But the group, with its blend of Marxism and Islam, fell foul of the new authorities.
In practice this never happened, particularly as Germany and France both fell foul of the rule.
Both Bartok and Shostakovich fell foul of the authorities in a favourite playground for censors sex.
But the model fell foul of two closely linked disruptions and one implacable trend.
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Gil repeatedly fell foul of football's governing bodies for his verbal attacks on players, coaches and referees.
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The name 4Real fell foul of authorities in New Zealand, because names cannot start with a number.
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Sittingbourne's match at Dulwich on Friday night also fell foul of the weather.
Giggs was the first superstar of the Premier League era but he never fell foul of the trappings of celebrity.
Meanwhile, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the present government's highly-regarded finance minister until he fell foul of corruption allegations, was back in the news.
His dreams of the green jersey in the Tour, however, fell foul.
In other countries subsidies helped to kick-start demand, but Britain's system of conversion grants was badly run, and eventually fell foul of European state-aid rules.
In 2010, Google fell foul of governments, privacy watchdogs and users when it emerged that Street View cars copied e-mails and passwords from private wi-fi networks.
And seven-time champion Michael Schumacher fell foul of a rule that ensures drivers in the final session must complete every lap within 110% of pole position.
A, a department store, fell foul of a court for offering 20% price reductions in the first few days after the introduction of euro notes and coins.
Not so, said Mr Sharif afraid, or so his critics argued, that if ever he fell foul of the court these new members could tip the balance against him.
The troubles of Nike, a firm making sports goods that fell foul of the activists in 1997, speeded up this transformation, as other multinationals scrambled to avoid similar boycotts.
He was part of that so-called fifth generation of film makers who first opened the world's eyes to modern Chinese cinema but who fell foul of official opinion inside China.
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Australian stocks also fell foul of disheartening domestic news.
David Cameron is expected to visit Burma this week and will be the first western leader to visit the country since it first fell foul of international sanctions in the late nineties.
The Russians have been more co-operative over recent months - for example, cancelling the sale to Iran of an anti-missile system that fell foul of UN sanctions which the Russians themselves supported.
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The film fell foul of censors in Germany, the UK and the US - where it was seized by customs officials ahead of a planned screening at the New York Film Festival.
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One group of enterprising German fans who decided they should not have to wait made an attempt to bring their hero to the masses in the summer but fell foul of the law.
For the conservative side, Justice Antonon Scalia said that he thought the Michigan system amounted to a quota, and questioned whether it furthered racial harmony if it upset many people who fell foul of its provisions.
The Magners League may be sponsored by a Tipperary cider company, but as the fixture has been scheduled for Good Friday, it fell foul of laws preventing the opening of bars on the Christian holy day.
Woods, arguably still golf's biggest star despite his fall from grace in the past two years, fell foul of the sport's disfavor for phlegm in February 2011 during a frustrating final day at the Dubai Desert Classic.
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Those who fell foul of him included politicians (Jonathan Aitken, Jeffrey Archer, Reginald Maudling), union leaders (Clive Jenkins), architects (John Poulson), journalists (notably his boss at the Mirror, David Montgomery), businessmen (the list is long), as well as disc jockeys, civil servants and countless others.
He fell foul of the law again in 2011, after attaching a laptop computer inside the MIT network (easily achieved as, although not a member of MIT, he was, at 24, already a grand old man of computing) and downloading around 4 million journal articles from JSTOR, the access-protected academic document storage system.
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The EHRC wrote to Mr Griffin on June 23rd that it believed the BNP fell foul of the law in its race-based membership policy, its hiring (which appears to be restricted to party members) and what the EHRC interpreted as hints that the party would not provide an equal service to constituents of all races.
Perhaps even more so because I have been listening to the dialogue about how to make America more post-racial -- mostly as it pertains to black and white culture -- for so long that it never occurred to me that an Asian immigrant family might cry foul when their son fell in love with an all-American girl like me.
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