It caused jealousies, disagreements, and suspicions among allies, at the expense of the common cause. |
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There is more in this vein, on a sliding scale of poisonousness that quantifies Beaton's various jealousies and resentments. |
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More familiar, but less important, were the internal squabbles and petty jealousies among civil rights leaders that hindered, but never hamstrung, the movement for justice. |
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The BNF itself split in 1998, riven by jealousies between 11 of its 13 members of the National Assembly and aging party founder Kenneth Koma. |
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We're up against big forces and people need to put aside personal jealousies and animosities and work together. |
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But the role was badly designed from the start, hampered by inflexible bureaucracy and the jealousies of 27 foreign ministers. |
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Less has been said about the disadvantages for example, the easy spread of jealousies among highly competitive people working in close proximity. |
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Mr. Speaker, the Prime Minister accuses the provinces of regional jealousies because they dared to speak out against the budget. |
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There are also strong standing personal rivalries and jealousies amongst the gangsters. |
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Frequently, interdepartmental efforts are marked by professional jealousies, bureaucratic delays and poor results. |
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In the meantime, it is important for UNDP to remember that donor jealousies exist outside as well as within the United Nations family. |
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That ends in a confusion of duplicating airlines, futile and uneconomic, and worse than that, in international jealousies and envies. |
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Co-operative planning knits a family closer together, dissolves jealousies and misunderstandings, breaks down tensions and wipes out resentments. |
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We must put an end to petty national jealousies and say that, with five phases, we could guarantee safety in aviation in Europe. |
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There may also be jealousies between agencies, which militate against a frank collaboration in the field. |
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The plan has worked well: everyone in the neighbourhood uses the mill, and the jealousies have almost disappeared. |
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That we overcome institutional jealousies and genuinely work for a single purpose. |
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National jealousies would again develop, and each State would again express its satisfaction only in its armed strength. |
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There is gentle humour here amid point-scoring office jealousies and a slow-ticking potential romance with single mum, earth mother and school teacher Wavey. |
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Battles are fought over it, bitter arguments erupt, jealousies flare. |
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But the clash goes beyond professional jealousies and crony networking. |
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John's suspicions and jealousies meant that he rarely enjoyed good relationships with even the leading loyalist barons. |
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I am growing more and more sick of factions, gossip, jealousies, recriminations, excoriations and the whole literary shee-bang. |
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In fact, we accuse ourselves of quarrelsomeness and jealousies. |
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The various jealousies and factions that kept these provinces in turmoil are hard to follow now, but, basically, it was a difference between Latin and Greek, between the West and the East. |
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The presence of Mercy would be reintroduced into the heart of parish communities to heal the divisions caused too often by quarrels, jealousies and destructive criticism within the parish family. |
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When Iris shows up the next day, things get even more awkward, and Ms. Shelton lingers over an emerging triangle of secrets, miscommunications and jealousies. |
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The union created jealousies in Mugenye's family. |
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Their endless, presumably entirely confected interaction is perhaps the ultimate celebrity magazine formula: a cavalcade of imagined break-ups, make-ups and jealousies so die-hard it could survive a nuclear winter. |
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However, many of the projects that were established, such as poultry production, were later vandalised as a result of jealousies between husbands and their wives. |
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We know that agencies, even within one state, will not share information because of jealousies, power struggles and turf wars, let alone through cross-border cooperation. |
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Like any family, we have our share of differences, squabbles and jealousies, but when times are difficult it is good to be part of a big family whose members are willing to come to one another's aid. |
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Family connections can easily cause friction in teams, yet Mary Magdalene loved and served her Master with no evidence of competition or jealousies. |
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Perfect territory then for the deviser of The Thick of It, the satire that so gloriously nailed the paranoias, insecurities and petty jealousies of Westminster life. |
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Too many jealousies and vested interests are involved. |
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The underlying differences of interest, preference and context, complicated by the usual jealousies and suspicions, will frustrate hopes of tidily consistent and nicely coordinated sustainability frameworks. |
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It may have been quite legitimate, given these divisions and jealousies, that the Saulteaux needed extra time to arrive at a common bargaining position in order to present a united front to the commissioners. |
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Braer, Sea Empress, and Erika demonstrated that such uncontrolled activities can be counter productive, with misuse of resources, frustrations and sometimes jealousies. |
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Whatever the case, Bentinck's closeness to William did arouse jealousies in the Royal Court. |
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Political parties are not above exploiting these fears and jealousies. |
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