12 political photos that made us look twice in 2013
Jang Song Taek, the uncle of the secretive 30-ish North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, was dramatically removed last week from a special party session by armed guards.
Calling him “despicable human scum,” the state then summarily executed the man who had mentored his nephew during the transition after the death of his dictator father Kim Jong Il.
In his two years in power so far, observes The Times, Kim Jong Un has invested “the country’s scarce resources in water slides, roller coasters, ski slopes and a ‘dolphinarium.’ ”
We might dismiss it as eccentric, except that North Korea has that nuclear arsenal.
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Politics are often all about words. Debating, orating, writing, crafting reams of legislation. But sometimes, politics are, simply, an image -- perhaps one that makes us stop, stare, wonder ... or gasp. From Syria to South Africa, from Texas to California, from a child to a queen, these are some of the photos, among the thousands of images we see every day, that helped tell the story of politics in 2013. --Sara Lessley
The former archbishop of Los Angeles, Cardinal Roger M. Mahony, seemed increasingly isolated this year.
He was “relieved of public and administrative duties following the release of personnel files that suggest he protected accused priests from criminal investigation,” official reports recounted. Criticism from parishioners, the media and others mounted. And in Rome, where Mahony attended the conclave to elect a successor to Pope Benedict XVI, cameras captured him, well, alone.
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(AFP/Getty Images)
President Obama made headlines with a gesture.
At the memorial service for South Africa’s Nelson Mandela this month, he shook hands with Raul Castro, president of the long-estranged communist Cuba and brother of Fidel. As The Times said: “A handshake with the leader of a nation that’s been a foe for half a century is never just a handshake.”
The world took note.
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(Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images)
Not since Queen Victoria’s time has it been possible: Today’s queen of England was photographed this year with three potential future kings -- the first such image of royal succession in more than 100 years.
Marking the autumn royal christening of baby Prince George was his father Prince William, his grandfather Prince Charles and his great grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II.
Ahhh, tradition.
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“They thought that the bullets would silence us, but they failed,” proclaimed Pakistani teen Malala Yousafzai, who was shot and nearly killed by Taliban fighters, to the United Nations in July.
“And then, out of that silence, came thousands of voices.”
Her cause: Girls should have the right to go to school.
Wearing a pink shawl that belonged to slain Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, Malala told the U.N. assembly on youth that she didn’t want revenge against the Taliban, which has threatened to hunt her down again.
Oh, and she gave those first formal, public remarks since the shooting on what was also her 16th birthday.
Would we do the same?
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At first, the source for the leaked data about top-secret electronic intelligence programs was anonymous. Rumors flew, cloak-and-dagger stories were spun.
Then, days later, the man dubbed a “traitor” by ex-Vice President Dick Cheney emerged. He turned out to be a mild-looking, bespectacled 29-year-old high school dropout and computer tech for a defense contractor. Edward J. Snowden told interviewers last summer that he spilled details of classified surveillance programs because, well, “Even if you’re not doing anything wrong, you’re being watched and recorded.”
How much do we care?
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It’s 2013, and women can’t get a driver’s license or drive legally in Saudi Arabia?
Right, because such freedom might lead to “increased premarital sex and promiscuity,” warn clerics in the conservative kingdom.
The image of a fully veiled woman, complete with sunglasses, furtively tooling around in the family car during a “defy the ban” protest in October speaks volumes.
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Hour after hour, the slight figure in running shoes talked ... and talked some more ... under the Capitol dome in Austin.
Texas Democratic state Sen. Wendy Davis was trying to stop a Republican-backed antiabortion bill.
During her filibuster, she couldn’t eat, nap, leave the floor, lean against the podium or speak about anything except the bill at hand.
After 11 hours, she had prevailed -- at least temporarily -- and so had her pink running shoes.
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Edith “Edie” Windsor was angry, according to The Times.
If her longtime partner, Thea Spyer, had been named Theo instead, the estate she left to Windsor would not have been taxed. “So I decided to sue and get my money back,” said Windsor, now 84.
This summer, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed, ruling the Defense of Marriage Act unconstitutional, clearing the way for same-sex married couples to enjoy the same inheritance laws and other benefits granted opposite-sex couples.
Really, who else could have been grand marshal this year at the Gay Pride Parade in New York?
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Anti-government activists in August accused the Syria government of killing hundreds of civilians in a poison-gas attack against rebels in a Damascus suburb.
The Syrian government called reports of a massacre untrue, but the images of dead Syrian children on The Times’ front page was searing:
“Kids dead on the cover page is so wrong,” implored one reader, while another wrote: “To those of us who want to know what’s really going on in the world, the photo was the best evidence available.”
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