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Local people clamour for water in Basra, iaq, Friday April 11, 2003, where members of the British Army's Black Watch and Desert Rats have been overseeing an operation which on a recent day brought 100,000 litres of water from Kuwait. (AP Photo/Terry Richards, Pool)
4/11/2003
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Women carry goods down train tracks in the village of Shaibah, near Basra in southern Iraq (news - web sites) Thursday April 10, 2003. Signs of increasing order are evident in Iraq's second-biggest city. A U.S. Central Command spokesman says British forces are shifting from combat operations to what they call ``security and stability operations.'' (AP Photo/Dan Chung, Pool
4/10/2003
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A young Iraqi girl cries as a British Challenger tank moves in on the Baath party office in Basra.(AFP/Odd Andersen)
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Local Iraqi children sit near a British Challenger tank from the Scots Dragoon Guards in the city of Basra in southern Iraq (news - web sites), April 7, 2003. British and U.S. troops walked unopposed almost to the center of Basra for the first time. Photo by Pool/Reuters
4/7/2003
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An Iraqi woman sits crying in front of her destroyed house following an air strike on the outskirts of Baghdad April 2, 2003. U.S. aircraft hit a Red Crescent maternity hospital in Baghdad, the city's trade fair, and other civilian buildings, killing several people and wounding at least 25, hospital sources and a Reuters witness said. (Faleh Kheiber/Reuters)
4/2/2003
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A refugee child from Iraq (news - web sites) cries while being vaccinated at a refugee camp, set up for third-world national people that fled Iraq because of the U.S.-led strike against Saddam Hussein (news - web sites)'s regime, near the far eastern Jordanian town of Ruweished, some 50 kilometers (30 miles) from the Jordanian-Iraqi border April 7, 2003. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich
4/7/2003
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An Iraqi woman carrying a child flees the city of Basra past members of Britain's 7th Armoured Brigade in southern Iraq (news - web sites), in this photograph released March 31, 2003. While some people have left the city, most residents have stayed put and say pro-Saddam militias are operating in Basra confidently or firing at U.S. and British troops from sprawling shanty towns around the city. REUTERS/POOL/Tony Nicoletti
3/31/2003
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Iraqi Hizra Al Aibi, 11, holds her 6-month-old brother Ali, in one of the rooms where their family is staying, at the former Al-Fanar orphanage compound in Baghdad Sunday, April 20, 2003. Several Iraqi families who claim they are too poor and the city lacks housing, moved into the compound after it was looted and heavily damaged following the fall of the capital to the U.S.-led forces(AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
4/20/2003
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A female fighter of the Mujahedin Khalq (MKO) stands guard at a gate outside their main base at Camp Ashraf, Iraq (news - web sites), 100 kms north of Baghdad Saturday April 19, 2003. The fall of Saddam Hussein (news - web sites)'s regime has raised the question of what will happen to the heavily armed Iranian opposition group that has operated on Iraqi soil for years. (AP Photo/Kevin Frayer)
4/19/2003
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A fighter of the Mujahedin Khalq (MKO) stands in front of some of their military vehicles alleged to have been destroyed by coalition bombing six days ago near their main base at Camp Ashraf, Iraq (news - web sites), 100 kms north of Baghdad Saturday April 19, 2003. The fall of Saddam Hussein (news - web sites)'s regime has raised the question of what will happen to the heavily armed Iranian opposition group that has operated on Iraqi soil for years. (AP Photo/Kevin Frayer)
4/19/2003
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