Unanimously
in sentence
156 examples of Unanimously in a sentence
And in the House of Representatives, the Republicans
unanimously
rejected every amendment, every compromise, and every courtesy that he offered.
The Indian public and the country’s notoriously fractious political class reacted with great pride to the news,
unanimously
hailing the decisive action as long overdue.
Last April, the European Parliament voted virtually
unanimously
for the Assyrians to be allowed to establish (on the basis of section 5 of the Iraqi Constitution) a federal region where they can be free from outside interference to practice their own way of life.
Abbas, whose bid is supported
unanimously
by the Arab and most Islamic countries, is convinced that the Arabs will stand with the Palestinians, regardless of the consequences.
The drama thickened for another ten months, until the Supreme Court
unanimously
ordered Nixon to surrender the tapes.
The United Nations Security Council has now
unanimously
passed the harshest sanctions yet against North Korea, in the hope of pressuring the small country to renounce its nuclear-weapons program.
In 1897, the House of Representatives in the US state of Indiana
unanimously
passed legislation that redefined the calculation of the value of pi , the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter.
First, (and here I speak about all postcommunist democracies) we accepted - almost
unanimously
and with little debate, for even the postcommunists accept the basic rules of the market - the neo-liberal package.
On September 19, 2016, the UN General Assembly
unanimously
adopted the New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants – a tentative step toward broad, non-binding, internationally accepted general principles for responding to the growing migration challenge.
Such a conception of national interest can rely only on full acceptance of the UN’s “responsibility to protect” doctrine, approved
unanimously
by the General Assembly in 2005.
The voting rules
unanimously
approved by the Governing Council and adopted by the European Council in early 2003 have prepared the ECB well.
The emissions tap must be turned off once the bathtub reaches a level associated with a certain level of warming – say, 2ºC, above which, scientists nearly
unanimously
agree, the risks become severe, tipping points become possible, and civilization’s ability to adapt is not guaranteed.
Such activities are not just unjust; they are a violation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 2334, adopted nearly
unanimously
last year (the US, then led by Barack Obama, abstained).
In 2005, the UN General Assembly
unanimously
recognized a “responsibility to protect” citizens when their own government fails to do so, and in 2011 it was invoked in UN Security Council Resolution 1973, authorizing the use of military force in Libya.
In 2005, the World Summit of heads of state and government and the UN General Assembly
unanimously
adopted the principle of the “Responsibility to Protect,” or R2P, as it has come to be known.
The Clinton administration ignored Rafsanjani’s effort, and the following year the US Congress
unanimously
passed the Iran and Libya Sanctions Act.
Mahmoud Abbas –
unanimously
elected as Fatah’s leader and commander-in-chief – made clear that while all options remain available for ending the occupation, the preference is still negotiations.
Under the responsibility to protect (R2P) principles that the UN General Assembly
unanimously
endorsed in 2005, coercive military action to stop atrocities should be contemplated only when peaceful means – from diplomatic persuasion to sanctions and threats of criminal prosecution – prove inadequate.
In accordance with the “responsibility to protect” doctrine, adopted
unanimously
by heads of state and government at the UN World Summit in September 2005, if a state fails to meet this primary obligation, responsibility shifts to the international community, which may exercise various measures, including, if absolutely necessary, military force.
In September 2015, world leaders echoed this conclusion when the United Nations General Assembly
unanimously
adopted the Sustainable Development Goals – which include a target to end these practices.
Last year, the Security Council
unanimously
adopted a similar resolution shaped by the jurisprudence of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda that condemned “without reservation” any denial of the Rwandan genocide of 1994.
Last year, the Security Council
unanimously
voted to refer the Libyan situation to the ICC for investigation several weeks before it adopted a second resolution creating the NATO no-fly zone over Libya.
In its latest resolution on Western Sahara this year, the UN Security Council
unanimously
called for the launch of a new political process and acknowledged that the status quo is not acceptable.
The idea of a “responsibility to protect” (R2P) was adopted
unanimously
at the UN’s World Summit in 2005, but subsequent events showed that not all member states interpreted the resolution the same way.
Perhaps more fundamentally, Kenya was
unanimously
seen as the “good student” of development, sometimes referred to as a symbol of an African renaissance.
In December, the United Nations Security Council
unanimously
adopted Resolution 2254, which establishes a political framework for a civil war that has raged for nearly five years, claiming as many as 300,000 lives and creating millions of refugees.
Last October, when the UN General Assembly met to discuss migration for only the second time, member states
unanimously
approved a declaration that called for migration’s inclusion in the post-2015 agenda.
Human Rights and LeprosyPRAGUE – At the end of last year, the United Nations General Assembly
unanimously
adopted a resolution approving principles and guidelines to end discrimination against people affected by leprosy and their family members.
One week later, the country’s parliament
unanimously
elected Sahle-Work Zewde to become Ethiopia’s first female president, and a week after that, lawmakers appointed Meaza Ashenafi to serve as the first female Supreme Court president.
On the contrary, he was
unanimously
re-elected and awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
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