Deccan Chronicle

33 Telugus rescued from Iraq

ISIS took over town where the workers had landed

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT HYDERABAD, APRIL 3

The 33 workers from TS and AP who were stuck in Erbil, the town overrun by the ISIS in Iraq, reached New Delhi early on Monday. The workers were brought to India after interventi­on of Telangana minister K.T. Rama Rao and Union external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj.

Some of them were sent back to their native places by train on Monday. The others are being accommodat­ed overnight at the Telangana Bhavan, and will be accommodat­ed in trains on Tuesday.

A few workers said they knew of the ISIS risk in Iraq but seeing their neighbours who had travelled to Iraq prosper, they too decided to hunt for jobs in the troubled country.

Speaking to this newspaper over the phone, one of the returnees, Durgam Ravi of Mancherial, said they were stranded in an area torn by conflict and war. Each one of them learnt to live with the fear of death, he said.

“I went to Erbil two years back and had no hopes on visiting my family again. My only wish was to see my four-year-old son,” he said.

The 33 workers from TS and AP who were stuck in Erbil, the town overrun by the ISIS in Iraq, reached New Delhi early on Monday.

“My neighbour, who was working in Iraq, came home and lured me with a job offer in Iraq with a salary up to `40,000 per month. I then borrowed `1.5 lakh from people in my village and paid him for the opportunit­y. But when I reached Iraq, I found out that I was on a 15-day visit visa.

“My work was limited to cleaning the premises of a college and soon, my neighbour disappeare­d. I was picking rags, collecting garbage and doing other odd jobs. For days, there was not even food,” one of the workers Durgam Ravi said.

Before travelling to Iraq, he was working as a farm worker at Jannaram, Mancherial district.

Meanwhile, Medi Praveen from Karimnagar said his agent had cheated him on the pretext of providing a work visa.

“I got a visit visa for only three months. I did not understand the details as the visa was in Arabic. In Iraq, the Akama is the official card for worker and we need to spend 3,000 Iraqi dinars for it. Only God knows how we stayed there for a year,” he said.

G. Shankar from Nizamabad said a worker without the Akama in Iraq could be prosecuted by the government.

“I paid `1.5 lakh to an agent as he had promised me a job at a big company. But when I reached Erbil, the agent forced me to join another company. The employer sacked me in three months and for six months, I had no work and was staying with other Indians. I was arrested during inspection­s; they seized my passport and imposed ID 500 as penalty. I really had no hopes on coming back,” he said.

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 ??  ?? A few members of the group that returned from Iraq on Monday speak with the resident commission­er of Telangana Bhavan in New Delhi, Arvind Kumar
A few members of the group that returned from Iraq on Monday speak with the resident commission­er of Telangana Bhavan in New Delhi, Arvind Kumar

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