Here you go.
Female followers of Shiite radical cleric Moqtada Sadr. At least three people were killed as Spanish-led troops clashed with supporters of Sadr outside Najaf, in the most dangerous confrontation between the US-led coalition and Iraq's majority community.(AFP)
Palestinian women step on the US flag during an all women's protest in suport of Iraq in Gaza City. Some 150 women, representatives of women's organisations, took to the street to protest the US presence in Iraq.(AFP/Mohammed Abed)
Iraqi women at Baghdad's Sunni Muslim Abu Khanifa mosque donate their blood for wounded people in the embattled town of Falluja April 7, 2004. The bloody clashes with Shi'ites that have raged since Sunday in other areas are a new front for U.S.-led forces already fighting an insurgency in Sunni towns and trying to pacify Iraq before a June 30 handover of sovereignty to an Iraqi government. REUTERS/Ali Jasim
Iraqi Christian women attend Sunday Mass at the Syrian Orthodox Church in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, March 28, 2004. About 3.6 percent of the country's 22 million people are Christians, with the vast majority of the population Shiite or Sunni Muslim. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen)
US civilian Administrator in Iraq Paul Bremer gestures during his breakfast meeting with a group of Iraqi women at the opening of the new Mansour Women's Center on International Women's Day in Baghdad, Iraq.(AFP/Pool/Bullit Marquez)
An Iraqi security guard monitors a queue of women at the Imam al-Kazem shrine in Baghdad. Two US government employees and their Iraqi interpreter were shot dead in central Iraq, while an errant US mortar round killed one Iraqi civilian.(AFP/Sabah Arar)