Although most Ethiopians maintain positive sentiments toward their former country, very few opt to repatriate. |
|
The outcomes are such that people repatriate with their family when they've formerly been at odds with them. |
|
If the U.S. pushes too hard, Japan can threaten to repatriate the assets, leaving the U.S. economy in dire straits. |
|
Secondly, foreigners might refuse to roll over loans to a country and repatriate the repaid funds. |
|
Among the proposals are demands that banks in the developed world repatriate money pilfered by corrupt leaders and inform on suspicious accounts. |
|
If investors have decided they want to repatriate sterling assets, now is a good a time to sell given current strength of sterling. |
|
Foreign ships relayed the news and some called in at Japanese ports to deliver relief supplies and repatriate foreigners who wished to leave. |
|
Ms Mutiti regretted that inadequate Government funding made it difficult for the department to repatriate and deport illegal immigrants. |
|
While many foreign students do repatriate, some of the best and brightest stay here to teach or find other employment. |
|
The trauma of June 4, 1989, inspired them to repatriate and found businesses with a mission. |
|
I arrived in Havana on January 8th, 1959, on a plane that the revolutionary Castroist leadership had sent to repatriate the exiled Cubans who lived in Argentina. |
|
The agreement requires it to repatriate any illegal immigrant arrested by the Spanish authorities who has transited Mauritania. |
|
Erskine, the Quaker, offered to serve as a stretcher-bearer, but the British Embassy refused to repatriate people not prepared to join the armed forces. |
|
He did not see active service during the war, but drove ambulances for the American Field Service and at war's end worked in Calcutta to repatriate prisoners of war. |
|
According to the peace accord, Zimbabwe must repatriate its troops. |
|
The prime minister wants to repatriate those rights, and not because he thinks he can improve them. |
|
In 2003, then-immigration minister Philip Ruddock struck a deal to repatriate 190 Iranian nationals during a visit to Tehran. |
|
The three freed hostages remained in the embassy in order for arrangements to be made to repatriate them to Romania. |
|
Students were able to repatriate in the early 1990s and reintegrate into their national system. |
|
What is more, emergency passports can always be issued to repatriate citizens without passports. |
|
|
This Legacy will enable us to repatriate some of the land that is critical to us for our community's future. |
|
The Sudanese Government continues its efforts to repatriate refugees and to help them to return to their home districts. |
|
In other instances, girls do not want to repatriate with their former abductors who are interned in either of the two camps. |
|
It is recommended that the NCBs should repatriate the banknotes of other participating countries. |
|
The purpose of the BMPE is to repatriate illicit proceeds while evading local foreign exchange controls. |
|
Belgium also contributed to the UNHCR efforts to repatriate Burundian refugees from the United Republic of Tanzania. |
|
You need to realise that we need to be able to repatriate people of their own free will, but I do not believe in this free will. |
|
Similarly, temporary workers also tend to repatriate their saved earnings, rather than investing or spending them in the local economy. |
|
Along with the US, it could become a monopoly consumer of services and even repatriate revenue that doctors in developing countries earned from treating local patients. |
|
This type of risk is arising from a decision of a foreign government to restrict capital movements, which would make it difficult to repatriate profits, dividends or capital. |
|
Direct foreign investment flows into India were further liberalised in 1996 and firms have been permitted to repatriate any profits earned back overseas. |
|
If Apple were to repatriate its cash held overseas, then it would have to pay the statutory corporate tax rate of 35 percent. |
|
Lately, companies like GE have been pushing to repatriate their cash at more reasonable tax rates of 10 to 15 percent. |
|
The statement was submitted to another government agency in support of representations that Canada was under obligation to repatriate the subject. |
|
Its mission was to provide economic assistance to European nations after World War II and to repatriate and assist the refugees who would come under Allied control. |
|
And today, we are saying that Canada signed the international convention and must honour that agreement, repatriate Mr. Khadr, treat him appropriately and, above all, not turn him loose just like that. |
|
Nor does he want to exhume and repatriate the 500-odd Poles buried in war graves in the Netherlands – presumably fallen soldiers count as permanent residents. |
|
The CHAIRPERSON asked if the Government was pursuing a policy to integrate refugees in Kenya or repatriate them to their country of origin, provided that repatriation was a safe option. |
|
Alert Bay is not in my riding, but Alert Bay has had a long struggle to repatriate many of the artifacts and potlatch items that would continue to be used in a ceremonial and traditional way. |
|
Australian officials believe countries are focused on processes to repatriate their own citizens first and that their acceptance of infected non-nationals could set a precedent for others. |
|
|
David Cameron will use EU reforms to repatriate and weaken workers' rights, Frances O'Grady, the new leader of the Trades Union Congress will warn on Monday. |
|
He can't yet be sure whether he can persuade other member states to get around the table to discuss his plan to reform the European Union and repatriate some as yet unspecified powers. |
|
Mr Ayaz has been trying to repatriate his wife to Pakistan, but could not afford to since she must be flown as a stretcher case. |
|
If we want to do something sensible, reasonable and in line with our values, we must look after and repatriate the individuals who have sometimes committed atrocious crimes. |
|
What measures are therefore being taken to repatriate them? |
|
In addition, the NCBs may repatriate the national banknotes of other participating countries, appoint an agent to perform this repatriation service on their behalf or use existing commercial repatriation channels. |
|
This drive to repatriate earnings led to the pressure of legitimizing their wealth, causing an increase in violence throughout Colombia. |
|
In the summer of 1915, Great Britain asked the Commonwealth countries that had contributed troops, to repatriate their wounded for treatment at their own country's expense. |
|
The Turkish government has said that it is under no pressure to repatriate gold from foreign central banks. |
|
At the moment efforts are underway to arrange for the hiring of a vessel that will go from Nigeria to Ghana and Sierra Leone and repatriate as many refugees wishing to return to do so with their personal effects. |
|
Somehow I felt I had to help and worked with the Sharjah court, the police, and the embalming centre to help repatriate the body. |
|
It is our duty to repatriate our citizens and provide them with their identification. |
|
Thus the trophies grew increasingly voluminous and none so rarely did the return trip become an undertaking made possible only by merchants who could repatriate the goods on great trading ships. |
|
Police arrested the men on vagrancy charges and efforts are now underway to repatriate them. |
|
First, the repatriate is returning from a high-status position with high autonomy to a less highly profiled role in the parent company. |
|
During this period, the department might repatriate the files and prepare to offer the service directly or by means of another model of cooperation, and the group might reorganize its operations. |
|
In 2005 it organised a major campaign on child camel jockeys in the Gulf States, which influenced the UAE's decision to rescue and repatriate up to 3,000 child camel jockeys. |
|