Deport in a sentence as a verb

If he broke the rules of his visa, then deport him.

Sure, technically they had the right to deport him.

I wish we could deport people who throw around the "racist" label casually.

Not really for us to preach when we can't even deport those we know to be a threat!This is terrifying.

A better approach would have been to deport Khobragade while still offering protection/visas to the servant and her family.

Of course, the only reasonable response is to institute a sufficiently vague law against vagrancy and then deport them.

But we have still helped CIA to deport and torture by proxy totally innocent innocent asylum seekers.

Lately Switzerland seems to have a small right-wing problem, first banning the construction of minarets and then voting to deport criminal foreigners.

After all, if 13 years is not enough to locate and deport them those people have a right to a continued existence in the place where they are now completely at home and integrated.

What is the alternative in that case, deport someone who was born and raised in Denmark to a country only their grandparents were actually from, and whose language they don't even speak?

The key clip begins at the 17-minute mark outlining the arbitrary goal of 400,000 deportations, including Non-criminal removals.

I think that referred to this bit:"By coincidence, Frontline this week is broadcasting a feature, Lost in Detention, outlining the increasingly aggressive measures to deport immigrants.

Thus, even if the chances that he's a real terrorist are incredibly small, the fact that they're nonzero, and the fact that knowledge of this tweet would inevitably result in massive fingerpointing in that remote event, means that deportation is the obvious best choice.

It has been widely speculated that the customs form that they pass out on the airplane en route to the USA is not about stopping bad guys but about getting them to lie on official paperwork so that there is a documented crime to cite as a reason to deport/jail them.

Deport definitions

verb

behave in a certain manner; "She carried herself well"; "he bore himself with dignity"; "They conducted themselves well during these difficult times"

See also: behave acquit bear conduct comport carry

verb

hand over to the authorities of another country; "They extradited the fugitive to his native country so he could be tried there"

See also: extradite deliver

verb

expel from a country; "The poet was exiled because he signed a letter protesting the government's actions"

See also: expatriate exile