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The danger for Mr Blair is that Mr Hague will take his revenge for the Cranborne humiliation and outflank Mr Blair by proposing a reform more radical than the government's.
ECONOMIST: Lords reform
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Indeed, there are even fears that, if Mr Taylor is convicted, his loyalists could take revenge against those who brought the case to trial in the first place, including members of the present government.
ECONOMIST: Charles Taylor on trial
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The decision was opposed by leaders of the Czech underground, who feared rightly that Hitler would take out on them his thirst for revenge.
FORBES: Former Secretary of State Albright: 'What Would We Have Done?'
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Shah had a century in his sights when lofting Harbhajan into the stands at long-on, but the bowler had his revenge in his following over when Dravid dived to take a fine catch at slip.
BBC: SPORT | Cricket | England | England put India under pressure
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He said his father had wanted to take revenge against "studio titans".
BBC: 'Hollywood Holocaust' apology published by paper
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General Guei has told French military officials they must take President Bedie out of the country immediately for his own safety, suggesting that mutinous soldiers might want to take revenge against him.
BBC: Ivory Coast rebels tighten grip
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In an online manifesto, he swore to take revenge on police officers he blamed for his firing in 2008, which he claimed was racially motivated.
BBC: Christopher Dorner: LAPD may reopen sacking probe
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But when he quarrelled with some of his relatives, they knew how to take the cruellest revenge - a pair of scissors in the night and it was gone.
BBC: Moustaches under threat
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But it his fear -- as the title of his new book, "The Last Generation: How Nature Will Take Her Revenge for Climate Change" (it is called "With Speed and Violence" in the U.S.), suggests -- that we still haven't fully realised the apocalyptic forces we have awoken and the reality of what is at stake if global warming continues untrammelled.
CNN: Climate change action: Too little, too late?