John Allen Muhammad was pronounced dead at 9:11 p.m. EST. His body is seen being loaded into a state forensic van, left. Full story
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Monday, November 23, 2009
Travel Alberta: Travel Alberta Canada-Alberta Travel Video Program
Travel Alberta: Travel Alberta Canada-Alberta Travel Video Program
Travel Alberta: Travel Alberta Canada-Alberta Travel Video Program
England - A Look Around Harrods, London's world famous department store
A Look Around Harrods, London's world famous department store-England
England - A Look Around Harrods, London's world famous department store
A Look Around Harrods, London's world famous department store - England

A Look Around Harrods, London's world famous department store - England
A Look Around Harrods, London's world famous department store - England
Tourist Copper Canyon (Barrancas del Cobre)

Copper Canyon (Barrancas del Cobre)
One of the largest canyon systems in the world, Copper Canyon is a land of mountains, rivers, waterfalls, desert and forest. Four of the canyons are deeper than Arizona’s famous Grand Canyon, although none of them are as wide. Perhaps the most famous attraction for visitors is the Chihuahua al PacĂfico Railway, a scenic journey that crosses 36 major bridges, travels through 87 tunnels and climbs to a height of 2438m (8000ft) before descending back down to sea level. The Sierra Tarahumara mountains are inhabited by Tarahumara Indians, who live in isolated communities along the railway line.Tourist Copper Canyon (Barrancas del Cobre)
North America Tourist Guide

A fairly comprehensive list of major world tourist attractions by region. Also includes country information, contact addresses for additional tourist information, videos and photos of some destinations, and maps. Some areas may still be under construction.
North America Tourist Guide
Tourist Places in Kerala

Tourist Places in Kerala -
Best Beaches ,Lakes and Backwaters for a tourist to visit in Kerala
Tourist Places in Kerala
Parks at San Francisco

Parks at San Francisco of Tourist
Parks at San Francisco
Popular Tourist Spots in Cyprus

Popular Tourist Spots in Cyprus
Ayia Napa was a very poor village, the only income came from the fishing port. After the invasion in 1974 from Turkey Ayia Napa was born. For the young we have the centre of Ayia Napa that caters for their night life with bars and clubs and it is one of the most popular tourist spots in Cyprus. Over the years it has developed into a popular holiday resort with its beautiful crystal clear blue beaches with golden sands and is visited by many people from all over the world. In recent years, apart from being a family holiday destination, it has become a party capital similar to Ibiza. All beaches in Ayia Napa have been awarded with the EU blue flag for their level of cleanliness and the comprehensive facilities offered in line with the uniform standards set by the European Union. Water sports such as wind surfing, canoeing, speed boating and scuba diving are very popular here. The Cyprus Tourism Organization supervises the beaches and is responsible for protecting the interests of all tourists. It is also very well known for its magnificent night clubs and bars which cater people of any age. The Square, is in the middle of the town, and is filled with nightclubs and restaurants and shops, and for many is seen as the focal point of the Ayia Napa night life. The clubbing season in Ayia Napa starts off in June and lasts all summer until September or October, though a few clubs like the Black and White are open all year round. Licensing hours in Cyprus last nearly all day, starting at 9am and running through to 2am. Like all the major towns in Cyprus, it is bursting with markets and shops. Leather goods, clothes, jewellery and CDs are particularly well stocked and are a fair bit cheaper than at home. It now has a few shops open all day, every day of the week. Well known for its haute cuisine people tend to come here for other reasons. But there is a wide range of food from around the world available Thai, French, Mexican, Indian Chinese, and British. If you want fish and chips, you can have it. There is a McDonalds too. If you want to try something traditional in a restaurant, ask for some meze. It is a selection of different foods, some spicy, and a choice of dips and sauces.Popular Tourist Spots in Cyprus
Bomb blas tourist spot in the world

Bomb blas tourist spot in the world
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Seven Spanish tourists and two Yemeni drivers were killed on Monday when a suicide bomber rammed his explosives-laden car into their convoy at an ancient temple in Yemen, officials said.
The interior ministry said the bombing in the restive northeastern region of Marib appeared to be the work of the al-Qaeda network.
"Preliminary information indicates that the al-Qaeda organisation is behind the cowardly attack," an interior ministry official told the Saba news agency.
"This criminal attack has killed seven Spanish tourists and two Yemeni nationals who worked as drivers and tourist guides, and wounded six Spanish tourists and two (Yemeni) nationals."
It was one of the deadliest bombings targeting foreigners in Yemen, the ancestral homeland of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden which has been battling a number of attacks by the network in recent years.
Witnesses said the attack occurred as the tourists were wrapping up a tour of a temple in Marib which dates back 3000 years to the time of the biblical Queen of Sheba.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility.
The security official said on the website of the Yemeni defence ministry's newspaper that the bomber slammed his explosives-laden vehicle into the tourists' five-car convoy, which included a police car.
In Madrid, an official had said earlier that six Spanish tourists had been killed and seven others injured in the attack.
Witnesses said the blast took place around 6pm (0100 AEST) in a western suburb of the town of Marib, 170 kilometres east of the capital Sanaa.
Tribal sources said it was heard as far as 20 kilometres away from the site of attack, near the Mahram Bilquis, or temple of the moon god.
Yemen has faced a wave of Islamist unrest among its Sunni Muslim majority which it has been fighting with help from US special forces based over the Bab al-Mandab strait in Djibouti.
In October 2000, 17 US sailors were killed when suicide bombers attacked the destroyer USS Cole off the southern Yemeni port of Aden in an attack claimed by al-Qaeda.
In October 2002, a similar attack against the French tanker the Limburg killed one Bulgarian crew member and wounded 12 others.
Thirty-six Yemenis are currently on trial charged with planning and carrying out attacks for al-Qaeda but several are on the run after tunnelling out of a Sanaa prison in February last year and are being tried in absentia.
Last month, a soldier with "emotional problems" opened fire on oil workers with US energy giant Occidental Petroleum killing an Indian woman engineer and wounding six other people, including the local American boss, in the eastern Shabwah province.
In September 2006, four bombers and a security guard were killed when Yemeni security forces foiled suicide bombings against two oil refineries. In March 2003, a Canadian was killed and another wounded after a Yemeni gunman opened fire at an oilfield east of Sanaa.
Yemen, which has 20 million inhabitants, is one of the world's poorest countries, despite its proximity to oil-rich Saudi Arabia.
The country has also been plagued by frequent kidnappings of Westerners, although all but one have been carried out by tribes with grievances against the central government and the hostages have been released unharmed.
Yemen has also faced a deadly uprising among the Zaidi minority in the mountains on the Saudi border although a ceasefire brokered by the gas-rich emirate of Qatari took effect last month.
In November 2002, a Hellfire missile fired from a US predator drone killed six al-Qaeda suspects in the Marib region, one of them a leading suspect in the sinking of the USS Cole.
It was the first strike outside Afghanistan of the so-called US war against terror.
Bomb blas tourist spot in the world
Brits take Broome to world's hot tourist spots
Brits take Broome to world's hot tourist spotsBRITISH travellers find Paris's Eiffel Tower and Egypt's pyramids a bore and much prefer to flock to some of Australia's top tourist spots, a survey has found.
The Sydney Harbour Bridge, Kings Canyon in the Northern Territory and Broome's Cable Beach have made it into a top 10 list of the best foreign tourist spots for British tourists.
Two of Paris's renowned sites - the Eiffel Tower and Leonardo Da Vinci's Mona Lisa at the Louvre - were rated the least impressive foreign sightseeing spots for British travellers.
New York's bustling Times Square and Statue of Liberty, the famous street of Las Ramblas in Barcelona, the White House in Washington DC, Egypt's historic pyramids and Rome's romantic meeting place, the Spanish Steps, also got the thumbs down.
Holidaying on home soil also proved a major disappointment for many Brits, with England's prehistoric Stonehenge named the worst tourist spot in the UK.
Some of London's major attractions - Big Ben, Buckingham Palace, the London Eye and the Princess Diana Memorial Fountain - fared little better, according to the survey of 1267 British tourists by Virgin Travel Insurance.
Joining the three Australian tourist hot spots in the top 10 foreign attractions was the Grand Canal in Venice, the Treasury monument at Petra in Jordan and Kenya's Masai Mara.
Top 10 tourist sights
1. The Treasury, Petra, Jordan, The Grand Canal, Venice, The Masai Mara, Kenya, Sydney, Harbour Bridge, Taroko Gorge, Taiwan, Kings Canyon, Australia, Cappadaocia Caves, Turkey
Lake Titicaca, Peru and Bolivia, Cable Beach, Australia, Jungfraujoch, Switzerland.

Brits take Broome to world's hot tourist spots
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Tourist
Saint Martin is a tropical island in the northeast Caribbean, approximately 300 km (186 miles) east of Puerto Rico. The 87 km2 island is divided roughly in half between France (53 km2)[1] and the Netherlands Antilles (34 km2)[2]; it is the smallest inhabited sea island divided between two nations, a division dating to 1648. The southern Dutch half comprises the Eilandgebied Sint Maarten (Island area of St. Martin) and is part of the Netherlands Antilles. The northern French half comprises the Collectivité de Saint-Martin (Collectivity of St. Martin) and is an overseas collectivity of France.
On January 1, 2006 the population of the entire island was 72,892 inhabitants, 37,629 of whom lived on the Dutch side,[3] and 35,263 on the French side.[4]
Collectively, the two territories are known as "St-Martin/St Maarten". Sometimes SXM, the IATA identifier for Princess Juliana International Airport (the island's main airport), is used to refer to the island.
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