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Iraqi opposition

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  • Hussam Qais Taha with a water buffalo
    Climate change in Iraq

    When the water buffalo die

    Iraq is one of the nations hardest hit by climate change. But the 'land between the two rivers' isn't just drying out, it's also battling groundwater contamination as a result of oil production

  • Excluding Kurdistan from a new infrastructure project in Iraq, designed to connect the Gulf with Turkey via road and rail, is purely political – despite the economic unfeasibility argument.
    Connecting the Gulf with Turkey

    Iraq's Transport Corridors – no place for Kurdistan?

    Excluding Kurdistan from a new infrastructure project in Iraq, designed to connect the Gulf with Turkey via road and rail, is purely political – despite the economic unfeasibility argument. Commentary by Sardar Aziz

  • The murder of another young woman by a family member has led to renewed calls for Iraq's government to finally enact a law on domestic violence.
    Iraqi YouTube star's murder

    How to end domestic violence in Iraq?

    In Iraq, the murder of another young woman by a family member has led to renewed calls for the country's government to finally enact a law on domestic violence, one that has been stuck in parliamentary limbo for years. Cathrin Schaer reports

  • 20 years after Saddam's fall

    Iraq still haunted by missing persons

    When he first heard that U.S. troops had toppled Saddam Hussein, Iraqi engineer Hazem Mohammed thought he would finally be able to find his brother, who had been shot dead and dumped in a mass grave after a failed uprising against Saddam's rule in 1991

  • Iraq's art and literature scene

    Culture boom in Baghdad

    Frustrated with their politicians, young Iraqis are turning their backs on politics and throwing themselves into cultural life. Birgit Svensson reports from Baghdad

  • "We want security, jobs and our civil rights": Just as they stopped protesting two years ago, so they continue now: Basra, Diwanija, Nasiriyah, Babylon, there are demonstrations everywhere. "We will not leave until all our demands are met, we want a future!"
    Protests in Iraq

    The streets speak for themselves!

    Once again, political deadlock is driving thousands of Iraqis to Tahrir Square. They want new elections, but the parliament refuses to dissolve. Elected representatives are now being protected from the people. Birgit Svensson reports from Baghdad

  • Iraq bans contact with Israel

    Anti-Semitism as state doctrine?

    A law has been passed by the Iraqi parliament that criminalises any contact with Israel. In the midst of heated debates on the subject, one crucial aspect has been forgotten: the restitution of Jewish property. Birgit Svensson reports from Baghdad

  • Parliamentary elections in Iraq

    Low turnout, high drama

    With turnout somewhere between 38 and 41 per cent, assassinations and intimidation of activists by armed groups in the run-up to the election, and a boycott of the election by several new parties linked to the protest movement, political calm and stability seem a distant prospect in Iraq. There has also been a shift in the balance of power towards Muqtada al-Sadr and Nouri al-Maliki. By Harith Hasan

  • Iraq's interim Prime Minister Mustafa al Kadhimi at the polling station.
    Parliamentary elections in Iraq

    Change or political stagnation in Baghdad?

    Will Iraq's parliamentary elections bring change? The new electoral law, which allowed independent candidates to stand for the first time, provided a golden opportunity. But not many people took advantage of it. And voter turnout was shamefully low. Birgit Svensson reports from Baghdad and Mosul

  • Men place an election poster for the upcoming early parliamentary elections on 10 October near private generator network wires in Baghdad.
    Middle East

    Factbox: Who's competing in Iraq's elections?

    Iraq holds a general election on 10 October, its fifth parliamentary vote since the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003 and ushered in a complex multi-party system contested by groups defined largely by sect or ethnicity.

  • Iraq's electricity crisis

    Iraqis left in the dark by their corrupt politicians

    Every electricity minister since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled dictator Saddam Hussein has faced the same daunting equation: Iraq should be able to produce over 30,000 megawatts of power, enough to meet current demand, but only about a half of that reaches consumers. Samya Kullab explores the reasons why

  • US withdrawal from Iraq

    Not Afghanistan: Why the US and Iraq won't leave one another

    While agreeing last week to a withdrawal of US combat troops from Iraq, neither Iraqi nor US leaders can admit publicly how much they need each other. By Cathrin Schaer

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