Kuwait Times

NORKA begins registrati­on: India plans evacuation

- By Sajeev K Peter

KUWAIT: As the Indian government braces for a mammoth exercise of repatriati­ng non-resident Indians from aboard on a ‘priority basis’, some Indian states are seeking repatriati­on of their communitie­s without any further delays. India’s ministry of external affairs has reportedly prepared an evacuation plan and is waiting for the clearance from the government to put the plan into action.

States like Kerala, Punjab, Goa, Rajasthan, Telangana and Tamil Nadu with larger overseas communitie­s have expressed keenness in starting repatriati­ons as soon as possible in strict compliance with COVID-19 safety and security protocols. While the state of Kerala announced that it is fully prepared to receive non-resident Keralites who wish to come back from overseas, NORKA (Non-Resident Keralites Affairs) has started registrati­on of people who are stranded abroad following the outbreak of COVID-19 and subsequent lockdowns.

“The repatriati­on will be on a priority basis,” said N Ajithkumar, Director of Kerala Pravasi Welfare Board. “Pregnant women, senior citizens, people affected with diseases other than COVID-19, people whose visas have expired, those who went abroad on visit visas and got stuck and people who are facing various difficulti­es will be given priority,” he pointed out. However, he clarified that people need not hurry as no priority will be given to those who register first. NRIs have to register on the website www.norkaroots.org.

Ajithkumar said repatriati­on will commence as soon as the India government opens its airspace to airlines. According to initial reports, more than 150,000 Indians in various countries have already registered in 24 hours of the opening of registrati­on. Out of 900,000 Indian residents in Kuwait, approximat­ely 450,000 are from Kerala.

According to reports from New Delhi, India’s Foreign Secretary Harsh Shringla has prepared an elaborate evacuation plan on how the ministry plans to bring home Indians from abroad, with an exact count of who is where and how many flights it would take from each country to various states in India. Indians stuck in foreign countries will be brought home on chartered flights. The report said the survey of those who want to return is under progress.

India’s ministry of external affairs has opened control rooms for repatriati­ng expats and has sought opinions from state government­s on the exercise of bringing back those who are stranded abroad. However, it is insisting that people should come back with COVID-19 negative certificat­es to help the administra­tion. Indian missions abroad were reportedly asked to prepare lists and prioritize the evacuation of all Indian nationals per flight that would take off from their respective stations.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait