Sentences with phrase «from international scrutiny»

In effect the richer nation has outsourced not just the labor, but its greenhouse gas emissions too, hiding them away from international scrutiny.

Not exact matches

Today, 8 July 2015, WikiLeaks releases more than 1 million searchable emails from the Italian surveillance malware vendor Hacking Team, which first came under international scrutiny after WikiLeaks publication of the SpyFiles.
«The flow of foreign money, either from the developer or international condo buyers, could also be sparking scrutiny
Perhaps the overwhelming oddness of the position — the shadows of 1966, the constant scrutiny, the on - again, off - again calendar, the increasing irrelevance of international football when set against the all - consuming Premier League, the insistence from the FA that the England manager stand as some kind of moral paragon — drives those that inhabit it to do strange things, to kick out against common sense.
It has been said that international duty represents an escape for Bale, who has been under constant scrutiny at Real Madrid since his world - record transfer from Tottenham Hotspur in 2013.
The scrutiny from Grassley follows a crackdown on intramural interactions with industry and strict rules on international travel put in place in the early 2000s after activists booed former Health and Human Services Director Tommy Thompson during an AIDS meeting in Barcelona, Spain.
Officials from the Singapore government veterinary inspection services presented on how their inspection regimes are designed to satisfy international scrutiny.
Ever since Greece accepted a $ 240 billion ($ 308 billion) bailout from the E.U. and I.M.F. in 2010, relations between Germany and Greece have been the focus of international scrutiny.
Greenpeace International executive director Kumi Naidoo said: «This illegal boarding of a peaceful protest ship highlights the extreme lengths that the Russian government will go to keep Gazprom's dangerous Arctic drilling away from public scrutiny.
My blog work facilitates the exposure and scrutiny of my legal ideas to a national and international readership that includes not only judges, policymakers, and practitioners at all levels in many jurisdictions, but also academics from other disciplines, journalists of all stripes, many nonlawyers interested in criminal justice issues, and also — perhaps most valuably — the real people whose lives are most impacted by the policies and doctrines that I discuss.»).
Phil Shiner of Public Interest Lawyers, who acted for the claimants, says: «[The court] has found that the Ministry of Defence have not complied with international and domestic law requiring there to be proper public scrutiny of these cases and the systemic issues arising from them.»
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