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  • 23
    Jan
    2013
    11:17am, EST

    Hints of a bloodbath: Hostage secretly took photos during Algeria siege

    Kyodo via AP

    An Islamic militant (in camouflage uniform, rear right) stands near Algerian employees who were forced to leave their living quarters with their belongings at the In Amenas natural gas complex in Algeria on Jan. 16.

    By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The images are striking for what they don’t show. They hold only hints of the bloodshed to come.

    The Japanese news agency Kyodo has released the first photographs from inside a hostage crisis in the North African nation of Algeria, secretly snapped by one of the captives with a cellphone camera.

    Islamist fighters stormed a gas field and nearby barracks on Jan. 16 and took hundreds of people hostage. The Algerian army launched a rescue raid the following day, opening a three-day standoff.

    It ended in a bloody clash. The Algerian government put the death toll at 67, including 38 foreign workers and 29 militants. The U.S. State Department said that three Americans were among those killed.

    The photos released by Kyodo depict the opening hours of the crisis. They show a scene that -- while certainly not safe -- appeared stable.

    In one shot, an Islamic militant, armed and wearing a mask and camouflage uniform, stands several feet away from three Algerian workers who had been forced to leave their living quarters. One of the three is wearing a hoodie, and another has his hands stuffed in his pockets.

    Kyodo via Reuters

    An Islamic militant (rear center, in camouflage) stands among Algerian employees who were forced to leave their living quarters with their belongings at the In Amenas natural gas complex on Jan. 16.

    In a second photo, Algerian workers stand around among duffel bags and plastic water bottles arranged on the ground outside. A militant appears in the background, facing away, easy to miss but for the butt of his rifle.

    A third picture is far more ominous: In the foreground are several militants, in the background at least a dozen hostages, forced to sit against a wall of the complex.

    Kyodo via AP

    Islamic militants stand in front of foreign hostages, seen sitting against a wall, at the Ain Amenas natural gas complex on Jan. 16.

    Kyodo did not say how it had obtained the photos. A Japanese government source said on Monday that the Algerian government listed nine Japanese killed in the siege, the highest toll among non-Algerians working at the site.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    5 comments

    Stop calling them jihadists or insurgents! They are simply terrorists!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: gas, africa, militants, hostage, algeria, islamist, photographs
  • 12
    Apr
    2011
    8:05pm, EDT

    Baby photos being cleaned and sorted with care in tsunami-devastated Japan

    By Carissa Ray

    This brings to mind the (hopefully) rhetorical question, "If your house caught fire and you had time to save one non-living thing, what would you take with you?" Maybe it's because I'm a photographer, but I remember even in school knowing that, given a chance, I would try to save my family photos. It's encouraging to think that maybe a few people in Japan will have that chance thanks to these volunteers.

    Toru Hanai / Reuters

    A volunteer cleans a family photo that was washed by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami as baby photos are placed to dry at a volunteer centre in Ofunato, Iwate prefecture, April 12, 2011.

     You can see David Arnott's post on the beginning of this photo recovery effort here and Meredith Birkett's post from last month on the images left in the wake of the tsunami.

    Toru Hanai / Reuters

    A volunteer opens family photos that were washed away by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami before cleaning at a volunteer centre in Ofunato, Iwate prefecture, April 12, 2011.

    8 comments

    Can you imagine having your home destroyed by a tsunami, everything lost? And then someone finds pictures and takes the care and the time to clean them so, someday, you may have them again? What an amazing thing to do. Thank you, photo cleaners!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, asia, earthquake, tsunami, world-news, photographs, featured, natural-disasters, family-photos
  • 11
    Apr
    2011
    7:28am, EDT

    AFP - Getty Images

    Volunteers remove mud and sort family photographs recovered by defense force soldiers from tsunami devastated areas, at a shelter in Kesennuma city in Miyagi prefecture, Japan on April 10.

    Volunteers work to return lost photos to tsunami survivors

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    Meredith Birkett wrote last month about the family photographs left in the rubble of houses after Japan's earthquake and tsunami. Now, an effort has begun to reunite some of those lost photos with their owners.

    Comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, asia, earthquake, tsunami, world-news, photographs, natural-disasters, family-photos
  • 7
    Mar
    2011
    8:44am, EST

    Family photographs show Catherine Middleton growing up

    By Mish Whalen

    A series of family photographs of royal bride-to-be Kate Middleton were released today, showing her growing up -- from a young child to Prince William's girlfriend. The five photographs are from the Middleton family album and released for the first time today. The Royal Wedding is scheduled to take place on April 29, at London's Westminster Abbey. See more Royal Wedding coverage here and visit our Royal Wedding blog, the Windsor Knot.

    Middleton Family via AP

    Kate Middleton, aged three-and-a-half is seen on holiday in England's Lake District.

    Middleton Family via AP

    Kate Middleton, aged four, left, with her father and sister Pippa, in Jerash, Jordan.

    Middleton Family via AP

    Kate Middleton, aged five.

    Middleton Family via AP

    Kate Middleton smiles following her graduation from St. Andrews University, Scotland, on June 23, 2005.

    Middleton Family via AP

    Prince William and Kate Middleton pose together following their graduation from St. Andrews University, Scotland, on June 23, 2005.

    A London newspaper has reported that Kate Middlelton will wear a dress by cutting-edge designer Sarah Burton and that the royal wedding reception may feature '80s disco tunes. Michelle Kosinski reports from London.

    42 comments

    The fascination is because she's going to be a real-life princess, and as someone who dreamed of being a princess as a girl and is now pretty much obsessed with weddings and fancy parties, I can completely understand.What I don't understand is why people who don't care bother to read through the art …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: family, kate, william, photographs, royal-wedding

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Carissa Ray

is the Supervising Multimedia Producer for TODAY.com, editing and producing photos and video.

David R Arnott

is NBCNews.com's Multimedia Editor in London.

Mish Whalen

TODAY.com. senior multimedia editor

Mish Whalen Blogroll

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