
right|thumb|250px|Haitian migrants are escorted off the Coast Guard Cutter Tampas fantail to an awaiting Haitian Coast Guard vessel during repatriation. thumb|right|250px|The crew of USS Pueblo (AGER-2)|USS Pueblo as it arrives at the U.N. Advance Camp, [[Korean Demilitarized Zone, on 23 December 1968, following their release by the North Korean government]] Repatriation is the return of a thing or person to its or their country of origin. The term may refer to non-human entities, such as converting a foreign currency into the currency of one's own country, as well as the return of military pe
right|thumb|250px|Haitian migrants are escorted off the Coast Guard Cutter Tampas fantail to an awaiting Haitian Coast Guard vessel during repatriation. thumb|right|250px|The crew of USS Pueblo (AGER-2)|USS Pueblo as it arrives at the U.N. Advance Camp, [[Korean Demilitarized Zone, on 23 December 1968, following their release by the North Korean government]] Repatriation is the return of a thing or person to its or their country of origin. The term may refer to non-human entities, such as converting a foreign currency into the currency of one's own country, as well as the return of military personnel to their place of origin following a war. It also applies to diplomatic envoys, international officials as well as expatriates and migrants in time of international crisis. For refugees, asylum seekers and illegal migrants, repatriation can mean either voluntary return or deportation.
==Repatriation of humans==
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).