Answer:
In 1991, he was elected to the House of Representatives and served as the Minister of Home Affairs in the cabinet led by Girija Prasad Koirala. This cabinet was dissolved, and Deuba rose to become prime minister after Manmohan Adhikari tried to dissolve the parliament again in 1995. During his first term, he signed the Treaty of Mahakali with the Government of India. Deuba's second premiership started in July 2001 following the resignation of Girija Prasad Koirala shortly after the Nepalese royal massacre. His second term saw the rise of Maoists and later he declared a state of emergency, and listed the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) as a "terrorist organisation". In October 2002, King Gyanendra dismissed him and his cabinet for being incompetent. The same year, he founded the breakaway party, Nepali Congress (Democratic), after being sacked by the Nepali Congress. He was later appointed as prime minister by King Gyanendra on 4 June 2004, however, he was arrested under corruption charges following the 2005 coup d'état, and he was released on 13 February 2006.
In August 2016, Deuba and Pushpa Kamal Dahal agreed to form a rotational government led by the CPN (Maoist Centre) and the Nepali Congress for nine months each. He was sworn in as prime minister for a fourth stint on 7 June 2017. In October 2017, all ministers from the CPN (Maoist Centre) left the cabinet after they formed an electoral alliance with the CPN (UML) in preparation for the general election and rescinded support to the Deuba government. On 12 July 2021, the Supreme Court ordered the appointment of Deuba as prime minister within 28 hours, the next day, he was appointed by President Bhandari as the prime minister in accordance with Article 76(5) of the Constitution of Nepal.
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The states in the North did not need slaves, rarely anyone from the North had slaves later on because of how the North felt about them. But back to the topic at hand, slaves in the North weren’t used for farming or on plantations like in the south, because the North didn’t have these things, they had slaves as servants. Mainly rich households only had slaves, as a sign of power, they had slaves to help with chores and tasks for the owners of the slaves. Furthermore, Northerners did not treat their slaves like they were dirt like Southerners did, Northerners treated their slaves as if they couldn’t live without them. That is how the North and the South are different when it comes to slaves.
One advantage of the interview method of personality assessment is the "<span>ability to pose open-ended questions".
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In an interview the person under appraisal must be given impressive scope in "recounting his story." Interviews have both verbal and nonverbal (e.g., gestural) segments. The point of the meeting is to accumulate data, and the sufficiency of the information assembled depends in extensive part on the inquiries asked by the questioner.
Answer:
Explanation:
Mostly mining products. North Korea is a source for some rare earths and its industrial base doesn't need them at this time so they are exports (mainly happily received by China).
Iron is more common and there is enough there that it can be an export. Zinc is pretty common too. Zinc can go hand in hand with iron ore. North Korea exports 6 billion tons of Magnesite which is a huge amount. Tungsten is also on its list of exports.
Generally speaking North Korea has minerals and some agricultural products and South Korea does the manufacturing.
people say A but idk cause i think i got that wrong on the test but keep researching