The best answer is "was not part of the Eastern Bloc", 
although this answer is misleading. 
Yugoslavia was indeed part of the Eastern Bloc in the sense that it was an Eastern European communist country, but it was the only one that did not align itself with the USSR after 1948. It also did no ally with the United States, choosing non-alignment instead. 
This answer is the best answer simply because it is less false than the other answers, which are completely wrong. Yugoslavia never joined the USSR, choosing to split from Stalin in 1948, and never became a satellite nation of the US, and isn't located anywhere near the Baltic. 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Britain<span> governed this area under a League of Nations mandate from 1920 to 1948.</span>
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer:
When the number of immigrants greatly outnumbers the indigenous population, nativist movements seek to halt cultural change. As a result of the influx of newcomers, native-born workers lose out on positions that would have been filled by immigrants, and wages fall as a result.
<em>I hope this helps you</em>
<em>:)</em>
 
        
             
        
        
        
South African nationality<span> has been influenced primarily by the racial dynamics that have structured </span>South African<span> society throughout its development. The country's colonial history led to the immigration (or importation) of different racial and ethnic groups into one shared area. Power dispersion and inter-group relations led to European dominance of the state, allowing it to directly shape </span>nationality<span> although not without internal division or influence from the less empowered races.</span>
        
                    
             
        
        
        
Answer:
The Yaa Asantewaa war began on March 28, 1900, and ended in September 1900
Explanation:
Over 2,000 Ashanti and 1,000 British and Allied forces were killed in the fierce fighting. Both figures were larger than the total number of dead in all preceding Anglo-Ashanti wars put together. However, the conflict only lasted six months.