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/ 3 April 2005

Insurgents attack infamous Iraq prison

Insurgents have attacked the Abu Ghraib prison west of Baghdad, injuring 44 United States service members and 12 prisoners after a period of declining attacks that had raised hopes the insurgency might be weakening. Lawmakers also prepared to name a new speaker on Sunday in a session aimed at ending days of deadlock.

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/ 3 April 2005

Powerful aftershocks hit Indonesia

Two intense aftershocks struck north-western Indonesia on Sunday in the latest of a barrage of jolts since a massive quake nearly a week ago killed about 1 300 people, meteorologists said. A 6,2-magnitude aftershock hit at 7.59am local time. The second quake was at 10.11am and measured 6,1 on the Richter scale.

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/ 3 April 2005

Germans now split by a rift of the mind

Last week, a poll commissioned by Berlin Free University reported that — 16 years after the wall came down, and 15 years after Germany’s political reunification that cost ,5-trillion and wrecked Europe’s largest economy — a quarter of former West Germans and half as many easterners would like the wall back.

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/ 3 April 2005

Who will be the next pope?

A multitude of names, spanning the entire religious and political spectrum, are now being touted as the next pope. But predicting who will become the spiritual head of the Catholic Church is a notoriously difficult exercise. History shows that the church has a tendency to overlook the favourite candidates.

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/ 3 April 2005

World mourns the pope

”A few moments before he died, the pope raised his right hand, moving it in an obvious, if only faint, gesture of blessing, as if he were aware of the crowd … in the square who were following the saying of the rosary. As soon as the prayer was over, the pope made a very great effort and said the word ‘Amen’. A moment later, he was dead.”

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/ 3 April 2005

Pope: Messages from around the world

Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II, United States President George Bush, former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev, French President Jacques Chirac and many others all paid tribute to Pope John Paul II after the pope’s death on Saturday.

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/ 2 April 2005

Tottenham’s Arnesen happy to learn

Frank Arnesen’s office is neatly arranged. Shelves lining the room display dozens of football reference books and scouting videos. A map of Great Britain is marked with little red flags denoting the location of each Premiership club. The Dane charged with restoring greatness to Tottenham has meticulousness in his method.

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/ 2 April 2005

How a new pope is chosen

On the death of a pope, his successor is elected by a college of cardinals meeting in conclave in the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican. The system of election has been changed several times over the 2 000 years of the papacy’s existence, with Pope John Paul II having himself introduced a new set of rules in 1996.

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/ 2 April 2005

The papacy throughout history

Since the foundation of the Christian religion nearly 2 000 years ago, about 264 popes have presided over the church’s fortunes, from Simon Peter of Galilee to the former Karol Wojtyla of Poland, better known as Pope John Paul II, who died on Saturday evening.