|
 | A bleeding demonstrator emerges from a scuffle with riot police at the end of a protest aimed at continuing to pressure the president over last month's controversial presidential election, Saturday, April 10, 2004, in Taipei, Taiwan. Over 30,000 protesters gather in front of the President Building in yet another rally organized by opposition parties to push its claim that President Chen Shui-bian narrow victory in the March 20 election was unfair. click to open  |  | A wounded supporter of defeated Taiwan presidential candidate Lien Chan gets help after a clash with riot police outside the presidential palace in Taipei, April 10, 2004. Thousands of Taiwanese demonstrators protesting last month's election results clashed with riot police on Saturday outside the barbed wire barrier protecting newly elected President Chen Shui-bian's office. click to open  |  | Demonstrators are held back by riot police water canon trucks as they try and break through police barricades in a huge protest to continue pressuring the president over last month's controversial election, Saturday, April 10, 2004, in Taipei, Taiwan. Over 30,000 protesters gathered in front of the President Building in yet another rally organized by opposition parties to push its claim that President Chen Shui-bian narrow victory in the March 20 election was unfair. click to open  |  | Demonstrators are held back by riot police water canon trucks as they try and break through police barricades in a huge protest to continue pressuring the president over last month's controversial election, Saturday, April 10, 2004, in Taipei, Taiwan. Over 30,000 protesters gathered in front of the President Building in yet another rally organized by opposition parties to push its claim that President Chen Shui-bian narrow victory in the March 20 election was unfair. click to open  |  | Dozens of people including two politicians have been injured and 13 others arrested as protesters tried to storm Taiwan President Chen Shui-bian's office in the worst clashes since his wafer-thin re-election. Here police use a water cannon on protesters click to open  |  | Riot police advance of demonstrators as they break a huge protest aimed at last month's controversial election, Saturday, April 10, 2004, in Taipei, Taiwan. Over 30,000 protesters gather in front of the President Building in yet another rally organized by opposition parties to push its claim that President Chen Shui-bian narrow victory in the March 20 election was unfair. click to open  |  | Demonstrators are held back by riot police water canon trucks as they try and break through police barricades in a huge protest to continue pressuring the president over last month's controversial election, Saturday, April 10, 2004, in Taipei, Taiwan. Over 30,000 protesters gathered in front of the President Building in yet another rally organized by opposition parties to push its claim that President Chen Shui-bian narrow victory in the March 20 election was unfair. click to open  |  | Demonstrators are held back by riot police water canon trucks as they try and break through police barricades in a huge protest to continue pressuring the president over last month's controversial election, Saturday, April 10, 2004, in Taipei, Taiwan. Over 30,000 protesters gathered in front of the President Building in yet another rally organized by opposition parties to push its claim that President Chen Shui-bian narrow victory in the March 20 election was unfair. click to open  |  | Taiwan riot police clash with angry supporters of defeated Taiwan presidential candidate Lien Chan as they tried to storm a barricade outside the presidential office in Taipei, April 10, 2004. click to open  |  | A protester walks away with blood dripping after being involved during a push on just under 1000 who moved to the front of the Presidential Building after a scheduled protest earlier, Sunday, April 4, 2004, in Taipei, Taiwan. Several hundreds protesters rallied in downtown Taipei to demand a re-count of ballots in the president's razor-thin election victory two weeks ago. click to open  |
|