COVID-19: The remaining Indian staff stranded from an organization of three hundred other people in the United Arab Emirates are, however, repatriated home

Dubai: the last group of an initial organization of three hundred stranded Indian employees, however, has returned from Dubai after close coordination between social staff and public officials in a months’s effort. since March, they were repatriated Friday from Dubai to the town of Hyderabad in southern India, while three other staff members were to fly from Dubai to the city of Lucknow in northern India later on Saturday.

The last lot, basically from the Indian state of Telangana, had no passport, and some of them had exceeded the duration of their UAE visas for 8 years, their massive immigration fines were voided and they were able after receiving exits and liquidation police, SV Reddy, mobile organizer of Non-Indian residents in Dubai for the Telangana Pradesh Congress Committee (TPCC) , who has been leading the repatriation of the group since March. “I am so relieved that, in spite of everything, they are reunited with their families after those difficult times. They had lost their jobs due to the economic consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic. Their passports were with their employers inaccessible, who went to India. Some staff members had been out of contract for many years. “Reddy said.

“It was thanks to the UAE government and department officials, as well as the Indian Consulate in Dubai, the Sharjah Indian Association [IAS] and donors who sponsored his transit accommodation, food and airfare that his repatriation was possible. “

The plight of the three hundred staff members was first highlighted by Gulf News in June when they were transferred from a structure site in Sharjah where they had been sleeping on the streets since March to a unit at the Police Academy in Sharjah. His repatriation began in a Subsequent, and in August, the remaining 89 employees were transferred to the Smooth Group staff home in Ajman. About 32 of them were abandoned and later moved to apartments in Sharjah. The last group has already been repatriated.

“It was a complicated scenario as they did not have their passport with them. The owners of their businesses had gone to India. Once all their papers were in order, someone paid for their tickets to the Indian Consulate, which arranged their coordinating us and the IAS. I need to thank everyone who made this enormous effort possible, “said Reddy.

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