Deputy
in sentence
343 examples of Deputy in a sentence
A former
deputy
chairman of the Central Bank of Turkmenistan and later an outspoken critic of Turkmenbashi’s government, Hadjiev, a senior member of the exiled Watan (Republican) Party, received “humanitarian parole” – a protected category of individuals that falls short of refugee status – when he reached Bulgaria.
My experience as chairwoman of the Verkhovna Rada Budget Committee and as
deputy
prime minister in the Yushchenko Cabinet proves that criminal elements here can be brought to heel if the fight against corruption is pursued with vigor and brains; and that Ukraine can become more powerful and prosperous.
United Energy Systems (UES) is headed by Anatoly Chubais, a former
deputy
prime minister with a reputation as a reformer.
To that end, we should follow the advice of David Lipton, the IMF’s first
deputy
managing director, and move beyond the fashionable “OHIO” approach, focused on getting one’s “own house in order,” to the more demanding California – or “CA” – strategy of “collective action.”
Many accomplished and brilliant candidates fall into this category, not least
Deputy
Chief Justice Dikgang Moseneke.
It would also strengthen the European Parliament’s call for an independent international investigation of the murder of the Russian opposition political leader, former
deputy
prime minister Boris Nemtsov, and bolster his family’s petition for an international investigation.
Mahmoud Abbas, Arafat’s longtime
deputy
and the architect of the Oslo accords, quickly secured the backing of Fatah, the PLO’s core body.
The government’s few technocrats, including the
deputy
prime minister and the finance minister, are holdovers from the previous coup government of 2006-2007, and they complain that they lack authority.
But, as Sultan’s health deteriorated, Abdullah bypassed his own creation and appointed Prince Naif, the interior minister, as a second
deputy.
A short list would include Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, a former finance minister of Nigeria;Nandan Nilekani, an entrepreneur who led an impressive bio-identification program in India; and Tharman Shanmugaratnam, Singapore’s
deputy
prime minister.
It does not seem to be an accident, though, that the capture came quickly after the Security Council passed a very specific set of sanctions against Iran that targeted not just IRGC-affiliated companies and financial institutions like the Ammunition and Metallurgy Industries Group and the Bank Sepah, organizations dealing with nuclear or ballistic missile activities, but also a series of senior IRGC commanders, including Morteza Rezaei, the Guards’
deputy
commander, Vice Admiral Ali Ahmadian, chief of the Joint Staff, and Brigadier General Mohammad Hejazi, commander of the Basij.
Or as Putin’s
deputy
chief of staff, Vyacheslav Volodin, unwittingly put it: “Any attack on Putin is an attack on Russia….[T]here is no Russia today if there is no Putin.”
Eleven former CIA directors and
deputy
directors, as well as 70 former senior CIA officers (including me), said as much last week, criticizing the unprecedented revocation as political coercion and accusing Trump of misusing presidential powers, damaging national security, and threatening current and former officials’ right of free speech.
As if to underscore the point, White House spokespeople say that Trump intends to order more revocations, including a former national security adviser and
deputy
attorney general, as well as former directors of national intelligence, the CIA and the National Security Agency.
According to Pan Gongsheng, a
deputy
governor of the PBOC, the relationship between the central bank and the financial sector entails both a division of labor and a system of checks and balances.
But, though the Congress prime minister, Sushil Koirala, and his Communist deputy, K.P. Oli, have presided over a more stable country, they have been unable to forge consensus on a new constitution.
Should they not be treated differently from the likes of Rotenberg, Yury Kovalchuk (known as Putin’s personal banker), or Putin’s de facto
deputy
Igor Sechin, not to mention Russia’s super-wealthy public officials?
Ramaphosa won the leadership contest by a slim margin, and his elected deputy, David Mabuza, and ANC secretary-general, Ace Magashule, are Zuma acolytes.
He was tipped to be Nelson Mandela’s
deputy
when Mandela became South Africa’s first post-apartheid president, but he stepped aside when asked, demonstrating pragmatism and patience.
As Paul Tucker, a former
deputy
governor of the Bank of England, discusses in his masterful recent book Unelected Power: The Quest for Legitimacy in Central Banking and the Administrative State, the argument for democratic delegation is a subtle one.
A 2005 report by Patrick Mazimhaka, a former AU
deputy
chairman, provides some leeway for this, as Mazimhaka pointed out that the union in 1960 between Somaliland and Somalia, following the withdrawal of the colonial powers (Britain and Italy), was never formally ratified.
Surely, Shevardnadze’s political skills were worthy of another great Soviet politician from the Caucasus, the Armenian Anastas Mikoyan, once Stalin’s trusted trade minister and later Nikita Khrushchev’s fellow anti-Stalinist and
deputy
prime minister.
But Peres was offered by Rabin’s
deputy
an opportunity to champion a track two negotiation with the PLO in Oslo, and, with Rabin’s consent, took charge of the talks, bringing them to a successful conclusion in August 1993.
It is certainly possible to imagine, as the French Communist
deputy
does, a woman in a burqa harboring an extremist or terrorist agenda.
Trump also looks likely to name John Bolton – a bombastic neo-conservative who still defends the Iraq war and thinks the US should bomb Iran – to be Tillerson’s
deputy.
He arrived with Anatoli's Chubais' team from St. Petersburg in November that year, first becoming
deputy
minister of finance and soon
deputy
chairman of the CBR.
The editor and
deputy
editors of Beijing News, a relatively new tabloid with a national reputation for exposing corruption and official abuse, were fired.
General Robert Caslen, the Pentagon’s
deputy
director for the war on terrorism, put it, “We are not killing them faster than they are being created.”
But the EU can make a much more positive and important contribution to the Arab awakening by launching an economic strategy along the lines laid out by Italy’s foreign minister, Franco Frattini, and Britain’s
deputy
prime minister, Nick Clegg.
Nemat Shafik, a
deputy
governor of the Bank of England, tried to position herself between these opposing positions.
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