Gulf News

Long-time expat hopes to reunite with family

AN ILLEGAL FOR OVER 4 YEARS, SYRIAN-ARMENIAN IS SEEKING AMNESTY

- BY MARY ACHKHANIAN Staff Reporter

When Syrian-Armenian expat Harout K. heard that he would be able to rectify his visa status under the amnesty scheme and finally reunite with his 13-year-old daughter and wife, his eyes began to sparkle.

The UAE resident for nearly 20 years never imagined his life would take a big turn after losing his job as a manager in a jewellery firm and becoming an illegal resident for the last fourand-a-half years.

In an interview with Gulf News, Harout, 56, spoke about how his ordeal started when he couldn’t find another job, and as a result, he slowly began falling short of funds to pay for his house rent.

“I had worked for a jewellery company for 17 years but then the owner of the firm wanted to sell it, and after I helped him find a buyer, he never gave me my gratuity,” he said.

“I looked for work, but no one was willing to hire me,” added Harout, who was raised in Aleppo and did not have a choice to return to his war-torn country as it was not safe.

“My visa then expired and I slowly started facing troubles in paying for the studio apartment. As a result of a rent dispute, my passport was confiscate­d and I was issued a travel ■ ban. That’s when I began to lose hope,” said Harout.

Mounting fines, travel ban

During this time, Harout began accumulati­ng thousands of dirhams in overstay fines. The only small income he was able to make was through commission work and relying on the mercy of his relatives and friends.

“My wife and daughter are in Russia and I haven’t seen them for so many years because I can’t travel outside the country and they can’t come here. When my mother passed away, I couldn’t leave the country to attend her funeral,” he said.

The struggle will soon be over, he said, as he is now in the process of finding a way to settle the pending rent payments with the help of friends and get his passport released in order to apply for amnesty.

“I will first have to fix my pending rent dispute case and then I will finally be able to rectify my visa status without paying for the accumulate­d overstay fines,” he said.

“This is such a generous move by the UAE and it gave me so much hope for my future.”

Residents who have escaped war in Syria and taken refuge in the UAE or lost their jobs in the country can stay in the emirates as per the resolution adopted by the UAE Cabinet that permits them to regularise their status with a one-year residence visa.

The resolution states that citizens of affected countries will be granted an extendable one-year permit, “regardless of their condition of residence” from August 1 to October 31 this year. They will also be exempt from any imposed fines.

“Once I get the visa, I will first go to Aleppo and sell my small house and then come back to Dubai to start a new life.”

 ?? Atiq ur Rehman/Gulf News ?? Haroun K. in Deira, Dubai. He lost his job when the jewellery firm owner sold the company.
Atiq ur Rehman/Gulf News Haroun K. in Deira, Dubai. He lost his job when the jewellery firm owner sold the company.
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For related stories, log on to: www.gulfnews.com

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