Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
The Act's seventh article provides further grounds for deprivation of citizenship.
Therefore, social exclusion may lead to deprivation of citizenship.
The decision and his deprivation of citizenship were rubber-stamped by the Soviet parliament.
Deprivation of citizenship cannot occur for this reason if the person has no other citizenship.
International opinion was canvassed against deprivation of citizenship rights.
This is known as deprivation of citizenship.
The sole penalty is deprivation of citizenship.
Deprivation of citizenship in the USSR was legal and happened from time to time.
Deprivation of citizenship as a punishment for sedition was expanded to associates and family relatives of seditious citizens.
Section 16 - Deprivation of Citizenship: One may be deprived or stripped of citizenship if:
Such assistance may lead to deprivation of citizenship at the advice of the Minister of Internal Affairs (in addition to a possible criminal trial).
However it is sometimes argued by emigrants and emigrant groups the restrictions on dual citizenship are a form of involuntary deprivation of citizenship.
This Article also punishes anyone who knowingly presents false information during naturalization with deprivation of citizenship "after due verification of the false information presented."
In 1976 he signed a petition against the deprivation of citizenship of fellow writer Wolf Biermann and subsequently lost his SED membership.
Procedural safeguards for both naturalization and bona fide citizenship remained largely absent: applicants could be rejected for no reason at all, such decisions were final and binding, and even bona fide Bhutanese citizens faced deprivation of citizenship for sedition.
Topics on which Shahak wrote included suppression of freedom of speech and political activity, land ordinances and confiscation, living restrictions, home destruction, unequal pay and work restrictions, emergency defense regulations, torture of prisoners, collective punishment, assassinations, discrimination in education and deprivation of citizenship.
Article TA (ཏ) restates the 1958 law that punishes all citizens who are "involved in acts against the King or speaks against the Royal Government or associates with people involved in activities against the Royal Government" with deprivation of citizenship.
The issue that arises with this plan is the transfer of populated territories and the revocation of citizenship for those in the transferred areas.
It is unlikely that either International or Israeli law would allow revocation of citizenship without a bilateral agreement with the Palestinian Authority.
Specifically, the Supreme Court upheld an act of Congress which provided for revocation of citizenship as a consequence of voting in a foreign election.
However, the Government rejected commission recommendations that would have streamlined procedures for revocation of citizenship and deportation, including a suggestion that defendants in such cases be restricted to a single judicial appeal.
The immediate outcomes ranged from anti-Jewish riots in Yemen and Syria to the revocation of citizenship for Jews in Libya to the confiscation of their property in Iraq.
The proposal did not specifically mention Jews, they said, but it contained language that would have kept in place the revocation of citizenship of tens of thousands of Jews by the Iraqi government in 1950.