining hundreds of their associates in a bid to foil a rally in the capital to protest the cartoons, officials said. click to open  |  | Police officers fire teargas shells at stone-throwing protesters who gathered in Islamabad, Pakistan to condemn the publications of cartoons depicting Islamic Prophet Muhammad, Sunday, Feb. 19, 2006. Pakistani police raided offices and homes of dozens of radical Islamic leaders, putting several under house arrest and detaining hundreds of their associates in a bid to foil a rally in the capital to protest the cartoons, officials said. click to open  |  | Muslim protesters burn wood as one holds a poster of Denmark's Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen during a rally called by the opposition in Islamabad, Pakistan to condemn the publications of cartoons depicting Islamic Prophet Muhammad, Sunday, Feb. 19, 2006. Pakistani police raided offices and homes of dozens of radical Islamic leaders, putting several under house arrest and detaining hundreds of their associates in a bid to foil a rally in the capital to protest the cartoons, officials said. click to open  |  | A Pakistani police officer opens fire on Islamists who gathered to protest the publication of cartoons depicting Islamic Prophet Muhammad in Isalamabad February 19, 2006. Police fired teargas and rubber bullets to disperse hundreds of demonstrators in Pakistan's capital on Sunday, despite sealing the city to stop Islamists protesting against cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad. click to open  |  | Supporters of Jamat-e-Islami or Party of Islam chant slogans to condemn the publications of cartoons depicting Islamic Prophet Muhammad, Sunday, Feb. 19, 2006 in Islamabad, Pakistan. Pakistani police raided offices and homes of dozens of radical Islamic leaders, putting several under house arrest and detaining hundreds of their associates in a bid to foil a rally in the capital to protest the cartoons, officials said. The Quranic quotes written on flag means,'There is only one God and Muhammad is his Prophet.' click to open  |
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