Warrant
in sentence
248 examples of Warrant in a sentence
For example, Iran’s possession of precision-strike capabilities – and a much more hostile relationship with America – would
warrant
new US initiatives to cope with growing security vulnerabilities.
To be sure, Iran’s accelerating uranium enrichment program and associated nuclear- and missile-related activities
warrant
concern.
Countering Russian interference in Ukraine does not
warrant
incorporating Ukraine into NATO.
Economic activity is affected by confidence: Do consumers believe their incomes are likely to rise (or even prove secure), and do companies believe that future growth will be buoyant enough to
warrant
current investment?
We appeared stronger in the diplomatic arena than our economic and military power might
warrant.
Most recently, an arrest
warrant
was issued for Qasim Ibrahim, the leader of Jumhooree, another opposition party.
Lacking such external threats, the ties between, say, Czechs and Slovaks (to say nothing of Serbs and Croats!) are too weak to
warrant
a common national level of government.
The epidemiologists acknowledged the uncertainties of these estimates, but presented enough data to
warrant
an urgent follow-up investigation and reconsideration by the Bush administration and the US military of aerial bombing of Iraq’s urban areas.
Things have gotten so bad as to
warrant
a visit by Premier Wen Jiabao.
Indeed, Russia's military prosecutor has now issued an international arrest
warrant
for her, even though the officer she is accused of bribing was acquitted in a trial in Moscow last year of the very charges that prosecutors now want to question her about.
There is every reason to believe that we could get the same ad-hoc joint intervention going should circumstances
warrant
today.
That instrument cannot be used for both price stability and financial stability, as the outlook for price stability could
warrant
higher interest rates, while ensuring financial stability might require a lower interest rate.
Environmental chemicals and particulates might
warrant
their own categories.
A
Warrant
of HypocrisyLONDON – Earlier this month, the International Criminal Court (ICC) upheld the request of the court’s chief prosecutor to issue an arrest
warrant
for Omar el-Bashir, the President of Sudan, charging him with war crimes and crimes against humanity.
The
warrant
was no leap forward.
Emboldened by the
warrant
and its elusive suggestion of international support, the Darfuri rebels, the Justice and Equality Movement, have walked out of peace talks with Sudan’s government.
Moreover, while the fear of being hauled off to The Hague may have some effect in deterring rulers from committing crimes against humanity, the claim that the Bashir
warrant
will deter the current crop of human rights’ violators is derisory.
The charge of selective application also applies to the Bashir
warrant.
It comes as no surprise, then, to read in the Arab News that Bashir’s
warrant
“reeks of hypocrisy.”
The Security Council has the power to defer the
warrant
for Bashir’s arrest for renewable periods of one year.
The idea is that deferring the
warrant
will give the Security Council leverage over Sudan.
Gareth Evans, a former Australian Foreign Minister, has called it “a powerful diplomatic tool,” while the Washington Post has called for the
warrant
to be used “as a bargaining chip with Mr. Bashir and his Chinese and Arab allies.”
By contrast, refusing to comply with the ruling would likely inhibit BNY Mellon from executing the payments, making it virtually impossible to pay the
warrant
to exchange bondholders on time.
The battle with the judges has incited enough popular unrest to
warrant
Mubarak’s deployment of thousands of black-uniformed central security forces in the heart of Cairo.
On July 14, the ICC prosecutor, Argentine lawyer Luis Moreno Ocampo, announced that he was seeking an arrest
warrant
for Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir for orchestrating the atrocities in Darfur.
But “findings” of “dumping” into foreign markets surely
warrant
some response, no?
In February, after the Democratic Republic of Congo challenged an arrest
warrant
against its foreign minister, the International Court of Justice said Belgium had gone too far by not respecting the immunity of sitting office holders.
If history is any guide, there are three major issues that
warrant
careful monitoring in the coming months.
Recent advances in joint policies – the European arrest warrant, for example – lead some to see a link, but this does not seem realistic.
Nevertheless, the decision of Luis Moreno-Ocampo, the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, to request an arrest
warrant
against al-Bashir is puzzling, for three reasons.
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