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Convention and ordered
As Dumouriez ordered the Colonel back to the camp, some of his soldiers cried out against the General, now declared a traitor by the National Convention.
With only few troops left, the player is ordered to build a small base and destroy the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre after it falls under the control of GLA and to eliminate further terrorist threats.
The fateful list drawn up by Commandant-General of the Parisian National Guard, François Hanriot, ( with help from Marat ), and endorsed by a decree of the intimidated Convention, included 22 Girondist deputies and 10 of the 12 members of the Commission of Twelve, who were ordered to be detained at their lodgings " under the safeguard of the people ".
Lord Edward FitzGerald, fresh from the gallery of the Convention in Paris, returned to his seat in the Irish Parliament and immediately sprang to their defence but within a week of his return he was ordered into custody and required to apologise at the bar of the House of Commons for violently denouncing in the House a Government proclamation, which Grattan had approved.
However, the National Convention was not satisfied with his progress and Choderlos de Laclos was ordered to support or replace him.
The Convention defines the human rights that the states parties are required to respect and guarantee, and it also ordered the establishment of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights.
When news that Brunswick had captured Verdun reached the Convention, they ordered the tocsin rung and alarm guns fired, which, without a doubt, added to the sense of panic.
After the execution of Bourbon King Louis XVI ( 21 January 1793 ), the chief French diplomatic agent, François Bernard Chauvelin, was ordered to leave Britain, while the National Convention declared war ( 1 February 1793 – see French Revolutionary Wars: Campaigns of 1793 ).
In October 1980, following the bombing of the Philippine International Convention Center, Marcos again ordered Salonga's arrest ; this time he was detained at Fort Bonifacio without any formal charges and investigation.
* At this year's Convention, Irish Republican Army members are ordered to join Sinn Féin.
On June 2 he was ordered by the Convention to hold himself under arrest with other members of his party.
At the 1949 IRA Convention, the IRA ordered its members to join Sinn Féin, which would become the " civilian wing " of the IRA.
On June 29, 2006, the Supreme Court ruled in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld that the military commissions ordered for Hamdan and other detainees violated the UCMJ and the Geneva Convention.
According to official documents read to the National Convention in Paris on 12 October 1794 ( 21 Vendémiaire, Year III ), these drownings were ordered by Adjutant General Lefèbvre resulting in 41 deaths: one 78 year-old blind man and another man, 12 women, 12 girls, and 15 children, including 10 who were only 6 to 10 years old and 5 infants.
After September 8, 1943, the German invasion army was ordered by the highest authorities not to obey the Geneva Convention nor normal rules of war, and to show no mercy towards the civilian population.

Convention and arrest
With the backing of the National Guard, they managed to persuade the Convention to arrest 31 Girondin leaders, including Jacques Pierre Brissot.
With the backing of the National Guard, they persuaded the Convention to arrest 29 Girondist leaders, including Jacques Pierre Brissot.
He returned to Sompuis, and was saved from arrest possibly by the protection of Georges Danton and in some degree by the impression made by his mother's courageous piety on the local commissary of the Convention.
The Convention was further radicalized by the call for the removal and arrest of Brissot and the entire Girondin party made by the Sans-culottes in the Parisian National Guard, which had surrounded the Convention, armed with cannons.
Although he was briefly kept as the new government's prosecutor, even helping in the arrest of Robespierre, Louis de Saint-Just, and Georges Couthon, and being confirmed by Bertrand Barère de Vieuzac and the Convention on 28 July, he was arrested after being denounced by Louis-Marie Stanislas Fréron.
After the arrest of the Girondin deputies in October 1793, the Convention sought to “ recast the Republic in a more radical mold ”, eventually using the symbol of Hercules to represent the Republic.
When the succeeding National Convention met in 1792, the seating arrangement continued, but following the coup d ' état of June 2, 1793, and the arrest of the Girondins, the right side of the assembly was deserted, and any remaining members who had sat there moved to the centre.
The Maryland Convention had been pressed by the Continental Congress ( and the Virginians in particular ) to arrest and detain Eden but they demurred, preferring to avoid such an " extreme " measure.
An Auckland District Court judge issued a warrant for his arrest for alleged war crimes arising from his role in the 2002 assassination of Hamas leader Salah Shahade in Gaza City, in which at least 14 Palestinian civilians were killed, saying that New Zealand had an obligation to uphold the Geneva Convention.
In a panic of self-preservation, the Convention called for the arrest of Robespierre and his affiliates, including Couthon, Saint-Just and Robespierre's own brother, Augustin Robespierre.
The sans-culottes – deemed " the people " by many radicals, and represented by the Paris Commune – had grown antipathetic to the moderate Girondins and on 2 June 1793, in a mass action supported by National Guardsmen, they surrounded the Convention and exacted the arrest of the Girondin deputies.
On 2 June 1793 he offered his resignation as representative of the people, but was not comprised in the decree by which the Convention determined upon the arrest of twenty-nine Girondists.
On 3 October, however, his arrest was decreed along with that of several other Girondist deputies who had left the Convention and were fomenting civil war in the departments.
On the following morning, 31 May 1793, he was chosen by the Paris Commune to lead the Parisian National Guard to the National Convention and demand the dissolution of the Committee of the Twelve and the arrest of select Girondists.
The Commune, however, was skeptical of the safety of the Convention, worried about any moderate supporters who may deter them from making the arrest.
The Republic of China protested the storming of the ship and the arrest of the officers, and contested the attempt by Canadian authorities to extradite them to Romania, citing Article 92 of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.
According to the liner notes of the CD, this performance was Ochs ' first since his arrest at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, but this is incorrect.
On May 31, a large crowd of sans-culotte agitators surrounded the National Convention in an attempt to force its accession to their demands: the dissolution of the Commission of Twelve, the arrest of a list of Girondin deputies, a tax on the rich, and the restriction of suffrage to sans-culottes.

Convention and Robespierre
When the new National Convention held its first meeting, David was sitting with his friends Jean-Paul Marat and Robespierre.
Then plotters seized Robespierre at the National Convention and he was later guillotined, in effect ending the Reign of Terror.
On 7 June Robespierre, who had previously condemned the Cult of Reason, advocated a new state religion and recommended the Convention acknowledge the existence of the " Supreme Being ".
Due to the emergency of war the National Convention created the Committee of Public Safety, controlled by Maximilien Robespierre of the Jacobin Club, to act as the country's executive.
The French National Convention, the first elected Assembly of the First Republic ( 1792 – 1804 ), on the 4th of February 1794, under the leadership of Maximilien Robespierre, abolished slavery by law in France and all its colonies.
* 1794 – French Revolution: Robespierre introduces the Cult of the Supreme Being in the National Convention as the new state religion of the French First Republic.
On 7 June Robespierre, who favoured deism over Hébert's atheism and had previously condemned the Cult of Reason, recommended that the Convention acknowledge the existence of God.
Eventually, the National Convention had enough of the Terror, partially fearing for their own lives, and turned against Maximilien Robespierre.
Finally, on 6 April 1793, the Convention created the Committee of Public Safety ( later headed by Maximilien Robespierre ), and was given a monumental task: “ To deal with the radical movements of the Enragés, food shortages and riots, the revolt in the Vendée and in Brittany, recent defeats of its armies, and the desertion of its commanding general .” Most notably, the Committee of Public Safety instated a policy of terror, and the guillotine began to fall on perceived enemies of the republic at an ever-increasing rate, beginning the period known today as the Reign of Terror.
Many in the National Convention were calling for a return to normalization, but Robespierre disagreed.
The National Convention asked Robespierre to identify others who were terrorists.
The overthrow of Robespierre signalled the reassertion of the French National Convention over the Committee of Public Safety.
Saint-Just and his fellow Committee of Public Safety member Barère attempted to keep the peace between the Committees of Public Safety and General Security ; however, on July 26, Robespierre delivered a speech to the National Convention in which he emphasized the need to " purify " the Committees and " crush all factions.
A period of intense civil unrest ensued, during which the members of the Committees of Public Safety and General Security were forced to seek refuge in the Convention ; the Robespierre brothers, Saint-Just, Le Bas, and Couthon ensconced themselves in the Hôtel de Ville, attempting to incite an insurrection.
After the fall of the monarchy Robespierre became a central figure in the Jacobin Club, and his faction in the National Convention, assembled in the fall of 1792, became known as Jacobins.
* May 7: National Convention, led by Robespierre, passes decree to establish the Cult of the Supreme Being.
The survivors of the party made an effort to re-enter the Convention after the fall of Robespierre on 27 July 1794, but it was not until 5 March 1795 that they were formally reinstated.
The antagonism caused by such an attitude had reached a significant point when on 10 April Robespierre himself laid his accusation before the Convention.
On the 9th Thermidor, however, he took sides against Robespierre, and on 12 September 1794 he was named by the Convention as a member of the executive committee of public instruction.
Prominent members of the original Convention included < span lang =" fr "> Maximilien Robespierre </ span > of the Jacobin Club, < span lang =" fr "> Jean-Paul Marat </ span > ( affiliated with the Jacobins, though never a formal member ), and < span lang =" fr "> Georges Danton </ span > of the < span lang =" fr "> Cordeliers </ span >.
It was not long before Robespierre and the Jacobins turned on the far-left factions of the National Convention as well as their radical sans-culottes supporters.
Elected, like Maximilien Robespierre, Georges Danton, and Collot d ' Herbois, a deputy of Paris to the National Convention, he spoke in favour of the immediate abolition of the Bourbon monarchy, and the next day demanded that all acts be dated from the Year I of the French Republic ( a measure adopted a little over a year later in the form of the French Revolutionary Calendar ).
Béranger was president of the club, made speeches before such members of the National Convention as passed through Péronne, and composed addresses to Jean Lambert Tallien and Robespierre.
It was triggered by a vote of the National Convention to execute Maximilien Robespierre, Louis Antoine de Saint-Just and several other leading members of the Terror.

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