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A road map to rebalance the Nato alliance

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Audio   来源:TV  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:—EVA VERÓNICA DE GYVÉS ZÁRATE: Es una exfiscal y juez de tribunales penales del sureño estado de Oaxaca. Se ha declarado seguidora del expresidente Andrés Manuel López Obrador y en su campaña repitió frases emblemáticas del discurso de Morena. Se ha comprometido a “velar por la exacta aplicación de la ley” para que el tribunal no se convierta en "órgano persecutor de personas que han laborado en administraciones anteriores”.

—EVA VERÓNICA DE GYVÉS ZÁRATE: Es una exfiscal y juez de tribunales penales del sureño estado de Oaxaca. Se ha declarado seguidora del expresidente Andrés Manuel López Obrador y en su campaña repitió frases emblemáticas del discurso de Morena. Se ha comprometido a “velar por la exacta aplicación de la ley” para que el tribunal no se convierta en "órgano persecutor de personas que han laborado en administraciones anteriores”.

MARRAKECH, Morocco (AP) — Sudan’s former prime minister on Wednesday dismissed the military’s moves toas “fake,” saying its recent victories in recapturing the capital

A road map to rebalance the Nato alliance

and other territory will not end the country’s two-year civil war.In a rare interview with The Associated Press, Abdalla Hamdok said no military victory, in Khartoum or elsewhere, could end the war that has killed tens of thousands and driven millions from their homes.“Whether Khartoum is captured or not captured, it’s irrelevant,” Hamdok said on the sidelines of the Mo Ibrahim Foundation’s governance conference in Morocco. “There is no military solution to this. No side will be able to have outright victory.”

A road map to rebalance the Nato alliance

first civilian prime minister after decades of military rule in 2019, trying to lead a democratic transition. Heafter a turbulent stretch in which he was

A road map to rebalance the Nato alliance

amid international pressure.

The following year, warring generalsin its stronghold in Darfur and made advances elsewhere,

Hamdok, a 69-year-old former economist who now leads a civilian coalition from exile, called the idea that the conflict was drawing down “total nonsense.” The idea that reconstruction can begin in Khartoum while fighting rages elsewhere is “absolutely ridiculous,” he said.“Any attempt at creating a government in Sudan today is fake. It is irrelevant,” he said, arguing that lasting peace can’t be secured without addressing the root causes of the war.

Hamdok said a ceasefire and a credible process to restore democratic, civilian rule would need to confront Sudan’s deep inequalities, including uneven development, issues among different identity groups and questions about the role of religion in government.“Trusting the soldiers to bring democracy is a false pretense,” he added.

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