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In-depth: 'Now we are refugees once again - and only God knows what we will be tomorrow.'
Human rights groups estimate as many as 5,000 people were executed in 1988 during a wartime purge of political prisoners by Iranian authorities.
Analysis: Washington's goal is the overthrow of the Islamic Republic - but the US is unlikely to find any replacement regime more palatable, writes Stasa Salacanin.
Feature: Marta Bellingreri speaks to the documentary makers of 'Women out of Darkness,' telling the story of four women by intertwining their lives in Iraq at different times and stages.
Analysis: Russia's role in Syria may very well depend on any future confrontation between Israel and Iran, writes Paul Iddon.
Analysis: If past strikes are anything to go by, this latest round of missiles is unlikely to deter Assad from gassing his people again in the future, writes Paul Iddon.
Analysis: It would be in Baghdad's interest to see Islamic State neutralised in the Syrian border region of Deir az-Zour, writes Paul Iddon.
Kurdish-Afrin has been surrounded by Turkish and Syrian rebel forces and appears about to fall in the coming days. Adi Smajić and Paul Mcloughlin report how this will be achieved.
More than 5,000 Iraqi Kurds, mostly women and children were killed on 16 March, 1988 when deadly gas was released on the northern town of Halabja by Saddam Hussein's forces.
As fighting erupted this week between pro-Kurdish forces and Syrian Islamist rebels, some accused Kurdish factions of siding with Russia and the regime. But the reality is much more complex.