And the media, like the nation, will find it hard to fill the gap.
Without such evidence--without accountability and, perhaps, forgiveness--the territory will find it hard to move forward.
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Russia would like to correct this imbalance, but will find it hard to do so.
With an election due in October, it will find it hard to raise taxes, or cut spending.
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Even so, the new president will find it hard to impose her will on her party and coalition.
But Ji believes that foreign competitors will find it hard to compete with Hanting on its home turf.
He also suspects Nokia will find it hard to compete with Apple and other digital music player makers.
When times improve, small and medium-scale manufacturers will find it hard to restart without access to Chinese money.
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But even he will find it hard to straddle the entire political spectrum.
For starters, a band with just an album or two will find it hard to put on a decent show.
With high unemployment concentrating labour's minds on the here and now, he will find it hard to get a hearing.
Dedicated investment banks such as Goldman Sachs will find it hard to decide whether to remain independent, says Mr Gach.
Local oil firms will find it hard to compete, because, on current evidence, they are not especially good at cost-cutting.
Given the new king's lesser experience and stature, he will find it hard to rule in such a hands-on manner.
Many fans will find it hard to believe this could be happening.
Law and Justice will find it hard to keep those spending promises.
Mr Blackwood said the legislation would marginalise those on low incomes who will find it hard to get accommodation in the private rental sector.
If Bush establishes a considerable lead, Gore will find it hard not to continue his repeated attacks on the Republicans and their presidential nominee.
He will find it hard to stop sellers from rigging auctions, if only because no two lots of dodgy securities are exactly the same.
Disgruntled investors will find it hard to prove that the new system has broken these contracts, says Lianne Craig of Hausfeld, a law firm.
But Mr Davis will find it hard to emulate Tony Blair's policy of robbing the right of its ideas and the left of its influence.
But Gatwick and Stansted are going on the market at a time when prospective buyers will find it hard to get cash from credit-crunched markets.
If so, Mr Putin will find it hard to honour the generous promises he made in his campaign, when he seemed to embody government largesse.
Without running a bigger surplus, Argentina will find it hard to meet even the payments on its non-defaulted local debt, much less renew payments on the rest.
With employment and technological trends likely to draw a growing number of competitors into the online marketplace, the largest, least-nimble firms will find it hard to keep pace.
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Despite signs that global steel prices may be picking up, many steelmakers will find it hard to pay back the loans they took out to finance their expansion.
In other words, short of the federal government undertaking major reform of America's creaking health-care system, the Big Three will find it hard to compete with the transplant factories.
And, given that in recent years most big countries have seen a large monetary expansion, central banks will find it hard to work out quite how accommodative they should be.
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