0 present participle of deport --
1 to force someone to leave a country, especially someone who has no legal right to be there or who has broken the law: --
Is there any express precedent for the deporting of a man to his own country, as is the case here?
They used to admit people belonging to other nationalities, but now they are deporting the greater number of their aliens.
The appellate authorities have rights to decide and hear appeals on the ground that compassionate circumstances might outweigh the public interest in deporting an overstayer.
Is it not true that simply locking such people up indefinitely cannot be a substitute for deporting them from our country?
Are we really deporting men for intentions rather than for acts?
What we are deporting them for—if "deporting" is the word—is desertion.
The police officers, in the presence of an immigration officer, went into her house for the purpose of arresting and deporting her.
Have we really got to the stage of deporting 63-year-old widows?