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26 November 2005

See also:

Part 1: http://cryptome.info/kid-kill/kid-kill-01.htm

Part 3: http://cryptome.info/kid-kill/kid-kill-03.htm

Part 4: http://cryptome.info/kid-kill/kid-kill-04.htm

Part 5: http://cryptome.info/kid-kill/kid-kill-05.htm

Part 6: http://cryptome.info/kid-kill/kid-kill-06.htm

Part 7: http://cryptome.info/kid-kill/kid-kill-07.htm

Part 8: http://cryptome.info/kid-kill/kid-kill-08.htm

Captions by Associated Press. [Image]

Two dead Iraqi children lie together shortly before a funeral ceremony in Ramadi, Iraq, west of Baghdad, Wednesday, May 19, 2004. A U.S. helicopter fired on a wedding party in the remote desert near the border with Syria, killing more than 40 people, most of them women and children, Iraqi officials said. The U.S. military said it was investigating. (AP Photo/Emad Al-Mula)

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An Iraqi student, wounded when a rocket hit a school, cries in pain at a hospital in Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday, Oct. 20, 2005. A rocket hit a public school for students aged 12 to 15 in the western al-Mansour neighborhood of the capital, killing one child and wounding five, said police Capt. Qassim Hussein. The blast also killed a nearby shopkeeper, said Hussein.(AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)

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The body of a child is buried after being found dead in the rubble of collapsed homes, in Ramadi, Iraq, Thursday, Nov. 3, 2005. According to local residents the homes collapsed on Wednesday after a U.S. fighter jet dropped two 500-pound bombs on what the U.S. military described as an "insurgent command center" about 400 yards from where a U.S. helicopter went down, near Ramadi.(AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

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A man with a blood stained shirt walks away after carrying an Iraqi student, laying on the bed, to a hospital in Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday, Oct. 20, 2005 after the girl was wounded when a rocket hit a school. A rocket hit a public school for students aged 12 to 15 in the western al-Mansour neighborhood of the capital, killing one child and wounding five, said police Capt. Qassim Hussein. The blast also killed a nearby shopkeeper, said Hussein.(AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)

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Iraqi children cry next to the body of a boy killed in U.S. airstrikes in Ramadi, Iraq, in this Monday Oct. 17 2005 file photo. U.S. warplanes and helicopters bombed two villages near the restive city of Ramadi, killing an estimated 70 militants, the military said Monday, though witnesses said at least 39 of the dead were civilians. The number of Iraqis who have died violently since the U.S.-led invasion is many times larger than the U.S. military death toll of 2,000 in Iraq. In one sign of the enormity of the Iraqi loss, at least 3,870 civilians were killed in the past six months alone, according to an Associated Press count. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

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Iraqis grieve around the body of a 6 year old girl killed by a car bomb in Samarra, Iraq, Friday Oct. 7 2005. Three other people from the same family were also wounded in the explosion late Thursday.(AP Photo/Hameed Rasheed)

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Ali Hussein, an Iraqi child, lies on a hospital bed in Mosul, Iraq, where he was transferred after being wounded in a suicide bombing in Tal Afar, Wednesday, Oct. 12 2005.The bomber set off explosives hidden beneath his clothing at the first of two checkpoints outside the recruiting center in Tal Afar, where men were gathering to apply for jobs, said army Capt. Raad Ahmed and town police chief Brig. Najim Abdullah. They said at least 30 people were killed and 35 wounded.(AP Photo/Mohammed Ibrahim)

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An Iraqi man carries a wounded child into an emergency room in Baghdad, Iraq, Tuesday Oct. 4 2005, following a suicide attack on the edge of the Green Zone. A suicide attacker set off a car bomb at the main entrance to the heavily fortified Green Zone, a district of Iraqi government buildings and the U.S. and British Embassies. The powerful blast killed two policemen.(AP Photo/Mohammed Uraibi)

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** GRAPHIC CONTENT **An Iraqi medic washes a child as it cries in pain after suffering burns when mortar rounds landed on a market in Baghdad, Iraq, Tuesday Oct. 11 2005. Insurgents determined to wreck Iraq's constitutional referendum killed nearly 45 people and wounded dozens in a series of attacks Tuesday, including a suicide car bomb that ripped apart a crowded market in a town near the Syrian border, police said.(AP Photo/Karim Kadim)

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Family members stand around coffins of five of the seven members of an Iraqi family, incuding two young children, in school in Samarra, Iraq, Sunday, Sept. 25, 2005 who were killed when their home was hit by mortar shells. In Baghdad a suicide car bomber struck an Interior Ministry convoy on Sunday, killing seven police commandos and two civilians. (AP Photo/Hameed Rasheed)

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An Iraqi woman reacts next to a wounded child in Hillah, Iraq, Friday Sept. 30, 2005 following a car bomb attack by Sunni-led insurgents. On Friday, a car bomb exploded in a bustling vegetable market in the mostly Shiite city of Hillah, killing at least nine people, including three women and two children, and wounding 41, said Dr. Mohammed Beirum of Hillah General Hospital. (AP Photo/Alla Al-Marjani)

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An Iraqi boy receives treatment for head wounds he received in an explosion at a mosque, Friday Aug. 12, 2005, in Al-Nasaf, 25 kms. (15 miles) east of Ramadi, central Iraq. Locals claim that during Friday prayers an artillery shell was fired into the Ibn Al-Jawzi Mosque killing 4 and injuring at least 19, of which 3 dead were children. Iraqis blamed U.S. forces, but an American military spokesman disputed the Iraqi account. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

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A father carries his two children Abdulla, 8, and Samar, 9, from the Kindi hospital after treatment for wounds sustained in one of the three massive car bomb attacks, Wednesday, Aug. 17, 2005, in Baghdad, Iraq. Two car bombs exploded Wednesday morning at the al-Nahda bus station and one in front of neighboring Kindi hospital that was receiving injured people, killing over 40 and injuring over 80. (AP Photo/Mohammed Hato)

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** CORRECTS ARTILLERY SHELL TO EXPLOSION ** An Iraqi boy receives treatment for head wounds he received in an explosion at a mosque, Friday Aug. 12, 2005, in Al-Nasaf, 25 kms. (15 miles) east of Ramadi, central Iraq. Locals claim that during Friday prayers an artillery shell was fired into the Ibn Al-Jawzi Mosque killing 4 and injuring at least 19, of which 3 dead were children. Iraqis blamed U.S. forces, but an American military spokesman disputed the Iraqi account. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

[Image]

** CORRECTS ARTILLERY SHELL TO EXPLOSION ** An Iraqi boy is carried into the main hospital for massive head wounds he received in an explosion at a mosque, Friday Aug. 12, 2005, in Al-Nasaf, 25 kms. (15 miles) east of Ramadi, central Iraq. Locals claim that during Friday prayers an artillery shell was fired into the Ibn Al-Jawzi Mosque killing 4 and injuring at least 19, of which 3 dead were children. Iraqis blamed U.S. forces, but an American military spokesman disputed the Iraqi account. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)