0 present participle of repatriate
1 to send or bring someone, or sometimes money or other property, back to the country that he, she, or it came from:
The government repatriated him because he had no visa.
In this he challenges the conventional wisdom that refugees are dislocated people who can be made whole only by repatriating them home.
Fiddling around in the meantime with repatriating hundreds of thousands is avoiding the main issue.
So far, no common policy on repatriating asylum-seekers has been formulated in the framework of asylum and immigration policy.
I am as an alternative arrangement to this examining the possibility, subject to local laws and conditions, of repatriating these bodies at a later date.
The possibility of repatriating the detainees remains under discussion.
I sympathise with what he said, but if we started breaking up the great museums by repatriating items, it would be a very serious mistake.
They are looking to find ways of repatriating capital so that capital stays in this country.
What are you to do in the way of repatriating those who are within our gates, a great many of whom at present are interned?