Orwell joined the militias and went to the front where he was seriously wounded. |
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Responded to such concerns, a national defence force of regular units, militias, and Volunteer units was constructed. |
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Two days ago, these regulars and militias were almost hysterical with tension. |
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In the late 1980s it used local militias to help clear the Dinka population from the Bahr al-Ghazal region of southwest Sudan. |
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When militias attacked her village the young mother ran desperately for her life. |
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Much has been made of the suggestion that the supposedly moderate prime minister designate intends to disband the militias. |
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Breaking up large elements of the army also raises the possibility that demobilized soldiers could affiliate with ethnic or tribal militias. |
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It is a cruel misnomer for the thousands of children and adults abducted or press-ganged into service in the militias or government army. |
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As the powder keg of ethnic tensions in the region exploded, the camps were targeted by militias who launched lethal firebomb attacks. |
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His left-wing militias also plundered small farmers in the nation's countryside and hinterland provinces. |
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During foreign invasions integrated contingents of civilian militias and elements of fragmented state armies had fought foreign invaders. |
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There had been massacres in the countryside, ethnically motivated massacres by Congolese militias, despite Uganda's presence. |
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Human Rights Watch found that the militias use Sudanese military weapons, insignia and chain of command. |
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The delegitimization of resisting combatants is continued in accompanying descriptions of the activities of the fedayeen and other militias. |
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The government denies the charge, saying that the militias are acting independently. |
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The beginning of the rainy season has made some roads impassable and the presence of militias make it dangerous to travel. |
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Both parties relied on their own militias, alliances with clan chiefs and security apparatus. |
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With around 7,500 soldiers, it is outmanned and outgunned by some of the larger militias that have Soviet-era tanks and artillery pieces. |
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Subdued and cowed by the warlords, the public has little motivation to mobilize against the militias. |
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With no effective central authority, Afghanistan was carved up between heavily-armed militias, each vying for influence. |
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On the other hand, these same leaders are often the heads of militias and these militias are being used to assassinate political opponents. |
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Visiting human rights groups have been routinely harassed by the army and threatened and attacked by militias. |
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Poaching for bushmeat during the conflict by locals and armed militias had a serious impact on the bonobos. |
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A key part of the agreement being brokered in the Congo is how to deal with the Hutu militias. |
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The militias pose a long-term problem for security, since they violate the state's monopoly on the use of force. |
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In several districts they were aided by militias in civilian dress armed with machetes and Molotov cocktails to scare away voters. |
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How are women faring in these countries as the superpower, the militias, the terrorists, and the U.N. flail? |
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Replacing militias, guerilla groups and other armed bands, the new Afghan army is developing according to plan. |
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Opposition forces may have had militias during the civil war but it is not civil war they want today. |
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Both sides include sectarian parties that were organised militias during the civil war, and have supported neoliberal polices. |
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There are another 6,200 UN peacekeepers on the way, who will supervise disarming of the rebels and pro-government militias. |
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Surviving civil wars and brutal militias in several African countries, they arrive in Algeria and then must walk across the desert to Morocco. |
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A legitimate government will encourage the regional forces to dissolve their militias in the interest of creating a national army. |
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If the rebel American militias were beaten on the battlefield, their ringleaders could expect to be hanged as traitors. |
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The size of the military forces of the opposing militias has been subject to exaggeration. |
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During the Revolutionary War, state governments assumed the colonies' authority to raise their short-term militias through drafts if necessary. |
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These elites raised militias that freed U.S. forces from town security duties and joined garrison soldiers to hunt guerrillas in the boondocks. |
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During the Revolutionary War, the civilian militias were, again contrary to myth, ineffective on the whole as a fighting force. |
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Powerful local families or sheiks took their place, setting up their own militias and spawning inter-tribal feuds. |
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When night falls and security wanes, the janjaweed militias come marauding through the camps and attack the women. |
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The soldiers will be from local militias and local reserves, with all the tangled politics that implies. |
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The deal merely apportioned the cabinet posts among power contenders without dissolving the factional militias. |
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Each group's militias have arrested human rights activists, newspaper editors and other dissidents. |
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Six months later, U.S. troops drove Filipino militias from Manila and pursued them into the countryside. |
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These he mixed with reproductions of old group portraits, of militias and the governors and governesses of charitable institutions. |
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Rogue government and rebel militias who prowl rural areas are hardly accountable to higher authorities. |
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The US is concerned that the weapons are intended for domestic militias or foreign guerillas. |
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With the demise of organized militias, they contend, the right lost any relevance to constitutional adjudication. |
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The war effort was built upon volunteer companies and the amorphous state militias behind them. |
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The army is already building up civilian militias close to the gas field. |
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Although it is the official al Qaeda affiliate in Syria, al Nusra is aligned with major Islamist rebel militias in the country. |
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He is widely believed to have fueled the war in support of one of the fighting parties, to which he committed ragtag militias that perpetrated unspeakable atrocities. |
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After the attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libyan leaders promised to quickly to disband militias. |
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Without jobs, it will be harder to persuade young men to give up their weapons and to disband their militias. |
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It will not be easy to persuade militias to disband with payback sentiments like those. |
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In the years before the American Revolution, few colonists on the Atlantic seaboard joined militias or even knew how to use arms. |
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It is easy for the militias to score points by attacking groups that are universally disliked, like effeminate men, Long notes. |
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The US-led occupying forces are uneasy about that, but officials say the fighting readiness of such militias make them useful elements in the fledgling government's armoury. |
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In late August, U.S. airpower and Iranian-backed militias broke the ISIS siege on the town of Amerli. |
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Hussein, a 45-year-old father of four from Tal Rifat, a town north of Aleppo, complains of rampant plundering by rebel militias. |
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The party militias are widely distrusted because of their partisan nature. |
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During this period, all states and territories required men who wanted to avoid military service in the militias to pay fees or to hire substitutes. |
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These mindful bureaucrats limited payments to state militias that had been directly mustered into federal service or those that had been called out with authorization. |
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Assembly members railed against the government for its apparent powerlessness to stem the bloodshed and there were calls for popular militias to step in. |
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Under the Constitution of 1787, military training was divided, as were the nation's military institutions, between the state militias and the regular army. |
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Other militias would emerge that no one has ever heard of today. |
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In the past, the problem of the opposition militias was taken care of by creating a well paid and trained armed force to deal with armed opposition. |
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In the late sixteenth century armed and trained militias were formed in London to form the core of the national army for defence against the threat from Spain. |
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The country is riven by tribalism, regionalism and a host of armed militias who so far have refused to disarm. |
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Some militias passed by waving guns in the air, and at that moment I realized something bad was about to happen. |
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Members of the militias led by bin-Ahmed and al-Gharabi overlapped with the February 17 militia, the cable says. |
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Nonetheless, the base itself had a number of American weapons that wound up in the hands of the raiding militias. |
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The colonial militias were transplants from England, modeled on the home defense forces successively raised and reformed under the Tudors, the Stuarts, and the Hanoverians. |
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The destruction of the old regime has triggered scrappy battles for power and influence, as chancers, coalitions and militias move into the vacuum left by the war. |
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The building works, including that at Berwick, along with the reform of the militias and musters, were eventually finished under Queen Mary. |
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The president is the Commander in Chief of the United States Armed Forces and state militias when they are mobilized. |
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With the creation of the British Empire, militias were also raised in the colonies, where little support could be provided by regular forces. |
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Besides the regular militias, a number of volunteer militia units were formed to fight on both sides of the war. |
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During British control various local militias, the Provincial Marine were used to support British regular forces in Canada. |
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Like in the case of Rwanda, the perpetrators were the Hutu-led government, Interahamwe and Impuzamugambi militias. |
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In the late nineteenth century a system of local Volunteer militias evolved throughout the country. |
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During French rule small local volunteer militia units or colonial militias were used to provide defence needs. |
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In eastern Libya in particular, a myriad of former rebel militias, Islamist as well as regionalist, have carved out their own fiefdoms. |
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He marched on Carthage and easily overwhelmed the local militias defending the city. |
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The earliest reports of Germanic militias was the system of hundreds described in 98 AD by the Roman historian Tacitus as the centeni. |
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It rewarded office and rank for martial exploits, going to far as to organize women's militias for siege defense. |
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Provincial militias were outlawed and decimated by the new army throughout the presidential terms of Mitre, Sarmiento, Avellaneda and Roca. |
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The IS group considers Shias to be heretics and is fighting Iranian-backed Shia militias in Iraq and Syria. |
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Despite this fact, the US has received little credit form the Shi'ites militias and the Iraqis. |
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The earliest Canadian militias date from the beginning of the French colonial period. |
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Tripoli is controlled by a political faction centered in the midcoastal city of Misurata that also includes Islamist groups and militias. |
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The Boers formed loose militias, which they termed commandos, and forged alliances with Khoisan groups to repel Xhosa raids. |
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Horses have been used in the 21st century by the Janjaweed militias in the War in Darfur. |
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The militias of Upper Canada and Lower Canada had a much more lower level of military effectiveness. |
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These militias took part in the many Portuguese campaigns against the Lankan Kings. |
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However, the Criollos militias and colonial army eventually repulsed the British. |
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Unaware of the Armada's fate, English militias mustered to defend the country under the Earl of Leicester's command. |
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But is he the man to disempower the warlords and disarm their militias in order to push through this constitution? |
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The people in the borderlands had to raise local militias to protect themselves from hostile Native Americans. |
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To regulate internal affairs, it has the power to regulate and govern military forces and militias, suppress insurrections and repel invasions. |
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After World War I, multiple militias formed as soldiers returned home to their villages, only to find many of them occupied by Slovene and Yugoslav forces. |
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The Argentine Civil War was waged by militias again, as both federalists and unitarians drafted common people into their ranks as part of ongoing conflicts. |
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The militias became a strong factor in the politics of the city afterwards, as a springboard from which the criollos could manifest their political ambitions. |
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Only Francis Godolphin, Deputy Lord Lieutenant of Cornwall and commander of the militias along with 12 of his soldiers stood to offer some kind of resistance. |
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The Schola Saxonum took its name from the militias of Saxons who served in Rome, but it eventually developed into a hostelry for English visitors to the city. |
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The vulnerability of Loyalist militias was repeatedly demonstrated in the South, where they suffered strings of defeats to their Patriot neighbors. |
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During Reconstruction after the Civil War, Republican state governments had militias composed almost entirely of freed slaves and populist whites. |
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How this affected militias either side of the border is unclear. |
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In South Carolina, fighting broke out on November 19 between Loyalist and Patriot militias, and the Loyalists were subsequently driven out of the colony. |
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One of the best known and ancient militias is the Swiss Armed Forces. |
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The occupation ended on 26 October 1947, although Britain was to retain military bases in Iraq until 1954, after which the Assyrian militias were disbanded. |
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The Dutch continued to employ these militias but due to their unreliability tended to favor employing Swiss and Malay mercenaries in their campaigns in the island. |
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When the Portuguese who were the first colonial power to dominate the island raised local militias under the command of local leaders known as Mudaliyars. |
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The first militias formed in Sri Lanka were by Lankan Kings, who raised militia armies for their military campaigns both within and outside the island. |
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The National Guard having less and less confidence from the authorities, became extinct in 1847, terminating a long tradition of national militias in Portugal. |
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Portugal had a long tradition in the use of militias for national defense. |
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But the Court's 5-to-4 ruling cited the second comma as evidence that the Framers intended the right to bear arms to apply not just to militias but to your Uncle Ted too. |
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Darfur rebels dismissed the moves, saying they did not trust him and wanted to see disarmament of the feared janjaweed militias before agreeing to a ceasefire. |
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The United States was not prepared to prosecute a war, for Madison had assumed that the state militias would easily seize Canada and that negotiations would follow. |
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The last of the slavery states, it was a launching pad for numerous raids into Kansas by slaveowner militias hired to turn the vote in that state in favor of the slavers. |
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The various sectarian militias and Kurdish pershmerga will be three sheets to the wind and bolstered by the training, weapons and successes they have inherited. |
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However, the state militias were poorly trained, armed and led. |
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Militias have been given authority to shoot bush meat poachers on sight in the Central African Republic. |
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The Communist People's Militias secured control of key locations in Prague, and a single party government was formed. |
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Militias thus can be military or paramilitary, depending on the instance. |
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