Showing 1 - 6 results of 6 for search '"mass killing"', query time: 0.08s Refine Results
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    Violation of human rights as the basis for the threats to international security by Botirjon Ruzmetov

    Published 2021-12-01
    “…Such human rights violations as mass killing, genocide, slavering, mass raping and others, together with other similar ones around the world, constitute a global threat to security. …”
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    The Imprint of the War in Ford Madox Ford’s Critical Writings by Isabelle BRASME

    Published 2020-06-01
    “…Yet when one examines the chronology of Ford’s non-fictional writing, and indeed of his literary work, one can sense a sharp dividing line that coincides with the moment when Ford enrolled in the British army in 1915, and was no longer a spectator from afar, but a direct witness of the unprecedented mass killing that was taking place on the front. His pre-war assertions gave way to questions; and as was the case with many other writers who took directly part in the hostilities, a decade elapsed before Ford succeeded in rendering his war experience in a novelistic form, through the Parade’s End tetralogy. …”
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    Political Strategy of Nahdlatul Ulama Party in Cirebon Regency during 1952-1967 by Ahmad Faiz Rofi'i, Yety Rochwulaningsih, Alamsyah Alamsyah

    Published 2022-06-01
    “…During the September 30, 1965 Movement (Gestapu), mass killings broke out in Central Java and East Java but similar violence did not occur in Cirebon, though there was small outbreaks of violence. …”
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    The United States and the Events of 1965–1966 in Indonesia by E. N. Glazunova, A. S. Manykin

    Published 2020-11-01
    “…In 1965–1966 Indonesia experienced mass killings of communists and Leftists, as well as ethnic Chinese, who were thought to be members of pro-communist organizations. …”
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    LEGAL ASSESSMENT OF RUSSIAN CRIMES IN UKRAINE by Andrukhiv O.

    Published 2024-06-01
    “…In our opinion, it is worth paying attention to the most revealing «war crimes» committed by Russia in Ukraine and which require its prosecution, namely the deportation of minors; execution of prisoners of war; the crime of ecocide; mass killings and abuse of the civilian population. It was established that the national legislation does not provide for the definition of «war crimes» at all and operates only with the concept of «war crimes», which does not fully reflect the essence of the problem. …”
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