The New York Times Agency May 2010

EN_00913897_2662
The New York Times Agency May 2010
(NYT45) HALABJA, Iraq -- Aug. 2, 2002 -- IRAQ-KURD-TERROR-2 -- More than a decade after Saddam Hussein's warplanes dropped poison gas canisters on Halabja, Iraq, killing perhaps 5,000 people in one of the worst such attacks since World War I, this city was still struggling to get back on its feet. After Sept. 11, an Islamic breakaway group known as Jund-ul-Islam, or Soldiers of God, sharply stepped up a string of ambushes, bombings and assassinations here, threatening to paralyze life anew, Kurdish leaders say. Aras Abed, 32, who lost both of his parents and all 10 of his brothers and sisters in Saddam Hussein's poison-gas attack on Halabja is seated before their grave, last week. (John F. Burns/The New York Times)
CENA MINIMALNA - 100 USD
2002-08-02
EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
John F. Burns/The New York Times/Redux
17338991
0,59MB
15cm x 10cm przy 300dpi
000, 10, 11, 2, 2002, 32, 5, A, ABED, AFTER, ALL, AMBUSHES, AN, AND, ANEW, ARAS, AS, ASSASSINATIONS, ATTACK, ATTACKS, AUG, BACK, BEFORE, BOMBINGS, BOTH, BREAKAWAY, BROTHERS, BURNS, CANISTERS, CITY, DECADE, DROPPED, FEET, GAS, GET, GOD, GRAVE, GROUP, HALABJA, HERE, HIS, HUSSEIN, I, IN, IRAQ, IS, ISLAMIC, ITS, JOHN, KILLING, KNOWN, KURDISH, LAST, LEADERS, LIFE, LOST, MORE, NEW, NYT45, OF, ON, ONE, OR, PARALYZE, PARENTS, PEOPLE, PERHAPS, POISON, POISON-GAS, REDUX, SADDAM, SAY, SEATED, SEPT, SHARPLY, SINCE, SISTERS, SOLDIERS, STEPPED, STILL, STRING, STRUGGLING, SUCH, THAN, THE, THIS, THREATENING, TIMES, TO, UP, WAR, WARPLANES, WAS, WEEK, WHO, WORLD, WORST, YORK,