Iran-Kurdish Rebel Ceasefire Holds Amid Skepticism
A ceasefire between Iran and the Kurdish rebel group PJAK went into effect on Sept. 5. But villagers in Iraq, displaced by years of fighting, said they are not convinced it will last.
A ceasefire between Iran and the Kurdish rebel group PJAK went into effect on Sept. 5. But villagers in Iraq, displaced by years of fighting, said they are not convinced it will last.
Sectarian tensions are still running high in Iraq. David Enders reports from the "Baghdad Belt" on the state of Iraq as US troops prepare to withdraw.
Pulitzer grantee David Enders shares his thoughts on religious reconciliation at a conference in Baghdad—a scenario that would have been highly unlikely three years ago.
Iraq has one of the worst displacement problems in the world--more than 1.3 million people remain displaced and many Kurdish refugees say the government has done nothing to help them.
Feeling cheated by Kuwait, abandoned by Baghdad, and betrayed by Washington, Iraq's oil-rich city of Basra in southern Iraq is turning to Iran.
Through poetry, Pulitzer Center grantee David Enders considers the danger he faces as a journalist in Iraq where security resides "only in your head."
Muqtada al Sadr, an outspoken Shiite cleric and staunch foe of the U.S., has consolidated his power in Baghdad's sprawling Sadr City and become a political kingmaker in Iraq.
As Iraqis prepare to travel to Mecca for the annual pilgrimage, a small village on the road to Saudi Arabia has become a major source of tension.
Iraq's Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki was once the great hope for democracy. Today, he looks more like Saddam-lite as the Iraqi government heads towards a dictatorship.
American troops are withdrawing from Iraq, but no one knows what the future will hold for the country.
Pulitzer Center grantee David Enders, reporting from Iraq, tells about his 500-mile drive, three-hour detention at a local police station and two missed meetings. All in a day's work.
Civilians living in refugee camps in northern Iraq are not convinced the cease fire between Kurdish rebels and the Iranian government will last.