Sentence examples similar to obliging persons from inspiring English sources

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The year before, a ZANU-PF-dominated Parliament had passed the Citizenship Amendment Act, which obliged all persons wishing to retain Zimbabwean citizenship to renounce their foreign citizenship.

The amendment before us introduces a new element, namely a right of information of the user which is not covered in any way by the substance of the directive and which would seem to suggest if interpreted a contrario, that Member States may actually be allowed to oblige legal persons to appear in the public directory.

A visa doesn't oblige a person to move; a visa is a decision not to actively stop that person from moving.

The serious endeavour of realizing God's presence in human beings obliges a person to promote the welfare of both individuals and society.

The future Children's Act [ 14] in section 150 will oblige any person to identify children in need of care and protection (e.g. living in a child headed household, required to perform child labour, being maltreated, abused, or exploited) and to refer these to a social worker.

However, these registers need only be accessible to 'competent authorities', financial intelligence units, obliged entities and "persons who can demonstrate a legitimate interest to access the information", and not the wider public.

In January 2001, Al-Kateb applied for a protection visa, on the grounds that the United Nations 1954 Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons obliged Australia to protect him.

If a participant did not have this sense of trust with regard to the physicians or did not have a helping healthcare professional among her close relations and did not feel sure such a specific healthcare professional would help her, she could use an obliging healthcare contact person (an NN), who would help her address whatever problem she might encounter.

Practical reason – i.e., the categorical imperative-obliges us to consider persons as ends in themselves rather than means to an end.

"As a matter of principle, displaced persons are obliged to have their habitual residence in the [state] to which they were allocated".

"As a matter of principle, displaced persons are obliged to have their habitual residence in the [state] to which they were allocated". Under no condition can an asylum seeker travel to his native country, or his application will be "deemed withdrawn," Gehrmann told me.

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