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Fort Knox Five: Album/Tour

Fort Knox Five: Remix Album & Tour


Fort Knox Five

In 2008 Washington, DC breakbeat funksters Fort Knox Five released their debut album Radio Free DC, which USA Today hailed as “One of this year’s most exciting, most eclectic funk albums.” After the release of Radio Free, the African influenced big-band sounding group followed a rigorous touring schedule, which included stops in Australia, New Zealand, United Kingdom, Germany, Greece, Holland, South America, and throughout the USA.

As summer kicks into gear, the Fort Knox Five have released Radio Free DC Remixed. A collection of remixes from up and coming talent including Deekline & Ed Solo, A Skillz, Nick Thayer, The Nextmen, Thomas Blondet, Jon Ohms, Rob Paine, Shimon, Neighbour and Sub Swara among others. These producers deliver 16 primetime, party rocking mixes that cross the genres of hip-hop, breaks, electro, dubstep, disco and dub. Download the remixes at fortknoxrecordings.com.

Fort Knox Five Summer Dates:

07/17/09 Fri Indian Lookout Country Club Mariaville, NY

07/24/09 Fri Hush Nightclub Victoria, BC

07/25/09 Sat Bass Coast Project Squamish, BC

08/01/09 Sat Hi Fi Club Calgary, AB

08/02/09 Sun Hoodoo Lounge Banff, AB

08/07/09 Fri Shambhala Music Festival Salmo, BC

08/08/09 Sat Shambhala Music Festival Salmo, BC

08/15/09 Sat Camp Zoe Salem, MO

09/25/09 Fri Earthdance (Black Oak Ranch)


James Purnell on life after cabinet

In his first interview since resignation, ex-minister on New Labour’s failings – and the challenge ahead

On Thursday morning in a cafe by the Thames near Tower Bridge, James Purnell can see wild flowers with big purple heads, fronds of water reeds and roller-skating children on school holiday – a Kodak moment that encapsulates why he’ll probably never stand to be leader of the Labour party.

This is his “walk in the park” test. Can the leader of a political party go for a walk in the park, or a bike ride on Sunday, and not be trailed by special branch? Purnell’s observations of his political mentor, Tony Blair, led him to conclude no.

“I don’t miss TV interviews,” Purnell says of his previous life, leaning back in his chair. “I don’t miss doing the Today programme, with great respect. Not having a weekend, I don’t miss. I love having a weekend. I love not having a red box hanging over me.”

Five weeks out of frontline politics appear to have done him good. His sideburns seem in rude health. He has a tan and is lightly freckled, and he has traded his ministerial suit for a pair of fashionable indigo jeans.

Speaking for the first time about his reasons for quitting Gordon Brown’s government, Purnell says the person who gave him the best guidance when he decided to resign was an unnamed friend who told him to honest about what he thought. So he was, brutally, telling the prime minister to stand down in his letter to Downing Street.

“They said to me, ‘You can’t go very far wrong with the truth.’”

The former work and pensions secretary had been struggling with the truth since as long ago as December 2008. “Over the last six months I had been thinking: has the elastic stretched beyond where I feel I was being true to myself? I remember doing an interview with Andrew Rawnsley and having to find things to say that were just about true enough and that the letter of what I was saying was true enough. I thought: ‘This is too much – too much of a stress.’ That’s less about politics and more about what I said in my letter [about Brown]. There were policy things. But I’m not going to go there.”

The discomfort turned to decision as late as 11.30am on the Thursday voters were going to the polls. Only the day before, those running Labour’s reshuffle had rung Purnell to ask whether he would like the health or education brief. He opted for education.

But the next day, he says, the 10pm deadline – ministers were under orders to keep quiet until the polls in the European and local elections had closed – concentrated his mind.

Uncomfortable

At 11.30am on a park bench on a former council estate in his constituency he decided to go; at 2.30pm he ducked into his constituency office and wrote the letter in five minutes; at 5pm he told three national newspapers; and at 9.50pm he spoke to Peter Mandelson (“we had a disagreement”).

The other man he spoke to was the foreign secretary, David Miliband, which provoked another disagreement, though one based on a previous shared understanding.

“I think I put him in quite a difficult position by what I did,” Purnell says, leaning away from the Dictaphone and uncomfortable. Why? “Why? Because I raised a question for him which he answered in a different way. People asked why, given I resigned, he didn’t resign.”

Purnell says he and Miliband are extremely close, and that the foreign secretary has been “extraordinarily thoughtful towards me since my resignation. I’ve been amazingly impressed by his thoughtfulness and dedication to maintaining that relationship and he’s done it in a way that is clearly not scarred by the fact of what I did.”

In his time on the backbenches Purnell has set about arranging his thoughts, both literally and metaphorically – it took one weekend to arrange the books in his flat from A to Z (A Class Act, by his former cabinet colleague Lord Adonis, the transport secretary, to Emile Zola).

British government, he says, can be a bit of a “conspiracy against ideas” and he describes his opposite number in New Zealand telling him that her government is run as a kind of “beehive”, with ministers working in the same place and a Thursday evening drink when cabinet members compare notes.

So, as Tony Benn gave up politics to spend more time on politics, Purnell is giving up government to spend more time on policy. In September he’ll begin a three-year project at the Demos thinktank to “reinvent New Labour” for the next generation.

Purnell will not be shying away from the years when the sheen came off the New Labour project (the novel he’s just started happens to be Ian McEwan’s Saturday – 24 hours on the day of the anti-war march that crystallised Blair’s fall from popularity). He says the project that started off as a “broad tent” has now become a “gazebo”.

He says New Labour became “too small-c conservative” on schools policy and didn’t make the case for immigration. It was terrified of swing voters, but should put electoral reform to a referendum at the next election.

“We took the electoral furniture to be too fixed. We didn’t think about creating a new coalition and I think that’s what we need to do now. To be honest I think we were too conservative about our means, so it was easier to take on arguments on the left, not the right. So what I want to try and do now is be as radical on the left as on the right.

“I think we need to go back and clarify values which underlie new Labour and be very candid about what worked and didn’t work.

“If Tony was coming into politics now he would be saying we need to develop a new set of policies for what is relevant for today, not for 1994.”

He admits to nostalgia for that period but it’s a nostalgia like that for Britpop.

The Open Left team at Demos will solicit help from across the left. “We’re going to go through Labour values, match them to what we’ve done and then identify challenges and then organise a team around those challenges.”

Purnell’s critics call him a Tory, some a Blairite, others a Liberal and he agrees he is pretty liberal on social policy (he has been heard to joke that had Brown tried to make him home secretary he’d have told the prime minister he planned to let immigrants in and prisoners out).

But his resignation letter talked about the need for “stronger regulation and an active state”. He agrees the real prize for the next generation of Labour politicians is to weld together liberalism and social democracy.

The white rubber wristband he wears he says he will keep wearing until the UK hits its target to spend 0.7% of GDP on international aid.

“Individuals,” Purnell thinks, “collapse under the weight of their autonomy. It is important, but people don’t want to feel alone – they want to feel protected and they also have a concept of a good society based on compassion for others.”

He suggests that the writings of others at Demos, including his friends Richard Reeves and Phil Collins – which draw heavily on Amartya Sen’s recent writing on capabilities – go some way towards explaining that. But he adds: “I think they leave out the compassion we have towards strangers which is at the root of being an egalitarian.”

Of those alphabetised books, Purnell’s favourite is one called Market Socialism. “It’s not a phrase that is ever going to inspire a political movement but it does capture a lot of what I believe – that markets are a good means to spread power and create innovation but they can be yoked to leftwing goals and not to capitalism. There is a difference between capitalism and markets.

“People on the right are very sceptical about the state but people on the left believe the state is a good thing.”

Advice for Brown in advance of an election? To pledge universal childcare and a guaranteed job for every person out of work after one year.

But his ideas probably won’t be deployed by himself as a leader of the party. “The way I feel at the moment is it’s pretty unlikely I’ll want to go back into frontline politics,” he says.

“I never want to leave politics. I love politics, I love ideas and I was pretty excited by the Department for Work and Pensions but actually I get exactly the same kick, in some ways in a freer way, from the stuff I am doing at Demos.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Scott Stringer: Putting Food Policy On The City’s Front Burner

Our food system in New York City needs a radical overhaul. We need to make food a real priority.

Laureate backs school vetting scheme

Anthony Browne takes conciliatory line following calls to boycott school visits over police checks

New children’s laureate Anthony Browne has attempted to calm the storm that has blown up among children’s authors over a new scheme requiring them to be vetted before visiting schools.

Philip Pullman described the vetting scheme as “outrageous, demeaning and insulting” to the Guardian on Friday and said he wouldn’t be appearing in schools again because of it, while former children’s laureate Anne Fine said it was “demeaning” and “unhealthy”, also ruling out appearing in UK schools. “It’s a sledgehammer to miss a nut,” she said on Friday.

The Vetting and Barring Scheme is managed by the Independent Safeguarding Authority, which was set up in response to the 2002 Soham murders, committed by former school caretaker Ian Huntley. It kicks off this October, requiring the 11.3m people across the education, care and health industries who work with children to register – for a £64 fee – on a national database.

Authors including Michael Morpurgo, Quentin Blake and Anthony Horowitz have all hit out at the scheme, saying along with Pullman and Fine that it meant they wouldn’t be appearing in schools in the future. “All of us are constantly invited to do tours of schools abroad. If we can no longer enthuse British children about reading then I’m happy to go to more sensible places like Australia, New Zealand, America, France and Italy,” said Fine on Friday.

Pullman, talking on BBC Radio’s Today programme this morning, asked why he “should have to pay £64 to a government agency to be given a certificate saying ‘I’m not a paedophile’. It’s so ludicrous that it’s almost funny, but it’s not funny, it’s actually rather dispiriting and sinister.”

Browne, however, has taken a more sanguine approach to news of the scheme. “I feel that as writers we shouldn’t necessarily be granted an exemption,” he said. “If all people who work with children have to be vetted by the police then we shouldn’t be an exception. It seems a bit odd that we have to pay for it, though.”

Gillian Cross, author of The Demon Headmaster, agreed with Browne, telling the Bookseller that anything that could be done to stop child abuse was worth it. “I understand entirely why people are enraged about the whole child abuse suspicion frenzy, which is particularly hard on men. It is nevertheless true that many children are abused. Theirs is the real suffering, and if checking can help to prevent that, I’m not opposed to it,” Cross said.

And posting on the Bookseller’s website, children’s author Robert Muchamore wrote that accusations that the scheme was “a stealth tax, or part of some Orwellian state apparatus that puts a barrier between children and adults is absurdly over the top”.

“You pay £64, they run a criminal records check and you get a piece of paper to say that you have no prior convictions related to mistreatment of children. It isn’t a cure for child abuse, but it does create a barrier to stop past offenders working with kids. That seems perfectly reasonable to me,” he wrote, adding on Twitter that he was “irritated at another round of whinging by the usual grey-haired mafia of ‘renowned’ kids’ authors”.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds



Freemasons jailed in Fiji over witchcraft claims

Masonic symbol of sqaure and compass

A group of freemasons have had to spend a night in jail in Fiji, after local villagers complained they were practising witchcraft.

The 14 men, including eight Australians and a New Zealander, had been holding a night-time meeting on Denerau island.

The New Zealand man told reporters he had spent a "wretched" time in jail, and blamed the mix-up on the actions of "dopey village people".

Police also seized wands, compasses and a skull from the freemasons’ lodge.

Freemasonry is a centuries-old club that practices secret rituals, and has more than five million members worldwide.

‘Nothing sinister’

The New Zealander, who did not want to give his name, told the New Zealand Herald that Tuesday night’s meeting was "interrupted by a banging on the door, and there were these village people and the police demanding to be let in".

Nothing sinister was going on, he claimed, but "such is the nature of life in Fiji" they were taken to a nearby police station.

The freemasons insist they had a permit for the meeting and were released after spending an uncomfortable night there.

Police director of operations Waisea Tabakau told Legend FM News in Fiji that the group was being investigated for "allegedly practicing sorcery", the Fiji Village website reported.

The New Zealand man said that when they were freed the following morning, they were told their release was on the orders of the prime minister’s office.

Emergency regulations imposed by Fiji’s military regime allow police to detain people for up to 48 hours without charge.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Michael Strong: The Most Progressive Movement on the Planet

What if we could apply the power of creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship to the problem of poverty reduction?

Mysterious Penguin Killings In Australia Leads To Investigation

SYDNEY — The first battered bodies were found on a small Australian beach, the white sand around them stained crimson with their blood. A few days later, the killer struck again – this time on the nearby cliffs overlooking Sydney H…

Quake sparks NZ-Australia alert

Breaking News

A 7.8-magnitude earthquake has shaken New Zealand, prompting a tsunami warning for parts of the Pacific Ocean.

The quake struck off the south-west tip of New Zealand, 161km (100 miles) west of Invercargill at a depth of 33km (20 miles), the US Geological Survey said.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center in Hawaii issued a "non-expanding regional tsunami warning" for nearby areas.

There were no immediate reports of damage or any evidence that a tsunami had formed after the quake.

"An earthquake of this size has the potential to generate a destructive tsunami that can strike coastlines in the region near the epicentre within minutes to hours," the warning centre said in a statement.

The quake was detected at 0922GMT (2122 local time), reports said.


Are you in the area Have you been affected Let us know by filling in the form below.

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Flight of the Conchords: best songs

The second season of Bret and Jemaine’s hapless musical adventures didn’t disappoint – here are the hits we can’t stop humming

“It’s about a couple of deadbeat guys who have got nothing going on …”

Flip! Say it ain’t so! Was last night’s episode really the last-ever outing for Flight of the Conchords? If so, it bowed out on a typically understated high, with Bret and Jemaine funking out on a farm back in New Zealand, shepherds once more, after failing to make it big in Murray’s off-Broadway musical about their life. Before the second series of their lo-fi musical adventures in New York aired, there was talk of second-album syndrome having set in – apparently everything was taking longer to write because they’d used up a lifetime’s worth of material on the first. But now that it’s finished, it doesn’t seem to have really been that much of a problem. It’s been one of the proper joys of recent TV, with Murray, Mel and Dave all given more screen time (even Doug got to shine a little at the end, with his manly harp) and peppered with little details like the NZ tourist board posters in Murray’s embassy office (“It’s not boring in New Zealand”), Lucy “Xena” Lawless’s cameo, Bret’s airbrushed animal jumpers and Jemaine’s forbidden love with an Australian.

Here are five of the best songs from the season. Will you ever be able to listen to Visage again?

Too Many Dicks on the Dancefloor: “You guys are dorking on my vibe!”

Sugar Lumps: “The ladies go crazy for my sugar lumps”

Dreams: “I have some cookies for you in my fanny pack!”

Stay Cool: “Bret – cool your jets!”

Fashion Is Danger: “Thatcher. Th-th-th-Thatcher. Jazzercise. Lip gloss.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Logan Campbell Opens Brothel To Fund Olympic Dream

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) – A New Zealand taekwondo athlete has opened a brothel to help fund his bid to compete at the 2012 London Olympics, local media reported Sunday.

Logan Campbell, 23, told the Sunday Star-Times newspaper he hoped hi…

Terry Gardner: Could Love Be in the Air?

Is it possible to find love in the air? That’s the question Air New Zealand hopes to answer for a group of people departing from LAX on October 13, 2009.

Sporting dilemma

By Jo-Anne Rowney
BBC News Magazine

The Australians have criticised the England cricket team for unsporting delaying tactics on the last day of the first Ashes test. But what’s the difference between cunning gamesmanship and cheating

Bilal Shafayat and the glove

In the closing minutes of the test, England sent "12th man" Bilal Shafayat on to the pitch to give batsman James Anderson new gloves, with the team physio also sauntering on.

Australian Captain Ricky Ponting and a number of pundits have been critical, but sport has always been rife with time-wasting techniques and attempts to unsettle the opponent.

TIME WASTING

There are occasions, when competitors are ahead and they just need the whistle to go. Footballers have regularly kept the ball in an opposition corner to delay the game. It’s within the rules, but it often angers opposition and fans.

Didier Drogba

Time wasting is also common in the ring. Sometimes fighters are hurt and just need to eat up the time left in the round so they can get back to their corner and recuperate. The shouts of "box, box" are often heard as boxers cling to each other – drawing out a round and minimising opportunities to hit.

As well as genuine efforts to use up time, sometimes delaying tactics are a psychological weapon.

TIME WASTING AS PSYCHOLOGICAL ATTACK

You’ve had a ball called out – you know it was definitely in. You’re a set down and just dropped a service game. You’re in trouble, big trouble. But how can you turn this around

It’s time for a toilet break.

"Skill in winning games, esp. by means that barely qualify as legitimate"

OED definition of ‘gamesmanship’

It’s a thought that’s run through many tennis players minds. Not only does it allow you time to think in the comfort of the toilet, but also puts your opponent off the boil. It leaves the adversary stiffening up, their temper fraying.

Jimmy Connors stands accused of beginning the leak legacy. In his match against Ivan Lendl in the 1983 US Open final, Connors suddenly sprinted off the court – leaving Lendl in the 100 degree heat for several minutes. Lendl protested, but Connors went on to win the match.

"Our attention wanders all of the time, taking our focus off a task," says Dr Richard Cox, consultant to the British Institute of Sports. "Any delaying technique is used to deflect attention. This is even easier to do in a sporting event. It may be a temporary break, but that’s enough."

Greg Rusedski

Also in the tennis arena, some of Greg Rusedski’s mannerisms raised an occasional eyebrow. One quirk was the wrapping of the grip. Carefully wrapping the handle’s grip back into place he could easily waste a few seconds. Then he might retie his shoelaces.

Rusedski was also noticeable for the frequency with which he towelled off between points.

"He is getting the opponent’s attention," says Dr Cox. "Their mind can be shifted at any one moment, as we only ever focus on one thing, he’s making sure that’s not the game.

"If you were to freeze your brain you’d see we have one focus at any given moment, whether an image or sound, or a comment."

And of course, whatever the actions until there’s a way to read a sportsman’s mind no-one can prove that Connors’s toilet visit and Rusedski’s towelling weren’t entirely innocent.

DIRECT DISTRACTION

There are the direct attempts to put the opposition off. Liverpool goalkeeper Bruce Grobbelaar is infamous for his wobbly knees during the 1984 European cup final penalty shoot-out against Roma. As Francesco Graziani prepared to take the kick, Grobbelaar wobbled his knees in mocking terror. The unnerved Italian missed, and the cup was packed off to Anfield.

For optimum focus the player needs to be emotionally balanced, keenly centred on the game. In cricket this may prove hard when handing over the bat. Steve Waugh, the former Australian Captain, used to talk openly about planning the "mental disintegration" of his opponents, a practice known as sledging.

Sledging – low abuse – is a well known attempt to unsettle the rival team. On one occasion fiery fast bowler Merv Hughes decided to give advice after England’s Graham Thorpe had played and missed several deliveries in a row. "Read the back of your bat mate, it’s got instructions on it," he said.

Effective sledging seeks to undermine confidence, says Dr Cox.

"Sledging is designed to deflect concentration and attention. Morality and ethics seldom come into play with psychological warfare. It’s childishness.

"The player’s powers of analysis, which are so important to the game, are impaired – emotional balance changes with anger, the adrenaline rushes into your system, and your focus changes. It doesn’t pay to become emotional."

OUTRIGHT UNDERHANDEDNESS

Underhand tactics are an everyday occurrence in football. Many players fall to the ground, feigning injury, after a the gentlest of touches.

But cricket also has its sneaky tactics. In February 1981 New Zealand needed six runs to tie the match from the final ball. The Australian captain, Greg Chappell, ordered the bowler, his brother Trevor Chappell, to bowl underarm. He rolled the ball along the ground to avoid the chance of a six.

It was described as "the most disgusting incident I can recall in the history of cricket" by the then prime minister of New Zealand, Rob Muldoon. He said: "It was an act of cowardice and I consider it appropriate that the Australian team were wearing yellow."

But however much outrage follows any act of gamesmanship, there are always a host of sportsmen who would have done the same thing.


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Oz batsmen move up Reliance Mobile ICC player rankings

Australia’s batsmen are on the move in the ICC Player Rankings for Test batsmen with three of them achieving career-best rankings after a nail-biting finish in the first Ashes Test against England at Cardiff.
Opener Simon Katich, middle-order batsmen Marcus North and wicket-keeper Brad Haddin all scored centuries to help Australia declare its first innings at [...]

Olympic hopeful opens NZ brothel to fund 2012 bid

Prostitute in Sydney (file pic)

An Olympic hopeful from New Zealand has opened a brothel in a bid to raise cash for a tilt at taekwondo glory in 2012.

Logan Campbell, 23, competed at Beijing in 2008, but has now opened a 14-room "gentleman’s club" after becoming tired of seeking funding from his parents.

New Zealand decriminalised prostitution six years ago, and brothels are allowed to operate with few restrictions.

But NZ Olympic officials say Campbell’s business venture may count against him when choosing a team for London 2012.

"Selection takes into account not just performance but also the athlete’s ability to serve as an example to the youth of the country," Team NZ funding manager John Schofield told the country’s Sunday Star Times newspaper.

Training schedule

Logan Campbell says he began looking for alternative ways of raising Olympic funding when he realised how difficult it was proving to raise adequate cash to make support his training towards a place at the London Olympics.

"Mum was hesitant but she met the girls, a couple came over to her house and she was sweet as"

Logan Campbell

Logan Campbell (left) fights Sung Yu-Chi

Competing in Beijing a year ago, Campbell lost to a Taiwanese fighter, Sung Yu-Chi, who eventually won a bronze medal.

Speaking to the Sunday Star Times, Campbell noted that his opponent was the equivalent of a "movie star" in his homeland.

His own costs leading up to Beijing totalled some NZ$150,000 (£58,000), much of it provided by his hard-working parents, Campbell noted.

To take the financial strain from his parents Campbell has gone into partnership with a Hugo Philiips, 20-year-old accountancy graduate, to set up what the pair insist is a "high-class" escort agency.

He hopes to take a couple of years off to work full-time on the new venture, before returning to training in 2011 with a NZ$300,000 Olympic kitty.

NZ PROSTITUTION REFORM ACT

  • Brothels allowed to operate
  • Up to four prostitutes can set up collective as equal partners
  • Advertising sale of sex legalised
  • Brothels require certificate and registration by court
  • Sex work subject to normal employment and health and safety standards

"When people think of a pimp they think of a guy standing around on a street corner with gold chains," he told the Sunday Star Times.

"Pimps are more tough-type guys. I’m an owner of an escort agency."

He accepts that his chosen profession carries with it a certain reputation.

"Mum was hesitant but she met the girls, a couple came over to her house and she was sweet as. She realised they were just normal people supporting their kids and stuff." </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Anne Hill: Facebook: Gameboy for the Over-40 Set

My boyfriend is on his laptop before 7 am, commenting on everyone’s status updates and new photos. By the end of the day he has caught up with friends from Russia to New Zealand.

Iraqi footballers win on return

Iraqi players in training, 8 July 2009

The Iraqi football team has celebrated a victory in the first international football match to be held in Iraq since the US-led invasion of 2003.

The final score in the match played in the northern town of Irbil against a Palestinian team was 3-0.

The game has been hailed as a symbol of the promise of better times ahead for Iraq, and players released a number of white doves before kick-off.

The last time Iraq played at home was in 2002 in a 2-1 win over Syria.

Since then the team – one of the best in the Asian region – has led a nomadic existence.

The country celebrated when Iraq’s players won a notable victory in the Asian Cup tournament in 2007, beating Saudi Arabia in the final by one goal to nil.

The players have since struggled to rediscover that championship-winning form, although they put in a creditable performance in the recent Confederations Cup in South Africa.

During that competition, which pits the champion nation from each continent against each other, Iraq drew with New Zealand and South Africa – the hosts of the upcoming 2010 World Cup – and lost narrowly to European Champions Spain.

Nevertheless, the BBC’s Gabriel Gatehouse in Baghdad says a win at home is a rare and welcome good news story.

The Palestinian players are themselves no strangers to conflict.

But the very fact the game took place inside Iraq, speaks of a country desperately trying to move beyond violence and insecurity, our correspondent says.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.