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・ Deportivo Santa Cruz
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・ Deportivo Teculután
・ Deportivo Tepic F.C.
・ Deportivo Thomas Bata
・ Deportivo Tintaya
・ Deportivo Toluca F.C.
・ Deportivo Táchira
・ Deportation
・ Deportation and removal from the United States
・ Deportation of Armenian intellectuals on 24 April 1915
・ Deportation of Azerbaijanis from Armenia
・ Deportation of Cambodians from the United States
Deportation of Germans from Romania after World War II
・ Deportation of Koreans in the Soviet Union
・ Deportation of the Crimean Tatars
・ Deportation of the Danish police
・ Deportations of Hungarians to the Czech lands
・ Deportations of the Ingrian Finns
・ Deporte de lazo
・ Deported (film)
・ Deported (upcoming film)
・ Deported Women of the SS Special Section
・ Deportee
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・ Deportee (Plane Wreck at Los Gatos)
・ Deportees (band)
・ Deportees' Cross 1914–1918


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Deportation of Germans from Romania after World War II : ウィキペディア英語版
Deportation of Germans from Romania after World War II
The deportation of Germans from Romania after World War II, conducted on Soviet order early in 1945, uprooted tens of thousands of Romania's Germans, many of whom lost their lives. The deportation was part of the Soviet plan for German war reparations in the form of forced labor, according to the 1944 secret Soviet Order 7161.
== Official position of the Rădescu government ==
The last non-communist government of Romania, headed by Prime Minister Nicolae Rădescu, declared itself "completely surprised" by the order that Romania's Soviet occupiers issued on January 6, 1945. The order provided for the mobilisation of all the German inhabitants of Romania, with a view toward deporting many of them to the Soviet Union. The deportation order applied to all men between the ages of 17 and 45 and women between 18 and 30. Only pregnant women, women with children less than a year old and persons unable to work were excluded. On January 13, 1945, when arrests had already begun in Bucharest and Brașov, the Rădescu government sent a protest note to the (Soviet) Vice-President of the Allied Control Commission for Romania, General Vladislav Petrovich Vinogradov. This note explained that the armistice treaty (signed on September 12, 1944) did not envision expulsions and that Romanian industry would suffer following the deportation of so much of its workforce, and especially of a high percentage of its skilled workforce, to be found among its German population. In closing, Rădescu raised humanitarian concerns regarding the fate of women and children left behind. The expulsion has been characterised as being one of the first manifestations of the Cold War, as it showed the impossibility of joint control between East and West, even before the end of World War II.

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