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Examples
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Al-Sadr, 37, left Iraq in 2007 for Iran, fleeing arrest in the killing of another cleric.
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Al-Sadr had been living in Iran, and it is unclear how long he plans to stay in Iraq.
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Al-Sadr left for Iran in 2007, in part to bolster his theological credentials – a necessity for a religious leader in this Shiite-dominated country – but also to escape an arrest warrant for allegedly killing another cleric.
Iraqi Cleric Muqtada al-Sadr: "Resist The US By All Means Necessary" AP 2011
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Al-Sadr said little about his immediate plans after exiting the stage but Sadrist politicians who watched the speech said he was here to stay.
Iraqi Cleric Muqtada al-Sadr: "Resist The US By All Means Necessary" AP 2011
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Al-Sadr said little about his immediate plans after exiting the stage but Sadrist politicians who watched the speech said he was here to stay.
Iraqi Cleric Muqtada al-Sadr: "Resist The US By All Means Necessary" AP 2011
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CNN: Al-Sadr flexes muscles in Iraqi political jockeying
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Al-Sadr's support helped the prime minister secure a second term.
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Al-Sadr has forged his reputation with thousands of poor Shiite followers in Baghdad and southern Iraq as a fierce opponent of foreign troops in Iraq.
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Al-Sadr has refused to back the top vote-getters in the March 7 election and is asking his followers to designate a prime minister of their choosing in a referendum this weekend.
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Al-Sadr left for Iran in 2007, in part to bolster his theological credentials – a necessity for a religious leader in this Shiite-dominated country – but also to escape an arrest warrant for allegedly killing another cleric.
Iraqi Cleric Muqtada al-Sadr: "Resist The US By All Means Necessary" AP 2011
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