Roman built public baths in the Balkan countries.
Answer : Option C
<u>Explanation:</u>
Balkan countries are Slovenia, Serbia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, Turkey, Albania, Romania, Greece, Kosovo, Bulgaria, and Macedonia. The Balkan Countries were governed by Rome directly.
Scorda was declared the capital of the Balkan Country. Perseus was defeated by Roman by taking advantage of the persistent Greek civil war. Perseus was the last king of Macedonia. Different Roman strategy was employed compared to other major conquerors of the Balkans.
Romans first came in the west and made public baths which gained them welcome, with attacks launched later from the southeast as well. By the century of first, the entire Balkan peninsula stayed under the control of Roman.
The executive branch and ministers loss,The legislation branch writes the laws, and the judicial branch intercepts the laws
Answer:
It can be corrupt
It is often ineffective
Explanation:
The biggest criticism towards the United Nations goes for:
- It can be corrupt; there's accusations towards the United Nations very often that it is corrupt, and that it serves mostly in the interest of the United States and the western world in general, and objectively speaking it does look that way more often than not.
- It is often ineffective; there's countless examples of the inefficiency of the United Nations, and lots of those kind of seem like the United Nations don't want to solve. Simple example is the name issue between the Republic of Macedonia and Greece. Even though in the law of the United Nations stands that every country has the right to choose its own name and no one can forbid it, and even though the Republic of Macedonia won in the International court over the issue, Greece is blocking its northern neighbor to get into the organizations like NATO and the EU because they are not allowing the term Macedonia to be included in the name of the country. The United Nations did literally nothing to force Greece to respect the law of the organization which they are obliged to do.