जून्टा Meaning in English
जून्टा शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : junta
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
जून्टोजुनुन
जूनुन
जुपिटस
जुरा
जुरासिक
जुरासिक काल
अधिकार क्षेट्र
अधिकार क्षेत्र
अधिकारक्षेत्र
अधिकारक्षेत्रा
क्षेत्राधिकार
ख़लिफ़ा का अधिकार क्षेत्र
न्यायशास्र
न्यायविस्र्द्धता
जून्टा इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
In 1984, the ownership of the University came under the military administration of Ondo State since the governance of the country came under the military junta.
He was a student syndicalist and activist in Athens and then a political activist in London, taking an active part in the 1968 student protests there, and in organisations of the revolutionary Greek Left during the struggle against the Greek military junta of 1967–1974.
At first the Beja Congress was frustrated in seeking political power: it was banned in 1960, along with all other political parties, by the military junta of General Ibrahim Abboud.
Paralia Sergoulas has a road parallel to the seaside, built by the military MOMA construction group during the junta dictatorship.
Prior to the construction of the National Route and the seaside road during the junta, the village was not as accessible as today and cars could not enter the village.
Soon afterwards, the military junta that effectively controlled Sultan al-Dawla's government demanded that al-Sharabi turn over Ibn Sahlan, a former Buyid governor of Iraq who had fled to the Batihah.
Al-Sharabi, keeping in mind the Batihah's tradition of not turning over fugitives, refused, whereupon the junta convinced Sultan al-Dawla to send an expedition to the swamp.
By 1974, an exodus of more Turkish Cypriots to Australia occurred due to fears that the island would unite with Greece when the Greek military junta staged a coup d'état against the Cypriot President, with the help of EOKA B.
The PCE was legalized during the 1948-52 term of President Galo Plaza, but was banned again when the military junta held power in 1963-1966.
7th-century Christian theologians The 1974 coup d'état in Cyprus was a military coup d'état by the Greek Army in Cyprus, the Cypriot National Guard and the Greek military junta of 1967–1974.
While the Greek policy shifted to a more cooperative one after 1967, when an extremist military junta took power in Greece, it supported the far-right EOKA-B group against Makarios.
Dimitrios Ioannidis, the de facto leader of the junta, believed that Makarios was no longer a true supporter of enosis, and suspected him of being a communist sympathizer.
The coup was ordered by Dimitrios Ioannidis, the shadow leader of the Greek junta, and Greek officers led the Cypriot National Guard to capture the Presidential Palace in Nicosia.