Reconciliation
in sentence
449 examples of Reconciliation in a sentence
Kenyatta’s supporters laud the former rivals for overcoming their differences to form a government, citing it as proof that the African tradition of
reconciliation
works – another reason the ICC should drop the case.
However, the aim of his trial should be not only to bring to justice the dictator and his accomplices, but also to foster national
reconciliation
through the affirmation by Iraqis of universal principles such as non-discrimination, fairness, and transparency.
Let us have no illusions: no “conditions” imposed from outside will bring about the “China we deserve” in the way, after World War II, we got the “Germany we deserved” through a process of integration and
reconciliation.
Through two rounds of free and democratic elections in 2005, the people of Liberia courageously chose peace, reconciliation, and development over ethnic divisions and violence.
More recently, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf – a Nobel Peace Prize laureate – led her country to
reconciliation
and recovery following a decade-long civil war, managing a devastating Ebola epidemic along the way.
The Kaesong Industrial Complex, a joint venture of the North and South Korean governments, is both a tribute to the concept of diplomatic
reconciliation
through business and a difficult test of its feasibility.
Without both of these elements, national
reconciliation
will likely prove impossible.
The Armenia-Turkey diplomatic process has stalled, and the Turkish government’s effort at
reconciliation
with the country’s large Kurdish minority has soured.
Their loyalty was not only to the citizens who elected them, but also to the generations of the past that had endured the consequences of Franco-German enmity, and to generations yet to come, which would benefit from
reconciliation.
Now, as another war of words heats up, Japanese and South Korean leaders need to step back, recognize where the real interests of their people lie, both today and in the future, and calmly begin to take the measures required to ensure durable
reconciliation.
In the aftermath of World War II, a group of idealistic Frenchmen bent on
reconciliation
with their former enemy declared that France would have “the Germany she deserved.”
Unity is Not EnoughThe
reconciliation
between the leaders of the two major Palestinian groups, Hamas and Fatah, that has just been negotiated in Saudi Arabia is being hailed as a major political breakthrough.
More an enemy of Israeli-Arab
reconciliation
than of Israel as such, the Mullahs’ resort to an incendiary anti-Jewish, pan-Islamic discourse is aimed at ending Iran’s isolation and presenting its regional ambitions in a light palatable to the Sunni masses.
Then the European Commission took the idea and translated it into bilateral Stability and Association Agreements, so the original idea - regional
reconciliation
- got lost.
It describes such denial as “hampering efforts at reconciliation” in the country.
Europeans who have stopped dreaming about Europe, who take peace, reconciliation, and above all freedom for granted, do not realize what is at stake.
You just have to listen to them praising the continent of peace, reconciliation, and even relative equality (compared to the US).
Indeed, Chinese diplomacy has been busy lately in trilateral talks with Pakistan and Afghanistan aimed at achieving
reconciliation
with the Taliban.
Our task is to help sow the seeds of
reconciliation
and peace.
Anything short of this would permanently taint Pakistan’s leadership and impede all attempts at political
reconciliation.
Ravaged by endemic elite discord since its founding, Pakistan desperately needs an elite
reconciliation
that includes all of the country’s major stakeholders.
The gate to Israeli-Arab
reconciliation
remains where it was always been – in the hands of the Palestinians.
This is frequently the case because the mechanisms established to cope with post-conflict reconciliation, truth, and justice, have proved inadequate.
In Northern Ireland, the Good Friday Agreement, justly acclaimed for staunching the bloodshed and starting reconciliation, has – to the great frustration of victims – run into political resistance over one integral element of the peace process: the establishment of mechanisms to clarify past crimes.
In the spirit of post-war
reconciliation
that diplomats are always keen to engender, we must not reconcile ourselves to the timid, blighted notion that world order requires us to recoil before rogue states that terrorize their citizens and menace our own.
And it can instill in them a desire to seek
reconciliation
when the conflicts have been resolved and the catastrophes have ended.
Indeed, it was none other than Alfonso Cano, a former FARC leader, who called the law “essential to a future of reconciliation” and a “contribution to a real solution to the conflict.”
The Wahhabi religious establishment, the Saudi state’s hidden co-rulers, could very well obstruct Abdullah’s attempts at regional religious
reconciliation.
Multilateral surveillance and
reconciliation
mechanisms – not just at the WTO, but also at the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank – should be revamped, and the functioning of the G-20 should be improved, including through the establishment of a small secretariat that facilitates greater policy continuity from year to year.
This genuine embrace of
reconciliation
provided much-needed support to Chinese leaders, who were eager to control anti-Japanese sentiments.
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