Yordanani hayerẹ: gitažoġovi niwt̕er : (22-24 Mayis 2016)
In: Haykakan Sp̕iwṙk̕ 4
In: Հայկական Սփիւռք 4
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In: Haykakan Sp̕iwṙk̕ 4
In: Հայկական Սփիւռք 4
In: al-Taqrīr al-istirātījī 35
In: Markaz Dirāsāt al-Sharq al-Awsaṭ
In: التقرير الإستراتيجي 35
In: مركز دراسات الشرق الأوسط ؛
In: Ṣafaḥāt jadīdah min al-tārīkh al-Islāmī
In: صفحات جديدة من التاريخ الإسلامي
In: https://archives.au.int/handle/123456789/6483
Executive Council Thirty-Fourth Ordinary Session 7 – 8 February 2019 Addis Ababa, Ethiopia ; The African Union Advisory Board on Corruption (AUABC) was established in accordance with the provisions of article 22 (5) (a) of the African Union Convention on Preventing and Combating Corruption (AUCPCC). The Convention was adopted at the second ordinary session of the Assembly of Heads of States and Government of the African Union in Maputo, Mozambique, on 11th July 2003, and entered into force on 5th August 2006, thirty (30) days after the deposit of the fifteenth instrument of ratification. As at November 2018, the Convention had been signed by 49 states and ratified or acceded to by 40 States.
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In: al-Taqrīr 22
In: التقرير ؛ 22
In: Trudy Instituta vostokovedenija RAN vypusk 22
In: Archaeopress egyptology 41
In: https://archives.au.int/handle/123456789/6589
Executive council Thirty-Fourth Ordinary Session 07 - 08 February 2019 Addis Ababa, Ethiopia ; The members of the PRC Sub-Committee on Headquarters and Host Agreements, met on 22 October 2018 at the AU Headquarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. to discuss issues relating to the implementation of the Agreement between the African Union and the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, on the Headquarters of the AU , as well as issues arising from the implementation of Host Country Agreements between the AU and States hosting AU institutions, organs, agencies and offices.
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"Muḥammad ibn Ḥabīb (d. 860), a specialist in Arab history, tribal genealogy, and poetry, who lived in Baghdad, collected in his Prominent Murder Victims many accounts of murderers and murder victims from the legendary pre-Islamic past, such as how Bilqīs, the Arabic name for the Queen of Sheba, came to power, to the murders ordered by viziers or caliphs in the early Islamic centuries. A lengthy appendix deals with poets from pre- and early Islamic times who were killed. The stories are entertaining as well as informative. Strikingly, the author refrains from explicit moralising. The present book offers a richly annotated English translation together with an improved Arabic text and indexes of persons, places, and rhymes"--