Sentences with phrase «federal executive body»

In accordance with Art. 10.1 of Law No. 149 - FZ, these responsibilities are to provide the federal executive body in the field of security (the FSB of Russia) with the information necessary to decode received, transmitted, delivered and (or) processed electronic messages.
However, Roskomnadzor, the country's federal executive body responsible for censorship, won't disclose which services have been blocked.

Not exact matches

As president and chief executive officer of the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority, Robin Silvester oversees the federal body responsible for facilitating Canada's trade through the Port of Vancouver, Canada's largest port.
None of the Reporting Persons nor any manager or executive officer of the Reporting Persons, has, during the past five years, (a) been convicted in a criminal proceeding (excluding traffic violations or similar misdemeanors), or (b) been a party to a civil proceeding of a judicial or administrative body of competent jurisdiction and as a result of such proceeding was or is subject to a judgment, decree or final order enjoining future violations of, or prohibiting, or mandating activities subject to, Federal or State securities laws or a finding of any violation with respect to such laws.
Winemakers Federation of Australia chief executive Tony Battaglene said the body would work with the Federal Government to make sure the right regulatory measures were in place because a strong regulatory system was important in preserving the integrity and quality of Australia's wine.
McClure clarified though that a former legislator «could appear before other local, state (such as agencies and / or the Executive Chamber), or federal bodies
However, it serves as the practical expression of the Federal Executive Council, which is Australia's highest formal governmental body.
The constitution has, however, imposed a duty on the Federal Executive Council to ask the President to resign on medical ground if he is unable to discharge the functions of his office on account of infirmity of mind or body.
The Federal Civil Service Commission of Nigeria (FCSC) is an executive body in Nigeria that has the authority to make appointments and transfers and to exercise disciplinary control over all Federal Civil Servants.
The judicial tribunals on which this book focuses are the same executive branch organizations that, as noted above, were called «judicial tribunals» in the McRuer Report; the same organizations that, in 1990, Ed Ratushny's Report on the Independence of Federal Administrative Tribunals and Agencies described as «tribunals which are adjudicative» and for which it recommended the label «tribunal» be exclusively reserved; and the same organizations that in 1991 the late Chief Justice of Canada Antonio Lamer, in a keynote speech to the conference of the Council of Canadian Administrative Tribunals, referred to as bodies that are «created to operate essentially as adjudicators... in a manner that is similar to the function of the judiciary... [and] expected to dispense justice in the same sense as the courts of law.»
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