Thousands of landmines have made patches of the fertile land into no-go zones. |
|
Ramblers celebrated the launch of new right to roam laws by taking a stroll across former no-go areas all over the north west. |
|
Today, the city is a no-go zone surrounded by United States marines. |
|
Once you know why it's a no-go, you can launch a thought-out counter argument explaining why you can handle a dog. |
|
About 46,000 cattle and sheep graze on Dartmoor, already declared a no-go area for walking, horse riding and other recreational uses. |
|
They say the streets are becoming no-go areas at night, with yobs causing mayhem and police already too thin on the ground to tackle the problem. |
|
For many, it's a no-go area, where the chances are you'll be beaten up or worse by marauding gangs. |
|
As well as vandalism, it will target drunken louts and unruly gangs who make neighbourhoods no-go areas. |
|
Plans to make East Lancashire's back alleys no-go zones for criminals have been delayed amid legal and health and safety problems. |
|
As he tries to find out what happened, he is sucked into a world of gunmen and no-go garrisons, brutalities and betrayals. |
|
My breath was stuck in my stomach, my limbs benumbed, my senses catapulted into a no-go area where terror meets exhilaration. |
|
To a young artist in the 1980s, the SoHo galleries that mattered seemed an unreachable territory, a no-go land. |
|
They say that a catalogue of crimes have turned parts of the estate into no-go areas. |
|
What specifically would he do in these so-called no-go zones? |
|
No-go schools, no-go areas, no-go times, no-go swimming pools – these things impact on your life. |
|
These are hands-off, no-go, sacrosanct areas that the British prime minister cannot afford to have tampered with. |
|
A Hampshire school has declared its playing fields a no-go zone after two sightings of a big cat fitting the description of a black panther. |
|
But if his signals indicate romance is a no-go, change the channel on your emotions by hanging out more often with other friends. |
|
Residents regularly complain about their neighbourhoods becoming no-go zones because of groups of juveniles around the streets drinking, swearing and becoming abusive. |
|
The so-called Sunni Triangle west of Baghdad is now a no-go zone. |
|
|
Eastern provinces near the Pakistan border have also become virtual no-go areas. |
|
Looking at the fine fleet of fishing vessels it would make you heartsick when you realize all the no-no and no-go regulations imposed on the fishermen's livelihoods. |
|
Reader Ruth King, from Minny Street, Cathays, in Cardiff, said the city centre had become a no-go area after 6pm. |
|
Before swimming or other active physical sports is another no-go area for drinking. |
|
As far as explicit reference to democratic political groups is concerned, the Council, as we have just heard, regards that as a no-go area. |
|
Only in that way can we develop a no-go area for proliferators and illicit procurement activities. |
|
Fears of another summer of violence grew last month when a man struck four times in 90 minutes, again in the no-go areas named. |
|
For electioneers, western Mosul the Sunni side has been a no-go zone. Moreover, the current relative calm among the Shia Arabs could be illusory. |
|
In the run-up to the last elections in Haiti, at the end of 2006, Brothers Posse launched the Artists for Peace movement, giving free concerts in no-go neighbourhoods where they called for an amnesty on automatic rifles. |
|
Needs for further research and no-go zones are identified, together with relatively sensitive areas where the oil and gas industry should obey special norms and standards. |
|
With the areas marked blue signifying the safe areas to train and red marking the no-go areas, the map looked like it had come down with a bad rash. |
|
The noise and drunkenness made the area a no-go zone at night for families. |
|
However, if they are run-down, parks can blight communities, become no-go areas and mean communities are deprived of the space they need. |
|
After all, it is intolerable for street markets to become no-go areas for intellectual property rights. |
|
Staffrooms have become no-go areas for men in some Scottish schools because they fear being picked on. |
|
Thus, grasping this stark reality, I am resigned to a certain amount of disruption as my jalopy splutters through no-go Birmingham. |
|
The way to resolve conservation questions is not by moving to different fish stocks and bringing them into a quota system, but by ensuring that we have certain no-go areas where we can allow fishing stocks to re-mature. |
|
The security situation in Cité Soleil, where numerous armed factions have made the slum a no-go area for local police, presents serious challenges to successful implementation of public works activities. |
|
But it should also go without saying that airports and airlines have a responsibility to ensure that all flights are no-go areas for drunks. |
|
However, the question remains whether the EC should not play a more co-ordinating role in this respect, without touching upon the no-go area of harmonisation of national cultural policies. |
|
|
For example, some parties in Flanders have called for more devolution of power to regions, including social security, but Chastel says this is a no-go area. |
|
In the North Sea, it is estimated that every square meter, except the no-go areas of wind farms and petroleum rigs, is trawled between 8 and 12 times per year. |
|
Although previously a no-go area for many countries, which want to keep their fiscal independence, a tax on carbon now seems to be gaining favour. |
|