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was repatriation
noun
The process of returning of a person to their country of origin or citizenship.
Exact(1)
Guy Lebas, an analyst at Janney Montgomery Scott in Philadelphia, said there was repatriation risk to global markets — Japanese companies and individuals moving money from the United States and elsewhere back to Japan for reconstruction or to have easier access to their savings.
Similar(58)
"Our big business is repatriation now," he says.
The participating centres were Repatriation General Hospital (Daw Park, South Australia), Flinders Medical Centre (Bedford Park, South Australia), Academic Medical Centre (Amsterdam, The Netherlands) and Flevo Hospital (Almere, The Netherlands).
Sometimes we can be repatriating a person home from abroad and sometimes the repatriation is from the UK.
Contested as it was, this repatriation has so far unfolded according to that commitment.
He said Morocco was negotiating repatriation agreements with several other sub-Saharan countries.
Their objective was the "repatriation of powers" – a menacing phrase that meant little to voters.
Even zero migration would not prevent national "suicide" unless there was mass repatriation too.
The overall perception was that repatriation of expatriates might present a major challenge to TB care and control in Oman.
A Neutral Nations Commission for Repatriation was entrusted with the repatriation of prisoners, 21,809 of whom among them 7,582 Korean and 14,227 Chinese chose to stay in South Korea or go to Taiwan.
She is a repatriation specialist.
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