It is true that all NGOs, except those exclusively concerned with succour and relief, are about change. |
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These bodies are giving succour and support to the British forces in Ireland and as such they are collaborators. |
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The rest of the story is then structured around God's provision of succour and support for him. |
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Western churches have a clear responsibility to provide succour and support for the Iraqi church in this time of trauma. |
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Perhaps, no human being would want to demean himself by seeking succour along the streets and from strangers. |
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However, their every utterance is designed to inflame fears and tensions and give succour to the fascists. |
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I watched its mouthpart feelers rapidly go to work on the succour and it was quickly rejuvenated. |
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In short, the manager has to find succour from shoestrings, a quality that Scott has demonstrated in the past. |
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But lest anyone think I give succour to the nationalists by talk of national futures, let there be no such fatuous interpretation. |
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The autumn leaves have been composting on the pavements ready to succour the soon-to-be emerging weed seedlings. |
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Conditions deteriorated and the milch cow of the state could no longer succour the system. |
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Mr. Roy, who has been a staunch supporter of Mr. Deo in providing succour to Parkinson's victims, translated the speech for the audience. |
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She is a succour and support to him but is also a considerable thinker in her own right. |
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You need a network of supporters and sympathisers prepared to hide and give succour, financial and otherwise for the cause. |
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He felt helpless because he could not do anything to save innocent lives and bring succour to them. |
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But whoever assumes this role, their supporters can at least derive succour from the infinite spirit of the Highlanders. |
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Music is the all time succour, as it helps in healing old wounds and hostilities. |
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He fully shares the hospital's concept of providing succour and medical help to the underprivileged section of our society. |
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A building can be economical and efficient, and have the traditional values of architecture like placedness, psychological succour, urbanity and so on. |
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They are the ones who are telling us to not give succour to their government. |
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The other is giving succour to the restless Tory right who detest the EU and want to see Britain secede from it. |
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It is our moral obligation to the survivors to give them at least a sense of closure and succour for their plight. |
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The harbour provided safety and succour to seafarers over the centuries. |
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Ah here's a little succour for Spurs: they're involved in a battle with Southampton for the Sporting Lisbon midfielder Adrien Silva. |
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Wherever they turn, the private sector finds very little recourse and no succour whatsoever. |
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We will never, under any circumstances, give succour to those who seek to use force to undermine legitimate democratic institutions. |
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If we subject our traditional alliances to excessive strain, we provide succour to dictators not democrats. |
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In particular, spouses in a civil union are bound to live together as a couple and they owe each other respect, fidelity, succour and assistance. |
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Marriage is the public union of two people who decide to live together and owe each other respect, fidelity, succour and assistance. |
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Sometimes they turn the violence they have witnessed or perpetrated on the people and country that have provided them with succour and sanctuary. |
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In this case, we must condemn the substance of the terrorists' claims, and should give them no succour in terms of a democratic vote. |
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Her shelter in Calcutta gave succour to perhaps 200 poor people in a city where millions and millions lived in abject poverty. |
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He may have created a garden to give spiritual succour but, so the story goes, he himself displayed all too human frailties by taking to drink and betting on the gee-gees. |
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One of the regrets of my incumbency, probably, should be that I have not given as much comfort and succour as I could have done, to all the local hostelries, taverns, or pubs. |
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These sections treat the effects of marriage: respect, fidelity, succour, assistance, the obligation to live together, the moral and material direction of the family, duties, etc. |
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They would say no. They would not want to engage, reward or give succour to those countries if those countries were pursuing policies that are dangerous, damaging and cause death. |
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When individuals such as Saddam Hussein give support and succour to international terrorists or field their own teams of terrorists, responsible nations must brace for war. |
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Like other rich countries, Britain is feeling the downdraft from the credit crisis at a time when rising inflation makes it hard for the central bank to provide succour. |
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I sympathise with the Commissioner who tonight is not too well, but I am sure that this measure will help to find a solution even to that and we will be able to find somewhere for him to travel to in order to find succour! |
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It also impacts on the resources we use here for our social programs and services to provide for refugees who have come to our country from areas of conflict to seek refuge and succour. |
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But there's not too much succour for Spurs: their midfielder Nabil Bentaleb has become the subject of a tug of war between Arsenal, Paris Saint-Germain and Juventus. |
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Longford was the only person to visit this dying man, a gesture repeated in countless episodes that never made headlines but which brought succour and relief. |
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I appeal to all parties to abide by the ceasefire in order to allow humanitarian organizations to carry out their mission of bringing succour to the war-ravaged population. |
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Pakistan will continue to support international efforts which bring quick succour to the affected people and hasten the process of reconstruction and rehabilitation in the countries hit by the tsunami. |
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John Major has been blurting out the bitterness he feels towards Margaret Thatcher, who passed him the torch in 1990 but then gave succour to the Europhobic rebels, including Mr Duncan Smith, who made his life a misery. |
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The United Nations should endeavour to go in early and stay long enough, if need be, to give hope to the hopeless and succour to the millions of helpless, distressed and displaced victims of conflict. |
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But who knows at what age Barlow began planning to present the public face of a charitable do-gooder, while secretly scheming to deprive the weak and vulnerable of succour, if indeed he ever did so? |
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Even if they no longer live together, husbands and wives retain towards each other the obligations and responsibilities arising from their marriage: respect, fidelity, succour and assistance. |
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Because after being pictured paying homage to Nazism, Harry and di Canio at least tried to deny they give succour to dangerous, racist, right-wing thugs. |
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