Contractors bidding for work must certify that no work will be performed out of the country. |
|
The taxpayer is exempt from late-payment penalties or fines for having sheltered income by moving cash out of the country. |
|
My parents had to hide me for 3 years before they snuck me out of the country. |
|
He was out of the country, vacationing in Mexico, but he arranged for a public relations firm to fax a prepared statement to the media. |
|
He's seldom been out of the country before on an official trip, a serious resume flaw. |
|
Only problem was, the tours were all filled by 10 am of the first sign-up day, when I was out of the country. |
|
After Obeidi got out of Army slammer, the CIA started hedging on its promises to get him out of the country. |
|
They went into internal exile, while other less-prominent gay Cuban writers managed to get out of the country or committed suicide. |
|
Within days of the earthquake she had been flown out of the country and was back home with her parents. |
|
They should conduct demonstrative asylums in and out of the country and propagate the value and effectiveness of the systems among the people. |
|
Many of us who were forced out of the country are now scattered all over the world as impoverished and financially destitute refugees. |
|
At the behest of their US puppet-masters, the newly elected Iraqi government had Al Jazeera temporarily thrown out of the country. |
|
A painting by a popular Victorian artist from Yorkshire could be heading out of the country after its sale at a London auction. |
|
Many have already prepared their route of retreat by sending their children overseas and redirecting their wealth out of the country. |
|
Those from Switzerland were kicked out of the country for their beliefs and were relocated to Prussia, which is now part of Germany. |
|
His dad couldn't get any money out of the country and the business went under. |
|
In 2002, her mother was charged with abduction and a court order banned her from taking the youngster out of the country. |
|
Having forced the main opposition activists out of the country, he has developed a personality cult unrivalled in Central Asia. |
|
Blackman is smuggled out of the country, given a new identity, and tucked away in a small town in Italy. |
|
His father paid people traffickers to smuggle his son out of the country to try to start a new life in Britain. |
|
|
At the check-in desk at Stansted Airport, I was asked whether I was carrying any meat or dairy products out of the country. |
|
After the cars are stolen they are passed on to another criminal, who exports them out of the country to other right-hand-drive jurisdictions. |
|
An exception is a bizarre incident in May when a Latvian TV crew was detained in the region and kicked out of the country with no explanation. |
|
Medecins Sans Frontieres have shown no intention to review their decision to pull out of the country in July for their workers' safety. |
|
Once their parents' divorce was final Pierre was thrown out of the country. |
|
For several years I myself have fumed at the illogical regulation which sends farangs out of the country to obtain re-entry visas. |
|
It is the one portfolio that means a Minister is out of the country all the time. |
|
Local shipping lines currently account for only 5.4 percent of the shipment of goods into and out of the country. |
|
This time, however, there was no fanfare as he slipped out of the country unnoticed. |
|
Both films' directors were out of the country when the studios involved cut the films sharply. |
|
This gent wants me to supply the funds up front to allow him to skidaddle out of the country. |
|
He got the backing of a church and they sneaked him out of the country, disguised as a priest. |
|
One or two of them have tickled the peter and skedaddled out of the country. |
|
If the Federal government had any hopes of spiriting the Iranian detainees quietly out of the country, those hopes are now dashed. |
|
The second reason was that Sali held a civil aviation certificate which enabled him to pilot any aircraft out of the country. |
|
Fearing a default will weaken banks, consumers have been spiriting money out of the country. |
|
It's a shrine to his daughter, who's been taken out of the country by his ex-wife. The house is packed with his daughter's absence. |
|
That's going to cost big time, and in some notable cases the better players are going to be tempted out of the country. |
|
The Prime Minister spirited his Quebec bagman out of the country before the RCMP could get to him. |
|
I understand though that there was a certain amount of furtiveness or subterfuge involved in getting this Aboriginal cricket team out of the country to set sail for England. |
|
|
In order to get the embattled president out of the country quickly, Nigeria gave him sanctuary. |
|
The pork industry, tonnage-wise, sends a lot more pork out of the country than the beef industry. |
|
At first, those who could find passage out of the country were eligible for release. |
|
British officials have refused to grant him safe passage out of the country. |
|
All we have heard with NAFTA is a big sucking sound of the wealth of the majority of Canadians being drained out of the country. |
|
Outside of Caracas, however, it is an open secret that Venezuela's diamonds are still being smuggled out of the country daily. |
|
Assets were stripped and massive sums spirited out of the country. |
|
Her husband desperately wanted his wife to get out of the country which was being terrorized by Khmer Rouge guerrillas. |
|
Former Communist Party apparatchiks wound up in control of most state assets while billions haemorrhaged out of the country into numbered Swiss bank accounts. |
|
The people who run these schemes, particularly Ponzi schemes, get money out of the country. |
|
He alleged the judge refused to let him take his daughter out of the country, assuming he would abduct her. |
|
Each card provider will have their own procedures to follow if your card is lost or stolen in Canada or while away out of the country. |
|
Somalis' gift of the gab, and the difficulty of getting in and out of the country, put a premium on extended telephone calls. |
|
Her agency had to take her out of the country that very evening after it was made clear that the servant had sworn to kill her. |
|
They remain when the ICRC pulls out of the country, and continue to look for missing relatives. |
|
Because of this, the peacekeeping forces have been blocking Muslims from leaving on envoys out of the country. |
|
Eight of the students had to be evacuated out of the country when they contracted diseases such as dengue fever and malaria. |
|
The king left him as sub regulus whenever he was out of the country. |
|
In January, the family was granted safe conduct out of the country, while I had to stay until May, because the government refused to allow me to leave. |
|
It is not technically illegal to take money out of the country. |
|
|
If they break the law they will be booted out of the country. |
|
The panel took a battering with players out of the country during the league campaign but, so far, everyone has shown strongly in the bid to land a third IFC in ten years. |
|
The rampant illegal mining and smuggling of minerals out of the country was due to lack of relevant education and sensitisation to the local entrepreneurs. |
|
Then they attempted a repeat of the 1970s hostage-style device, blindfolding foreigners in a ploy designed to intimidate troops out of the country. |
|
Money flooded out of the country and the value of the currency sank. |
|
Electors can appoint a proxy if they are unable to vote themselves, if they are out of the country on holiday or on business or in the armed forces. |
|
His family managed to obtain his release, but he was immediately shipped out of the country by the government, on a non-renewable passport with a one-year expiration date. |
|
First, Mr Frum says an undocumented immigrant not covered by the provisions of the law could apply anyway using forged documents, which, even if detected, could impede the process of running the scofflaw out of the country. |
|
This monumental work that once seemed placed out of the country today with the territorial expansion and building development that has suffered the whole territory is situated at the entrance of the village. |
|
Most countries have some form of border control to regulate or limit the movement of people, animals, and goods into and out of the country. |
|
With measures egging on to export, to take goods out of the country. |
|
With the onset of the Industrial Revolution, people began to move out of the country and into towns and cities to find work. |
|
In June 2001 John sold 20 of his cars at Christie's, saying he didn't get the chance to drive them because he was out of the country so often. |
|
At the same time, he shared in the drafting of a proclamation giving Anabaptists and Sacramentaries ten days to get out of the country. |
|
The photog, wisely, just wants to get out of the country, preferably to a place where there's snow. |
|
The Cayman Islands Immigration Department requires foreigners to remain out of the country until their work permit has been approved. |
|
No longer can any government completely control the flow of news inside the country, out of the country or into the country and we have seen that many times. |
|
However, Khannouchi is out of the country. |
|
But Jennings, of Ingrave Road, Walton, was out of the country at the time and escaped arrest. |
|
Capitalists in Venezuela are taking their money out of the country and in some cases they are hoarding their products, causing high inflation rates and shortages of food in the market. |
|
|
At the special office he has set up to enforce mining and customs regulations, employees show off a huge block of malachite that one Zhang Cao had tried to smuggle out of the country. |
|
There are thousands of people whom we should legitimately be getting out of the country because they have broken laws and have serious criminality issues, and not being citizens can be dealt with. |
|
Again, it was a very bad decision, justifying the use of these devices for the sake of convenience, to make it a little easier to get people out of the country. |
|
On 11 February 2005, three of the last remaining internationally accredited journalists had been hounded out of the country and on 26 February, the Government had closed the Weekly Times. |
|
The government brings in anti-terrorism legislation that seems to target regular Canadians more than the real threat of al-Qaeda and terrorist networks around the world that can move in and out of the country unimpaired. |
|
A Customs authority in each country is responsible for collecting taxes on the import into or export of goods out of the country. |
|
Others may need to be certain the traveler has paid the appropriate fees for their visas and has future travel planned out of the country. |
|
Scotland needs to be founded as a republic with its own constitution and do its very best to keep the globalist bankers out of the country. |
|
I asked gormlessly, knowing Leanne was having her wedding in Greece and that Bobbie had never been out of the country. |
|
Dartmouth refused to assist the king in getting James Edward, Prince of Wales, out of the country, and he even reproved the king for attempting this proceeding. |
|
We heard that industrial saboteurs were given a get out of jail free card and airfare out of the country when they should be doing time for their crime. |
|
This will open up what I believe will be a number of frivolous situations where a lot of legitimate producers of pesticides and herbicides may well be chased out of the country. |
|
While Robert and Thomas were out of the country in 1469 the king asserted his control, executing members of the Boyd family. |
|
The War Cabinet was formally maintained for much of 1919, but as Lloyd George was out of the country for many months this made little difference. |
|
Master illusionist Andrew Van Buren was born in the area and is still based there, although he is more often found performing out of the country. |
|
The belt was recovered when an Australian, named Henry Beckett, was caught trying to smuggle it out of the country. |
|
He is credited with driving recusants out of the country, those who refused to attend Anglican services. |
|
For instance, Chinese people are still not entirely free to take capital out of the country, though many are trying to do so. China's remaining economic illiberalism is both costly and unpopular. |
|
It is believed the sphinx was about to be smuggled out of the country after being stolen from the Montem Rossulum necropolis 60 miles north of Rome. |
|
Heavy gunfire was reported near the presidential palace in the capital Banjul earlier this week, while longtime ruler Yahya Jammeh was out of the country. |
|
|
Around the same time, Simon de Montfort, who had been out of the country since 1261, returned to England and reignited the baronial reform movement. |
|
As a consequence, silver flowed out of the country and gold flowed in, leading to a situation where Great Britain was effectively on a gold standard. |
|