Criminals
in sentence
581 examples of Criminals in a sentence
Just as sex
criminals
– and the leaders who directed the use of rape and sexual abuse as a military strategy – were tried and sentenced after the wars in Bosnia and Sierra Leone, so Americans must hold accountable those who committed, or authorized, sex crimes in US-operated prisons.
Unlike eBay, a country needs to put its
criminals
in jail and keep them there; it can’t simply cancel their accounts.
Few Americans will take seriously the assertion that President George W. Bush and other members of his administration – including Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, and John Bolton, recently appointed by President Donald Trump as his next National Security Adviser – are war
criminals.
The EU, Japan, and the US would be even more effective if they aligned their policies to prevent
criminals
from accessing their markets and enabled legitimate operators to benefit from a “supercharged” level of access.
These strains in the US-Japan relationship – surely the foundation stone of Asian stability – first became noticeable in December, when Abe visited the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo, which houses the “souls” of (among others) Class A war
criminals
from the Pacific War.
Terrorists might buy malware from criminals, and governments might find it useful to hide behind both.
The most promising areas for international cooperation today most likely concern problems posed for states by third parties such as
criminals
and terrorists.
He is a perfect fit for a Russia grown tired of the heroes, revolutionaries,
criminals
– even saviours – who make life exciting but rarely stable.
Abe, too, has stoked tensions, particularly by visiting Tokyo’s Yasukuni Shrine – a controversial memorial that honors, among others, Class A war
criminals
from World War II.
The recent terrorist attacks in France, Kuwait, and Tunisia are only the latest reminders of how important it is to understand that, behind these outrages, there are serious ideas, not simply angry, frustrated
criminals.
For China and South Korea, the Yasukuni Shrine’s inclusion of 14 Class A war
criminals
who were executed after World War II has made it a potent symbol of Japan’s prewar militarism, and Abe had long refrained from visiting it – including during his previous stint as prime minister.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has rarely missed an opportunity to provoke Japan’s Korean critics, whether by visiting Tokyo’s Yasukuni shrine, where the “souls” of 14 Class A war
criminals
are interred, or embracing revisionist critiques of previous official apologies for Japanese aggression.
Of 50 European countries, only Belarus, notorious for its lack of respect for basic human rights, still executes
criminals
in peacetime.
It was a brutal war for territory, in which civilians were targeted more often than combatants, making a mockery of international humanitarian law (indeed, it has taken decades to round up known war criminals, some of whose trials remain ongoing).
By placing Ukraine’s energy needs in the hands of a shadowy company linked to international criminals, the agreement has planted the seeds of new and perhaps more dangerous crises.
But this requires treating drug users not as
criminals
to be incarcerated, but as patients to be cared for.
Failures to promote social solidarity can have other costs, not the least of which are the social and private expenditures required to protect property and incarcerate
criminals.
While Abe wisely visited China and smoothed over relations ruffled by his predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi, who repeatedly visited the Yasukuni Shrine (where 14 class A war
criminals
from WWII are interred), many people are uncertain about his long-term vision.
Banks, airlines, credit card companies, social media firms, hotel chains, social clubs, and other organizations should participate as well, to avoid being perceived as profiting from serving such
criminals.
Similarly, foreign courts exercising universal jurisdiction over alleged Syrian war
criminals
found on their territory would be free to ignore an amnesty.
Indeed, over 5,000 people were killed by organized drug
criminals
last year, more than double the death toll in 2007.
Many may not make that choice, but should we make
criminals
of those who do?It’s not a crazy choice.
Afghanistan is in danger of falling back into the hands of terrorists, insurgents, and criminals, and the multi-billion-dollar opium trade is at the heart of the country’s malaise.
As a result, the Afghan state is at risk of takeover by a malign coalition of extremists, criminals, and opportunists.
Yes, sex
criminals
must be punished; but political career after political career, especially in America, is ending because of consensual affairs.
In the Commission’s worst-case scenario, the costs imposed by the malicious actions of
criminals
and the political controls imposed by governments would cause people to lose trust in the Internet and reduce their use of it.
In 13 years, the ICTY, with 1,200 employees, spent roughly $1.25 billion to convict only a few dozen war
criminals.
Over the course of two years, an estimated 3,000-10,000 alleged petty
criminals
– many of them supposedly drug users – were executed without trial.
Both Suharto and Thaksin were eventually overthrown, but not because they orchestrated the killings of suspected petty
criminals
and drug users.
Likewise, adult accusers of Church-protected sex
criminals
knew that they would have to answer fundamental questions (notably, many of them have identified themselves, which has helped get real prosecutions).
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