Iraq
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Editors' picks
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Iraqis rebuild their lives thanks to a lull in violence
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Most recent
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7 Jan 2009:
Woman arrested in Balad Ruz procession marking death of Prophet Muhammad's grandson, Imam Hussein
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5 Jan 2009:
Attack by female bomber comes as Shia Muslims prepare to mark the holy day of Ashura
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4 Jan 2009: Police say at least 30 people died when female suicide bomber detonated explosives near shrine
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2 Jan 2009:
Letters: "A new Iraq inquiry need not review WMD again" (Jonathan Steele, 1 January). Oh, but it must.
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2 Jan 2009:
Former MEK member, believes Camp Ashraf closure will give people chance to escape pressures of cult
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2 Jan 2009:
Decision to shut base used for sabotage sharpens political differences between Baghdad and Washington
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1 Jan 2009:
Iraqi's lawyer says they would almost certainly face death penalty after transfer
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31 Dec 2008:
The number of journalists, bloggers and media workers killed doing their jobs fell to 62 this year from 106 in 2007, according to the Paris-based press freedom watchdog Reporters Without Borders. But it said that the decrease was hardly grounds for optimism because, in many parts of the world, it showed that violent repression had forced reporters to abandon their jobs. Iraq remained the deadliest country for journalists with 15 deaths (down from 47 in 2007). Pakistan, the Philippines and Mexico followed Iraq as the most dangerous countries for reporters. (Via RSF)
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31 Dec 2008:
Appeal court rules against accused but they secure interim injunction pending further appeal
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30 Dec 2008: Two men accused of shooting British troops after ambush face death penalty after losing appeal against transfer
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29 Dec 2008: Foreign secretary warns of 'dark moment' for peace and unacceptable loss of life
1-15 of 16962 for Iraq


