A woman cries in front of a church where
some 30 people were burned alive in
Eldoret, Kenya. Picture taken January 1,
2008. REUTERS/
Stringer
REF: RTX55JM
%method>
A man wipes his face in front of a
church where some 30 people were burned
alive in Eldoret, Kenya. Picture taken
January 1, 2008. REUTERS/
Stringer
REF: RTX55JO
%method>
A man buys loaves of bread as others
wait in a queue to buy bread at a bakery
in Kisumu town, about 438 km (263 miles)
west of Kenya's capital Nairobi, January
1, 2008, as food shortages hit the city
according to local residents. REUTERS/
James Akena
REF: RTX5516
%method>
TV frame grab shows aerial footage of
displaced people in the area where a
church was attacked near Eldoret, some
310 km (193 miles) northwest of Nairobi.
REUTERS/Kenyan Red Cross via REUTERS TV
REF: RTX557V
%method>
People line up to buy kerosene as some
shops and petrol stations opened for
business after days of rioting in
Nairobi, January 2, 2008. REUTERS/Noor
Khamis
REF: RTX55LN
%method>
People pick through the rubble of their
destroyed houses and shops in Mathare
slum after days of post-election riots
in Nairobi. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya
REF: RTX55P3
%method>
Red Cross workers remove bodies after
ethnic violence in Kiambaa, about 300 km
(190 miles) north of Nairobi, January 2,
2008. REUTERS/Tim
Cocks
REF: RTX55RV
%method>
People take shelter in a police station
after ethnic violence in Eldoret,
January 2, 2008. REUTERS/Tim
Cocks
REF: RTX55RX
%method>