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He may now return and stir up trouble once again, especially for Mr Odinga.
ECONOMIST: Two old political enemies form a surprising alliance
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You must leave something of value to the folks you expect to stir up trouble to make it work.
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Iran continues to stir up trouble there and Obama continues to cuddle that situation instead of handling it properly.
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Nor should it stir up trouble in the region, is another subliminal message.
BBC: What Obama's message to Iran means
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In remarks broadcast on national television, he said the court's decision was "sacred, " stressed that Chavez's government remains intact and accused the opposition of ignoring the constitution and trying to stir up trouble.
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This Islamic dictatorship--the biggest source of terrorist training and financing in the world and the nation that's doing all it can to stir up trouble in already combustible Iraq--is clearly on the cusp of becoming a nuclear power.
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One Shia official said the prime suspects for the attack were Saddam loyalists hoping to stir up trouble between Shia and Sunni Muslims, but others think the attack may be linked to a power struggle within the Shia community.
ECONOMIST: Iraq's security void
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China Youth Daily welcomes a visit by the Japanese prime minister's special envoy to Beijing last week, but complains that Japan keeps "containing China" with its military expansion and history textbooks that "distort historical facts and stir up trouble on territorial issues".
BBC: China round-up: Anti-corruption drive
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Mr Drace-Francis said in his telegram that the crumpled Mr Ashcroft had threatened over breakfast to stir up trouble for Britain in the Turks and Caicos Islands (thank goodness this foreign-policy calamity was averted) unless he was helped to break into the islands' banking business.
ECONOMIST: Living on his wits
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Republicans accused Democrats of trying to stir up political trouble over the cuts, which they promised would not affect FEMA's ability to respond to natural disasters, in part, because the money is being diverted to other agencies -- such as the Forest Service -- to be spent on disaster response.
CNN: House overwhelmingly passes supplemental spending bill
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Why, then, did Mr Blair take trouble this week to stir things up?
ECONOMIST: Not quite across the Rubicon