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  1. The politics of Belarus takes place in a framework of a presidential republic with a bicameral parliament. The President of Belarus is the head of state. Executive power is nominally exercised by the government, at its top sits a ceremonial prime minister, appointed directly by the President. Legislative power is de jure vested in the bicameral ...

  2. Ministry of Labour and Social Protection of the Population Azerbaijan cooperates with more than twenty various countries such as Russia, Turkey, Germany, Sweden, Austria, Netherlands, Bulgaria, Latvia, Belarus, and Kazakhstan. According to the statistics, there are signed more than forty agreements, memorandums and protocols between the ...

  3. At different times between 1938 and 1960, the following oblasts existed: Babruysk Oblast, created 1944, eliminated 1954. Baranavichy Oblast, created 1939, eliminated 1954. Belastok Oblast, created 1939, eliminated 1944 (now Białystok in Poland) Brest Region, created 1939. Gomel Oblast, created 1938.

  4. t. e. The Polish population transfers in 1944–1946 from the eastern half of prewar Poland (also known as the expulsions of Poles from the Kresy macroregion ), [1] were the forced migrations of Poles toward the end and in the aftermath of World War II. These were the result of a Soviet Union policy that had been ratified by the main Allies of ...

  5. The state flag of Belarus ( Belarusian: Сцяг Беларусі, romanized : Sciah Biełarusi) is a red-green bicolour with a red-on-white ornament pattern placed at the hoist (staff) end. The current design was introduced in 2012 by the State Committee for Standardisation of the Republic of Belarus, and is adapted from a design approved in a ...

  6. The official languages of Belarus are Belarusian and Russian . The pre-Slavic language of the area, as well as its geographic name was Sudovian and Sudavia, a Baltic language. Sudovian is believed to have gone extinct around the 17th century. At present, Belarusian and Russian are considered the sole native languages of Belarus, as seen below.

  7. News of Belarus' upcoming permanent division angered the population, and using the town's Polish occupation, the local population began self-organising into a militia and associating itself with the Belarusian Democratic Republic. On 24 November the Polish units left the town, and for nearly a month the Slutsk partisans resisted Soviet attempts ...

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