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As part of the official "Roadmap for the End of Transition", a political process devised by former Prime Minister Abdiweli Mohamed Ali Gaas which provides clear benchmarks leading toward the establishment of permanent democratic institutions in Somalia by late August 2012, [3] members of Somalia's then ruling Transitional Federal Government (TFG) and other administrative officials met in the ...
North Vella La Vella: Clezy Rore [Wikidata] United Democratic Party 2,232 54.5% North West Choiseul: Harry Kuma Independent 2,948 51.3% North West Guadalcanal: Bodo Dettke: Solomon Islands Democratic Party 3,021 52.5% Ranongga/Simbo: Charles Sigoto: Solomon Islands Democratic Party 2,592 57.5% Rennell/Bellona: Tautai Agikimu'a Kaitu'u ...
The National Assembly of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam (N.A.; Vietnamese: Quốc hội nước Cộng hoà xã hội chủ nghĩa Việt Nam) [a] is the unicameral parliament and the highest body of state power of Vietnam.
Gordon Darcy Lilo (born 28 August 1965) is a Solomon Islander politician who served as the prime minister of Solomon Islands from 16 November 2011 to 9 December 2014. He was a member of the National Parliament of the Solomon Islands, representing the Gizo/Kolombangara constituency spanning Gizo and the island of Kolombangara in Western Province.
As the land where the old parliament building sits was already returned to the Crown Property Bureau, Parliament met in an auditorium rented from telecom firm TOT at a cost of 11 million baht per month from May 2019. [11] Since August 2019, Parliament now meets in Sappaya-Sapasathan, although parts of the building remained unfinished. [12]
The National Assembly was established in its current form by the Lao Constitution of 1991, [3] replacing the Supreme People's Assembly (the latter also formerly known as the Supreme People's Council).
This is a list of the 149 (or, in practice, zero) members of the 50th Parliament of Haiti. The Chamber of Deputies is currently defunct: As of 28 October 2021, the terms of the representatives elected in the 2015–16 election expired.
During the Konbaung dynasty, the hluttaw was the centre of government and the kingdom's national administrative body, divided into three branches, namely fiscal, executive, and judicial (the word hluttaw was originally refers to the cabinet but since the colonial times, hluttaw has been used to describe a parliament or legislative body.)