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===Yisrael===
===Yisrael===
====Treaty with Sante Rezes====
====Treaty with Sante Reze====
 
In the early 1800s, Yisraeli authorities recorded increasing numbers of [[Sante Reze]]se exiles appearing on their Salacian coast, either by disembarking ships in ports such as [[Ashkelon]] or being found ashore after being thrown overboard (either by the ship's crew or self-caused). The countries exchanged delegations to resolve the issue after officials in the Yisraeli Crown raised alarms about the exiles, many of whom were deemed dangerous or criminals.
 
In 1825, a treaty on exiles was signed between both states. Amended and modified over the years, the Sante Rezese authorities each year present a list of "exiles" stripped of their SR citizenship to the Yisraeli embassy of those would-be exiles who selected Yisrael as their home of exile. The Kingdom of Yisrael is more likely to grant SR exiles of {{wp|halacha|halachic}} Jewish background who select Yisrael or claim [[Law of Return (Yisrael)|''Aliyah'']]. In recent decades, Yisrael has given their SR counterparts a list of qualifications, many of which would appear to favor sophisticated or educated criminal types such as hackers, thieves, con artists, and the like. Critics charge that the Yisraeli intelligence community, especially the [[Royal Yisraeli Intelligence Service|RYIS]], are recruiting SR criminals of certain talents to use as espionage assets.
 
====Policies on other nationalities====
====Policies on other nationalities====
Yisrael will usually accept halachic Jews from any country seeking refuge. Countries that undergo {{wp|regime change}} where the old regime had figures of political, economic, diplomatic, or religious import with favorable inclinations towards Yisrael or sympathetic ideologies such as being capitalistic or monarchist are frequently granted political asylum.


==See also==
==See also==

Latest revision as of 05:26, 9 June 2024

Various nations in the world utilize the practice of exile, which is to expel and ban an offender from returning to their native country, generally for political or other punitive reasons. Those who have committed crimes worthy of exile are typically either exiled to other parts of their respective nations or to different countries entirely. As a result, many nations around the world have specific practices in place when dealing with exiled persons.

Practitioners

Sante Reze

Wazheganon

Yisrael

National policies on receiving exiles

Velikoslavia

<--enjoy the oil fields, scrub-->

Alanahr

Latium

Syalat

There is no policy of the national government offering any particular dispensation for exiles seeking to enter Syalat. Most exiles must submit to the same naturalization process as other applicants. However, Syalat's Begana Army has been known to induct exiles, stateless or otherwise, into their ranks. All those who serve in the Begana Army, including exile recruits, are eligible for Syalati citizenship after two years of service. As with other recruits, exiles are granted temporary residency should they be accepted by the Begana recruitment officers for training. The rates of acceptance for volunteers is around 40%, with less than half of those accepted completing the training period to see induction into the Begana Army. The Begana recruitment office is known to accept recruits with some criminal background, typically those who were denied by the armed forces of their natal countries because of a preexisting criminal record. However, they do not accept those who have committed "crimes of blood", generally murderers or sex offenders.

Exiles are a preferred category of recruit for the Begana Army, provided they meet they the standards of the recruiting officers, due to their special status. Like any recruit, an exile who joins the Begana Army can be washed out an any point prior to induction, which will result in the loss of residency and deportation from Syalat. Even after formally gaining Begana status, they can be discharged from service for disciplinary infractions, which likewise results in expulsion from Syalat.

Yisrael

Treaty with Sante Reze

In the early 1800s, Yisraeli authorities recorded increasing numbers of Sante Rezese exiles appearing on their Salacian coast, either by disembarking ships in ports such as Ashkelon or being found ashore after being thrown overboard (either by the ship's crew or self-caused). The countries exchanged delegations to resolve the issue after officials in the Yisraeli Crown raised alarms about the exiles, many of whom were deemed dangerous or criminals.

In 1825, a treaty on exiles was signed between both states. Amended and modified over the years, the Sante Rezese authorities each year present a list of "exiles" stripped of their SR citizenship to the Yisraeli embassy of those would-be exiles who selected Yisrael as their home of exile. The Kingdom of Yisrael is more likely to grant SR exiles of halachic Jewish background who select Yisrael or claim Aliyah. In recent decades, Yisrael has given their SR counterparts a list of qualifications, many of which would appear to favor sophisticated or educated criminal types such as hackers, thieves, con artists, and the like. Critics charge that the Yisraeli intelligence community, especially the RYIS, are recruiting SR criminals of certain talents to use as espionage assets.

Policies on other nationalities

Yisrael will usually accept halachic Jews from any country seeking refuge. Countries that undergo regime change where the old regime had figures of political, economic, diplomatic, or religious import with favorable inclinations towards Yisrael or sympathetic ideologies such as being capitalistic or monarchist are frequently granted political asylum.

See also