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Court denies death benefit for man killed in Iraq, citing war clause

Court denies death benefit for man killed in Iraq, citing war clause

TOKYO, Japan - Yukiko Hashida, widow of Shinsuke Hashida, who was killed in Iraq in May 2004, speaks at a press conference in Tokyo on Aug. 23 after the Tokyo District Court turned down her claim to death benefit, citing a clause waiving an insurer of paying such benefits in the event of war.

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Iraqi boy visits Shizuoka hospital for eye treatment

Iraqi boy visits Shizuoka hospital for eye treatment

NUMAZU, Japan - Mohamad Haytham Saleh (L), a 10-year-old Iraqi boy who has returned to Japan to receive further treatment on his left eye which was injured in a conflict, enters a hospital in Numazu, Shizuoka Prefecture, for the treatment on Nov. 29. He was accompanied by Yukiko Hashida, whose late husband Shinsuke had arranged the boy's first trip to Numazu. (Pool photo)

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(2)Iraqi boy visits Japan again for eye treatment

(2)Iraqi boy visits Japan again for eye treatment

NARITA, Japan - Mohamad Haytham Saleh, a 10-year-old Iraqi boy, waves at well-wishers on arrival at Narita airport on Nov. 25 to have eye treatment following surgery in June in Shizuoka Prefecture. Accompanying him is Yukiko Hashida, 51, whose husband Shinsuke, 61, had arranged Mohamad's first trip to Japan for surgery.

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(1)Iraqi boy visits Japan again for eye treatment

(1)Iraqi boy visits Japan again for eye treatment

NARITA, Japan - Mohamad Haytham Saleh, a 10-year-old Iraqi boy smiles on arrival at Narita airport on Nov. 25 to have eye treatment following surgery in June in Shizuoka Prefecture. Accompanying him is Yukiko Hashida, 51, whose husband Shinsuke, 61, had arranged Mohamad's first trip to Japan for surgery.

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Iraqi boy visits graves of Japanese journalists who helped him

Iraqi boy visits graves of Japanese journalists who helped him

UBE, Japan - Mohamad Haytham Saleh (C), a 10-year-old Iraqi boy whose eye surgery in Japan was arranged by two Japanese freelance journalists -- Shinsuke Hashida and his nephew, Kotaro Ogawa -- slain in May in Iraq, visits Hashida's gave in Ube, Yamaguchi Prefecture, on July 2. On the left is Hashia's wife Yukiko and Mohamad's father is on the right Haytham. Mohamad also visited Ogawa's grave.

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Saleh attends farewell gathering for slain journalists

Saleh attends farewell gathering for slain journalists

TOKYO, Japan - Mohamad Haytham Saleh (L), 10, from Iraq who had surgery on his injured eye at a hospital in Shizuoka Prefecture on June 11, meets reporters at a farewell gathering for two Japanese journalists killed in Iraq -- Shinsuke Hashida and Kotaro Ogawa -- in Tokyo on June 19. The boy's visit to Japan was arranged by the two journalists. Ogawa's mother Yoko is at center and Hashida's wife Yukiko at right.

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(3)Iraqi boy released from hospital

(3)Iraqi boy released from hospital

NUMAZU, Japan - Yukiko Hasihida (R), wife of slain journalist Shinsuke Hashida, talks to Mohamad Haytham Saleh, 10, from Iraq, at a hotel in Numazu, Shizuoka Prefecture, on June 14 after his release from a hospital in the city. The boy received surgery on his injured left eye on a trip arranged by Shinsuke Hashida and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa, who were killed in an ambush in Iraq in May.

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(2)Iraqi boy released from hospital

(2)Iraqi boy released from hospital

NUMAZU, Japan - Yukiko Hasihida, wife of the late journalist Shinsuke Hashida, hugs Mohamad Haytham Saleh, a 10-year-old Iraqi boy, at a hotel in Numazu, Shizuoka Prefecture, on June 14 after Mohamad was released from a hospital in Nuzamu. The boy has been in Numazu for surgery on his injured left eye, on a trip arranged by Shinsuke Hashida and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa, who were killed in an ambush in Iraq in late May.

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Ashes of slain Japanese journalists brought to Japan

Ashes of slain Japanese journalists brought to Japan

NARITA, Japan - Yukiko Hashida (front) and other relatives of two slain freelance journalists, Shinsuke Hashida and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa, return to Narita airport June 9 with their ashes.

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Slain Japanese journalists cremated

Slain Japanese journalists cremated

BANGKOK, Thailand - Relatives of two slain freelancers, Shinsuke Hashida and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa, leave a crematorium in Bangkok on June 8. They are Hashida's wife Yukiko (L), their son Daisuke (R) and Ogawa's father Hiroshi. The victims were killed in Iraq.

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Ashes of journalists slain in Iraq return to Japan hometown

Ashes of journalists slain in Iraq return to Japan hometown

UBE, Japan - Yukiko Hashida (R), wife of Shinsuke Hashida, and Yoko Ogawa, mother of Kotaro Ogawa, speaks to reporters at Ube Airport in Yamaguchi Prefecture on June 9 after arriving there with the ashes of Hashida and Ogawa. Freelance journalist Hashida and his nephew Ogawa were killed in Iraq in May.

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Bodies of 2 slain journalists cremated in Bangkok

Bodies of 2 slain journalists cremated in Bangkok

BANGKOK, Thailand - Yukiko Hashida (2nd from R), wife of Japanese journalist Shinsuke Hashida, who was killed in Iraq in May, walks around a crematorium at a temple in Bangkok with other relatives on June 7 before the bodies of Hashida and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa who was also killed with him were cremated.

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Bodies of 2 slain Japanese journalists arrive in Bangkok

Bodies of 2 slain Japanese journalists arrive in Bangkok

BANGKOK, Thailand - Yukiko Hashida (L) and her son Daisuke (R) arrive in Bangkok from Kuwait on June 6 with the bodies of her husband Shinsuke Hashida and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa who were slain in an attack near Baghdad in May. The bodies of the two journalists are scheduled to be cremated a temple in Bangkok, where they were based.

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Bodies of 2 slain Japanese journalists leave Kuwait

Bodies of 2 slain Japanese journalists leave Kuwait

KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait - Yukiko Hashida (R) and her son Daisuke prepare to leave Kuwait airport for Bangkok on June 6 aboard an airplane that will carry the bodies of her husband Shinsuke and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa, who were slain in an attack near Baghdad in late May. Yukiko and Daisuke will accompany the bodies and plan to cremate them at a temple in Bangkok.

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(3)Iraqi boy arrives in Japan for eye treatment

(3)Iraqi boy arrives in Japan for eye treatment

SHIZUOKA, Japan - Mohamad Haytham Saleh (R), a 10-year-old Iraqi boy, smiles after being introduced to people supporting his visit to Japan on June 4 in Numazu, Shizuoka Prefecture. He arrived in the city from Iraq to undergo treatment of an injured eye. Japanese journalist Shinsuke Hashida, who was killed in Iraq, had planned to bring the boy to Japan.

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Iraqi boy arrives in Japan for eye treatment

Iraqi boy arrives in Japan for eye treatment

TOKYO, Japan - Mohamad Haytham Saleh (R), 10, is accompanied by his father Haytham after arriving from Iraq at Narita airport June 4. They are in Japan so the boy can receive treatment for an injured eye. Japanese journalist Shinsuke Hashida, who was killed in Iraq, had planned to take the boy to Japan.

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Body confirmed as that of Japanese cameraman Hashida

Body confirmed as that of Japanese cameraman Hashida

KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait - Yukiko Hashida, along with her son Daisuke, speaks to reporters at a hotel in Kuwait City on June 3 after a body airlifted from Iraq was confirmed to be that of her husband Shinsuke Hashida, a freelance cameraman shot to death near Baghdad on May 27. Hashida holds the hat her husband was wearing when he and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa, their Iraqi driver and their interpreter were attacked by gunmen.

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(3)Body confirmed to be that of Hashida

(3)Body confirmed to be that of Hashida

KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait - A cap (shown June 2) belonging to Shinsuke Hashida, one of two Japanese freelance journalists fatally attacked near Baghdad, is shown with blood and what are believed to be bullet holes.

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(2)Body confirmed to be that of Hashida

(2)Body confirmed to be that of Hashida

KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait - Yukiko Hashida (front), whose husband Shinsuke was one of two Japanese freelance journalists attacked near Baghdad, and their son Daisuke return to their hotel in Kuwait after identifying her husband's body.

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(1)Body confirmed to be that of Hashida

(1)Body confirmed to be that of Hashida

KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait - Yukiko Hashida, whose husband Shinsuke was one of two Japanese freelance journalists attacked near Baghdad, leaves a Kuwaiti hotel June 2 to identify her husband's body.

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(1)Kin of journalists get belongings left behind in Baghdad

(1)Kin of journalists get belongings left behind in Baghdad

KUWAIT, Kuwait - Yukiko Hashida, wife of journalist Shinsuke Hashida believed to have been killed in Iraq folds her husband jacket in Kuwait on May 31. Belongings left behind by Hashida were carried to Kuwait from a Baghdad hotel where he was staying.

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Iraqi boy to arrive in Japan on Friday for eye treatment

Iraqi boy to arrive in Japan on Friday for eye treatment

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Mohamad Haytham Saleh (L), who stands with his father in this photo taken on May 30, will come to Japan on June 4 for eye treatment. Mohamad was originally scheduled to visit Japan on June 1, but the killing of his sponsors -- freelance journalists Shinsuke Hashida and Kotaro Ogawa -- threw his departure into disarray. The Japanese Embassy in Baghdad helped to rearrange his trip to Japan.

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Kin of Japanese slain in Iraq identify body in Kuwait

Kin of Japanese slain in Iraq identify body in Kuwait

KUWAIT, Kuwait - Relatives of freelance journalist Kotaro Ogawa -- his mother Yoko, father Hiroshi and brother Shuji -- return to a hotel in Kuwait May 30 after identifying his body at an Air Force base, to which the body was airlifted from Baghdad. Ogawa and his uncle Shinsuke Hashida were attacked in a Baghdad suburb on May 27 by gunmen.

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Kin of 2 Japanese feared killed in Iraq arrive in Kuwait

Kin of 2 Japanese feared killed in Iraq arrive in Kuwait

KUWAIT AIRPORT, Kuwait - The relatives of two Japanese journalists feared killed in an attack in Iraq, Shinsuke Hashida and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa, arrive at Kuwait International Airport on May 29 to identify the bodies. They are (from L to R) Hashida's wife Yukiko, their son Daisuke, Ogawa's brother Shuji, his parents Yoko and Hiroshi.

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Kin of 2 Japanese reported killed leave for Kuwait

Kin of 2 Japanese reported killed leave for Kuwait

TOKYO, Japan - Five relatives of reporters Shinsuke Hashida, 61, and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa, 33, who were reportedly killed in Iraq arrive at Narita airport May 29 to leave for Kuwait to identify the bodies. They are (from L to R) Ogawa's brother Shuji, his mother Yoko, Hashida's wife Yukiko, his son Daisuke and Ogawa's father Hiroshi.

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Driver of Japanese reporters describes attack

Driver of Japanese reporters describes attack

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Raad Ashoor, the Iraqi driver of Japanese journalists Kotaro Ogawa and his uncle Shinsuke Hashida, describes how they were attacked on the way through Mahmoudiya, about 30 km south of Baghdad.

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(2)2 Japanese journalists attacked outside Baghdad

(2)2 Japanese journalists attacked outside Baghdad

TOKYO, Japan - Yukiko Hashida (R), wife of Japanese freeland journalist Shinsuke Hashida, speaks at a press conference in Tokyo on May 28. flanked by Yoko Ogawa, mother of another freelance journalist Kotaro Ogawa. A car carrying the two journalists, their driver and interpreter, both Iraqis, was attacked near Baghdad on May 27. They are feared killed, local officials and the Japanese government said.

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(3)2 Japanese journalists attacked in Baghdad suburb

(3)2 Japanese journalists attacked in Baghdad suburb

SHIZUOKA, Japan - Yukiko Hashida (C), wife of freelance journalist Shinsuke Hashida, leaves her home in the town of Shimizu, Shizuoka Prefecture, May 28 for the Jordanian capital of Amman following reports her husband was attacked in a Baghdad suburb the previous day.

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(3)2 Japanese journalists attacked outside Baghdad

(3)2 Japanese journalists attacked outside Baghdad

UBE, Japan - Mine Hashida, mother of Japanese freelance jhournalist Shinsuke Hashida, speaks with reporters at her house in Ube, Yamaguchi Prefecture, on May 28. A carrying Shinsuke and another freelance journalist Kotaro Ogawa was attacked near Baghdad on May 27. The two are feared killed, local officials and the Japanese government said.

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(2)Iraqi boy visits Japan again for eye treatment

(2)Iraqi boy visits Japan again for eye treatment

NARITA, Japan - Mohamad Haytham Saleh, a 10-year-old Iraqi boy, waves at well-wishers on arrival at Narita airport on Nov. 25 to have eye treatment following surgery in June in Shizuoka Prefecture. Accompanying him is Yukiko Hashida, 51, whose husband Shinsuke, 61, had arranged Mohamad's first trip to Japan for surgery. (Kyodo)

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(1)Iraqi boy visits Japan again for eye treatment

(1)Iraqi boy visits Japan again for eye treatment

NARITA, Japan - Mohamad Haytham Saleh, a 10-year-old Iraqi boy smiles on arrival at Narita airport on Nov. 25 to have eye treatment following surgery in June in Shizuoka Prefecture. Accompanying him is Yukiko Hashida, 51, whose husband Shinsuke, 61, had arranged Mohamad's first trip to Japan for surgery. (Kyodo)

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Iraqi boy visits Shizuoka hospital for eye treatment

Iraqi boy visits Shizuoka hospital for eye treatment

NUMAZU, Japan - Mohamad Haytham Saleh (L), a 10-year-old Iraqi boy who has returned to Japan to receive further treatment on his left eye which was injured in a conflict, enters a hospital in Numazu, Shizuoka Prefecture, for the treatment on Nov. 29. He was accompanied by Yukiko Hashida, whose late husband Shinsuke had arranged the boy's first trip to Numazu. (Pool photo)(Kyodo)

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Court denies death benefit for man killed in Iraq, citing war cl

Court denies death benefit for man killed in Iraq, citing war cl

TOKYO, Japan - Yukiko Hashida, widow of Shinsuke Hashida, who was killed in Iraq in May 2004, speaks at a press conference in Tokyo on Aug. 23 after the Tokyo District Court turned down her claim to death benefit, citing a clause waiving an insurer of paying such benefits in the event of war. (Kyodo)

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Iraqi boy visits graves of Japanese journalists who helped him

Iraqi boy visits graves of Japanese journalists who helped him

UBE, Japan - Mohamad Haytham Saleh (C), a 10-year-old Iraqi boy whose eye surgery in Japan was arranged by two Japanese freelance journalists -- Shinsuke Hashida and his nephew, Kotaro Ogawa -- slain in May in Iraq, visits Hashida's gave in Ube, Yamaguchi Prefecture, on July 2. On the left is Hashia's wife Yukiko and Mohamad's father is on the right Haytham. Mohamad also visited Ogawa's grave. (Kyodo)

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(2)Iraqi boy released from hospital

(2)Iraqi boy released from hospital

NUMAZU, Japan - Yukiko Hasihida, wife of the late journalist Shinsuke Hashida, hugs Mohamad Haytham Saleh, a 10-year-old Iraqi boy, at a hotel in Numazu, Shizuoka Prefecture, on June 14 after Mohamad was released from a hospital in Nuzamu. The boy has been in Numazu for surgery on his injured left eye, on a trip arranged by Shinsuke Hashida and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa, who were killed in an ambush in Iraq in late May. (Kyodo)

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(2)2 Japanese journalists attacked

(2)2 Japanese journalists attacked

TOKYO, Japan - Shinsuke Hashida (R) who is believed to have been killed in the attack on May 27, talks with Samawah students. The photo was taken March 8, in Samawah, Iraq. (Kyodo)

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(1)2 Japanese journalists attacked

(1)2 Japanese journalists attacked

TOKYO, Japan - Kotaro Ogawa (front L) and Shinsuke Hashida (front R), both believed to have been killed in the attack on May 27, record Samawah students on video tape. The photo was taken March 8, in Samawah, Iraq. (Kyodo)

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(2)Body confirmed to be that of Hashida

(2)Body confirmed to be that of Hashida

KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait - Yukiko Hashida (front), whose husband Shinsuke was one of two Japanese freelance journalists attacked near Baghdad, and their son Daisuke return to their hotel in Kuwait after identifying her husband's body. (Kyodo)

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Saleh attends farewell gathering for slain journalists

Saleh attends farewell gathering for slain journalists

TOKYO, Japan - Mohamad Haytham Saleh (L), 10, from Iraq who had surgery on his injured eye at a hospital in Shizuoka Prefecture on June 11, meets reporters at a farewell gathering for two Japanese journalists killed in Iraq -- Shinsuke Hashida and Kotaro Ogawa -- in Tokyo on June 19. The boy's visit to Japan was arranged by the two journalists. Ogawa's mother Yoko is at center and Hashida's wife Yukiko at right. (Kyodo)

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(3)Iraqi boy released from hospital

(3)Iraqi boy released from hospital

NUMAZU, Japan - Yukiko Hasihida (R), wife of slain journalist Shinsuke Hashida, talks to Mohamad Haytham Saleh, 10, from Iraq, at a hotel in Numazu, Shizuoka Prefecture, on June 14 after his release from a hospital in the city. The boy received surgery on his injured left eye on a trip arranged by Shinsuke Hashida and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa, who were killed in an ambush in Iraq in May. (Kyodo)

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Ashes of slain Japanese journalists brought to Japan

Ashes of slain Japanese journalists brought to Japan

NARITA, Japan - Yukiko Hashida (front) and other relatives of two slain freelance journalists, Shinsuke Hashida and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa, return to Narita airport June 9 with their ashes. (Kyodo)

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Ashes of journalists slain in Iraq return to Japan hometown

Ashes of journalists slain in Iraq return to Japan hometown

UBE, Japan - Yukiko Hashida (R), wife of Shinsuke Hashida, and Yoko Ogawa, mother of Kotaro Ogawa, speaks to reporters at Ube Airport in Yamaguchi Prefecture on June 9 after arriving there with the ashes of Hashida and Ogawa. Freelance journalist Hashida and his nephew Ogawa were killed in Iraq in May. (Kyodo)

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Slain Japanese journalists cremated

Slain Japanese journalists cremated

BANGKOK, Thailand - Relatives of two slain freelancers, Shinsuke Hashida and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa, leave a crematorium in Bangkok on June 8. They are Hashida's wife Yukiko (L), their son Daisuke (R) and Ogawa's father Hiroshi. The victims were killed in Iraq. (Kyodo)

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Bodies of 2 slain journalists cremated in Bangkok

Bodies of 2 slain journalists cremated in Bangkok

BANGKOK, Thailand - Yukiko Hashida (2nd from R), wife of Japanese journalist Shinsuke Hashida, who was killed in Iraq in May, walks around a crematorium at a temple in Bangkok with other relatives on June 7 before the bodies of Hashida and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa who was also killed with him were cremated. (Kyodo)

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Bodies of 2 slain Japanese journalists arrive in Bangkok

Bodies of 2 slain Japanese journalists arrive in Bangkok

BANGKOK, Thailand - Yukiko Hashida (L) and her son Daisuke (R) arrive in Bangkok from Kuwait on June 6 with the bodies of her husband Shinsuke Hashida and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa who were slain in an attack near Baghdad in May. The bodies of the two journalists are scheduled to be cremated a temple in Bangkok, where they were based. (Kyodo)

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Iraqi boy arrives in Japan for eye treatment

Iraqi boy arrives in Japan for eye treatment

TOKYO, Japan - Mohamad Haytham Saleh (R), 10, is accompanied by his father Haytham after arriving from Iraq at Narita airport June 4. They are in Japan so the boy can receive treatment for an injured eye. Japanese journalist Shinsuke Hashida, who was killed in Iraq, had planned to take the boy to Japan. (Kyodo)

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(3)Iraqi boy arrives in Japan for eye treatment

(3)Iraqi boy arrives in Japan for eye treatment

SHIZUOKA, Japan - Mohamad Haytham Saleh (R), a 10-year-old Iraqi boy, smiles after being introduced to people supporting his visit to Japan on June 4 in Numazu, Shizuoka Prefecture. He arrived in the city from Iraq to undergo treatment of an injured eye. Japanese journalist Shinsuke Hashida, who was killed in Iraq, had planned to bring the boy to Japan. (Kyodo)

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Body confirmed as that of Japanese cameraman Hashida

Body confirmed as that of Japanese cameraman Hashida

KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait - Yukiko Hashida, along with her son Daisuke, speaks to reporters at a hotel in Kuwait City on June 3 after a body airlifted from Iraq was confirmed to be that of her husband Shinsuke Hashida, a freelance cameraman shot to death near Baghdad on May 27. Hashida holds the hat her husband was wearing when he and his nephew Kotaro Ogawa, their Iraqi driver and their interpreter were attacked by gunmen. (Kyodo)

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(3)Body confirmed to be that of Hashida

(3)Body confirmed to be that of Hashida

KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait - A cap (shown June 2) belonging to Shinsuke Hashida, one of two Japanese freelance journalists fatally attacked near Baghdad, is shown with blood and what are believed to be bullet holes. (Kyodo)

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(1)Body confirmed to be that of Hashida

(1)Body confirmed to be that of Hashida

KUWAIT CITY, Kuwait - Yukiko Hashida, whose husband Shinsuke was one of two Japanese freelance journalists attacked near Baghdad, leaves a Kuwaiti hotel June 2 to identify her husband's body. (Kyodo)

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