Sentences with phrase «war crimes then»

Not exact matches

If what you say is true, then your god is also responsible for illness, crime, natural disasters, war — basically all suffering is god's doing.
Coming closest to that outlook is probably someone like Walter Cronkite, who, with good heart and human fellowship, displayed the world's anomalies — starving children, wars, and crimes — and then concluded his show with ironic summary: «That's the way it is.»
Let a child be physically maimed for life by a birth injury, or spiritually maimed by having to grow up in hunger and fear as in war - torn lands, or in squalor and crime as in our own slums; and then when the natural consequences appear, not a few pious Christians will say that God in his inscrutable providence willed it to be this way.
If we all stop believing in God, we will probably stop going to church, and then we will lose friendships we had at church, then people will be less happy, then more crime will occur, then war will occur, then we will all die.
If not, then why have other world leaders been jailed for war crimes?
The UN then leveled allegations of usage of chemical weapons against him, which is a violation of the Hague Conventions and a war crime.
But when the issue transcends petty political rascality, and becomes a vicious war to roll back gains against corruption, corruption that has, for too long, under - developed the people, resulting in mass anguish and pains, then it is nothing but capital crime of political hue: one side must die for the other to prevail.
And then there is the Prime Minister of Sweden creating an international incident by comparing the bombing of Hanoi to Nazi war atrocities which while an exaggeration is still a war crime.
have been: Iden herself is presented first as a loyalist to the Empire and then expected to have that loyalty compromised by what could only be called actual war crimes.
Then his Interpol agent ex-girlfriend Amelia (Elodie Yung) offers him a job escorting the ruthless assassin Darius (Jackson) from his British prison cell to The Hague, where he's needed to testify against murderous Belarusian warlord Dukhovich (Gary Oldman) in a war crimes trial.
Set firstly in immediate post-war Japan and Hong Kong, then in England and New Zealand, this is the story of Aldred Leith, author, researching a book on China and Japan and Peter Exley, solicitor and fine art enthusiast, investigating Japanese war crimes.
Then defend it from rival crime gangs; the free resources you \'ll gain will come in handy for future wars and when crafting new guns and items in the game.
It starts out with everything from child soldiers to straight - up war crimes torture (including the most Hippocratic Oath violating operation I've ever seen), and then suddenly eases into feature lists like «realistic weather!»
If innocent people were killed because of an illegal war, then a crime has taken place.
Since then, they have been invoked in an ever - growing array of anti-crime objectives including the war on drugs, to battle the scourge of gun crimes, high - level fraud cases, and in the protection against sexual predators and child pornography.
Back then there seemed to be a sense felt by everyone that the world had been burning from war and crimes of humanity, from Europe to the Pacific to Vietnam and the streets of Selma, Alabama.
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