Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Talks ended with an unconditional cease-fire being declared by spokesmen for the militant National Front for the Liberation of Corsica (FLNC).
1999, Jan. 1 2001
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The FLNC did not wish to damage the copper installations.
Strategic Management in Developing Countries Case Studies James E. Austin 2000
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Claiming responsibility for the rebellion was the Congo National Liberation Front FLNC, a revolutionary movement formed in 1975, “working closely with the masses to replace the Mobutu regime with a new social order.”
Strategic Management in Developing Countries Case Studies James E. Austin 2000
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Claiming responsibility for the rebellion was the Congo National Liberation Front FLNC, a revolutionary movement formed in 1975, “working closely with the masses to replace the Mobutu regime with a new social order.”
Strategic Management in Developing Countries Case Studies James E. Austin 2000
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The FLNC did not wish to damage the copper installations.
Strategic Management in Developing Countries Case Studies James E. Austin 2000
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Many former FLNC members have returned to the DRC, and some including Mbumba are in Kabila's camp.
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The following year the FLNC struck again in Katanga, targetting the city of Kolwezi, and France sent troops to protect Europeans in the region.
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In 1977, the FLNC launched a military operation in southeastern
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Ilunga-Sapukabuma was a deputy of Nathanael Mbumba during the 1970s when Mbumba led the National Liberation Front of the Congo (FLNC), which was backed by Angola and Cuba.
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Most of the attacks were committed by separatist groups such as the ETA in Spain and the Corsican National Liberation Front (FLNC) in France.
The Times of India 2010
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