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.
A Palestinian vendor stands among flags and shirts of Barcelona's football team at a sport store in Rafah, southern Gaza strip, on September 29, 2012. The Hamas rulers of Gaza called on September 29 for a media boycott of next month's Barcelona-Real Madrid derby if the Catalan club goes ahead with plans to welcome Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit to the game. The Palestinian Islamist group, which held Shalit captive for more than five years until his release in a prisoner exchange in October last year, said his attendance at the game on October 7 would be offensive.Photo by Abed Rahim Khatib / Flash 90
A Palestinian vendor stands among flags and shirts of Barcelona's football team at a sport store in Rafah, southern Gaza strip, on September 29, 2012. The Hamas rulers of Gaza called on September 29 for a media boycott of next month's Barcelona-Real Madrid derby if the Catalan club goes ahead with plans to welcome Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit to the game. The Palestinian Islamist group, which held Shalit captive for more than five years until his release in a prisoner exchange in October last year, said his attendance at the game on October 7 would be offensive.Photo by Abed Rahim Khatib / Flash 90
A Palestinian vendor stands among flags and shirts of Barcelona's football team at a sport store in Rafah, southern Gaza strip, on September 29, 2012. The Hamas rulers of Gaza called on September 29 for a media boycott of next month's Barcelona-Real Madrid derby if the Catalan club goes ahead with plans to welcome Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit to the game. The Palestinian Islamist group, which held Shalit captive for more than five years until his release in a prisoner exchange in October last year, said his attendance at the game on October 7 would be offensive.Photo by Abed Rahim Khatib / Flash 90