Oops! Something went wrong! It doesn't appear to have affected your data. Please notify your system administrator if the problem persists.Access denied
Your session was expired. Page will be reloaded.
Processing...
Your assets are ready. If the download does not start automatically, click Download.
Ehud Barak, Israeli Defence Minister and Labor Party leader attends the weekly Labor Party meeting at the Knesset, Israel's Parliament. March 02, 2009. Labor Chairman Ehud Bark said at a faction meeting on Monday that his meeting with Likud Chairman Prime Minister-designate Benjamin Netanyahu "dealt mainly with the challenges ahead, and we also talked about politics". Photo by Miriam Alster / FLASH90
Israel's Likud party leader Benjamin Netanyahu speaks with Gideon Sa'ar at the party meeting in the Knesset, the Israeli parliament, in Jerusalem March 2, 2009. Prime Minister-designate Benjamin Netanyahu said at a Likud faction meeting in the Knesset on Monday that he will form a government soon. "The incidents will not wait, the Qassams will not wait, and neither will the unemployment," Netanyahu explained. Photo by Miriam Alster / FLASH90.
State Comptroller Micha Lindenstrauss (L) presents his annual report at the Israeli Knesset in Jerusalem, March 02, 2009. Photo by Miriam Alster / flash90.
Leader of Israel's ultra-nationalist Yisrael Beitenu party MP Avigdor Lieberman speaks on a cellular telephone as he walks through a hall on his way to a party meeting in the Knesset (Israeli Parliament) in Jerusalem on March 02, 2009. Israel's Likud launched talks with far-right parties on February 25, although hawkish leader Benjamin Netanyahu still hoped to form a broad-based government more acceptable to the international community. Likud negotiators kicked off formal talks at an afternoon meeting with the Yisrael Beitenu party of ultra-nationalist MP Avigdor Lieberman, followed by negotiations with the religious Shas and United Torah Judaism. Photo by Miriam Alster / flash90.
Mira Awad (R) and Achinoam Nini (L) perform the winning song they will sing as they represent Israel in the Eurovision songcontest 2009. Israel is sending a Jewish-Arab duo to represent it with a song of peace at a particularly fragile moment for relations between the country's Jews and Arabs. March 02, 2009. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90
Mira Awad (R) and Achinoam Nini (L) perform the winning song they will sing as they represent Israel in the Eurovision songcontest 2009. Israel is sending a Jewish-Arab duo to represent it with a song of peace at a particularly fragile moment for relations between the country's Jews and Arabs. March 02, 2009. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90
Mira Awad (R) and Achinoam Nini (L) perform the winning song they will sing as they represent Israel in the Eurovision songcontest 2009. Israel is sending a Jewish-Arab duo to represent it with a song of peace at a particularly fragile moment for relations between the country's Jews and Arabs. March 02, 2009. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90
Mira Awad (R) and Achinoam Nini (L) perform the winning song they will sing as they represent Israel in the Eurovision songcontest 2009. Israel is sending a Jewish-Arab duo to represent it with a song of peace at a particularly fragile moment for relations between the country's Jews and Arabs. March 02, 2009. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90
Mira Awad and Achinoam Nini (not seen)perform the winning song they will sing as they represent Israel in the Eurovision songcontest 2009. Israel is sending a Jewish-Arab duo to represent it with a song of peace at a particularly fragile moment for relations between the country's Jews and Arabs. March 02, 2009. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90
Achinoam Nini and Mira Awad (not seen) perform the winning song they will sing as they represent Israel in the Eurovision songcontest 2009. Israel is sending a Jewish-Arab duo to represent it with a song of peace at a particularly fragile moment for relations between the country's Jews and Arabs. March 02, 2009. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90
Mira Awad (not seen) and Achinoam Nini perform the winning song they will sing as they represent Israel in the Eurovision songcontest 2009. Israel is sending a Jewish-Arab duo to represent it with a song of peace at a particularly fragile moment for relations between the country's Jews and Arabs. March 02, 2009. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90
Mira Awad (R) and Achinoam Nini (L) recieve flowers as the winning song they will sing as they represent Israel in the Eurovision songcontest 2009 is presented. Israel is sending a Jewish-Arab duo to represent it with a song of peace at a particularly fragile moment for relations between the country's Jews and Arabs. March 02, 2009. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90