Attack on Sudan’s capital - 14 May 07

In Sudan, a manhunt is under way to find the leader of the rebel group which attacked the capital on Saturday. Khalil Ibrahim now has a bounty of $250,000 on his head. Fighters from his Justice and Equality Movement, based in Darfur, thousands of kilometres to the west, were stopped by the army in Omdurman, a suburb of Khartoum.

The military says more than 200 people were killed.

Al Jazeera’s Amr El Kahky has been given an exclusive look around the city after a curfew was lifted.

As he reports, many residents are still in shock from the fighting.

Chinese village faces earthquake aftermath - 15 May 2008

More than 80 million people live in the Sichuan region, and Al Jazeera’s correspondent in China, Tony Cheng, says it feels as if everyone is out on high alert, that the rhythms of normal, everyday life have stopped.

People are evacuating from danger zones and homes just about everywhere are gone.

The presence of rescue workers, tens of thousands of soldiers, the wail of ambulances go on and on.

Cheng takes the viewer on a ride, following emergency teams up into the mountains, where one of the most remote villages is reached.

Immigration laws threaten Britain’s curry houses - 03 May 08

Al Jazeera’s Tessa Parry-Wingfield reports on the new immigration laws that are threatening to plunge the country’s billion-dollar curry industry into crisis.

Restaurant owners fear their chefs will not meet the new EU points-based criteria, which could spell disaster for curry fans across Britain.

Turkish and Chinese chefs are also being affected by the new laws within the UK.

Ahmadiyah faces possible ban from Indonesia - 03 May 2008

Al Jazeera’s Step Vaessen reports on a religious group in Indonesia that has been the target of violent attacks and now faces being banned from the country.

The Ahmadiyah claims to be an off-shoot of Islam, but a government inquiry has declared them a "deviant" group, and says their beliefs have caused unrest.

US company in Iraq accused of malpractice - 30 Apr 08

It is being called the Baghdad Bubble.

That is new business opportunities in Iraq following the US-led invasion.

One American company, L-3 Titan has won multi-million dollar contracts to provide translating services to troops.

But a corporate watchdog claims many Titan employees have poor language skills, and are not properly trained for combat zones, potentially putting lives at risk.

Al Jazeera’s John Terrett reports.

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