One of the greatest scourges afflicting Indigenous peoples in Canada is given only token attention, he said. |
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They were in hot pursuit of their escaping slaves, with whips and scourges cracking, and blades drawn. |
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Common scourges found in the desert include plague, typhus, malaria, dengue fever, dysentery, cholera, and typhoid. |
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The Initiate is scourged, and then in return scourges the Initiator, three strokes for every one received. |
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He also scourges the bureaucracy and the corruption, and the collusion between the Mafia and politicians. |
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Despite huge initiatives and lavish spending, vast stretches of Asia and Africa continue to be afflicted by the scourges of hunger and disease. |
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Rain lashed from the angry sky, icy scourges flailing Alex's head and shoulders as soon as she stepped out of the Gate she had used to escape the tunnels. |
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We cannot do anything about these two deadly scourges of the African continent. |
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We need to help these two countries eschew the scourges of terrorism and address economic challenges. |
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Spam is justifiably considered to be one of the biggest scourges of the Internet. |
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With the creation of the international criminal court, we can perhaps hope to save them from the most terrible scourges that war brings. |
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To secure a better future for the world, we have to protect our posterity from the scourges of war and armed conflict. |
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The unique vulnerability of our island States to all these scourges is widely recognized. |
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In the 20th century, these major scourges were better controlled, but the sorry state of the housing became even more evident. |
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I speak of the scourges of human rights violations, racism, human trafficking and underdevelopment. |
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It is entirely possible that some young blacks are now being prepared to act as scourges of the unjust American social order. |
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In Evian we will also be focusing on strengthening the fight against terrorism and proliferation, scourges which take advantage of the fault lines in globalization. |
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To bring an end to such scourges, civil society, States and the international community must combine their efforts so as to enlighten future generations. |
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Species of Salmonella that cause typhoid and paratyphoid remain endemic scourges in tropical countries and, together with Shigella, are occasional causes of epidemics in institutions, especially among the elderly. |
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A centre-left politician twice defeats conservative opponents to become president, implements a Keynesian stimulus package and as the recovery takes hold warns of the scourges of inequality and stagnant wages. |
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In addition to the threat of nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction, developing countries face other scourges which are the so-called conventional weapons. |
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This is the only way, in the long run, to deal with the twin scourges of war and famine which have for too long afflicted the peoples of that continent. |
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Such action shall cover the fight against the major health scourges, by promoting research into their causes, their transmission and their prevention, as well as health information and education. |
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These scourges care nothing for the arrival of a new century or a new millennium, nor for the hopes, dreams and expectations excited by such events. |
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Trade in human beings lay at the root of the racism and racial discrimination that still existed, and it was disturbing to witness a recrudescence of those scourges several years after the Durban Conference. |
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They must also realize that the European Union will help them to cope with industrial and social transformation, external challenges and a number of the scourges of our society starting with unemployment. |
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Turkey will continue to work for the eradication of all those scourges. |
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India's difficulties are infinitely greater than those of many other countries, in which we continue to tolerate a dictatorial regime, fundamentalism and other similar scourges. |
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But most wars also envenom entire regions and exacerbate international scourges such as crime and terrorism. In this section To protect sovereignty, or to protect lives? |
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If it were only a matter of being 'enlightened', the progress achieved in mass education and the 'deconstruction' of pseudo-racial ideologies would long ago have led to the eradication of these scourges. |
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The common strategy confirmed that the Russian Federation and the European Union have a common interest in stepping up their cooperation in the fight against common scourges, including organised crime. |
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It is certainly perceived as one of the scourges of humanity, and every civilisation and religion has strived constantly for peace, in quest of a paradise lost or long-lost golden age. |
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Of these, harmonization is more seductive for the gung-ho politician who wants to be seen doing something, one of the scourges of the contemporary world. |
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We only weaken our hand in fighting the horrors of extreme poverty or terrorism if, in our efforts to do so, we deny the very human rights that these scourges take away from citizens. |
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The scourges of tetanus and gas gangrene were controlled to a large extent by antitoxin and antiserum injections, yet surgical treatment of the wound remained an essential requirement. |
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Moreover, Cyprus, could, in close cooperation with its partners in the EU, fight in a more efficient and effective way other scourges that threaten our societies. |
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The international community has learned the hard way that only through extensive and solid international cooperation can these scourges be eradicated. |
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