0 to make someone return for trial to another country or state where they have been accused of doing something illegal:
He will be extradited to Arizona from Florida.
The concept cannot be expressed with semantic accuracy by word pairs like 'expel-expulsion', 'exile-exile' or 'extradite-extradition'.
It puts an end to fugitives from justice, an end to the complications of the political process to extradite criminal suspects.
Why should not a person be tried for the offence and, if found guilty, extradited if necessary?
He does not necessarily have asylum here, but he is safe from being extradited.
There are problems of proof, of obtaining evidence from victims, of getting witnesses into this country and of extraditing alleged offenders from some other countries.
It does not seem likely that, under international law, the pilots can be extradited.
His host country may not be one to which he can be extradited.
No one will be extradited for conduct in this country that is not illegal in this country.