Gulf News

Debt-ridden family seeks help to return home

SRI LANKAN COUPLE HOMESCHOOL THEIR CHILDREN AS THEY AWAIT ASSISTANCE

- BY SUCHITRA BAJPAI CHAUDHARY Senior Reporter

Six-year old Reyhan Abbas and his brother Keyhan (5) have never seen the inside of a school. Their parents Mohammad Fehrat Sinkaya Abbas and Ishara Vijetunghe, both Sri Lankans, have not only lost their jobs but have also gone bankrupt and their visas have expired.

As the UAE marks World Humanitari­an Day today, Abbas and his wife, who live with their kids in a shared bed space donated by a friend and are fed by generous souls, are desperate for help to tide over their situation. Unaware of their tragic circumstan­ces, the two children greet people with a broad smile. They struggle to learn the letters of the alphabet and doodle on plain papers as their father Abbas tries to homeschool them.

The family wants to fly back home. However, outstandin­g payments prevent their exit. Abbas said if they pay off rental dues worth Dh52,000, at least his wife will be able to fly back with the children to Sri Lanka.

Narrating how the oncehappy family fell into hard times, Abbas told Gulf News :“I was employed since 2008 with a company that sold space at exhibition­s and was doing well. However, there was a slump in the market and I lost my job in

2016. I thought I would be able to get another one. But despite my best efforts, things didn’t work out.”

He said his wife Ishara started a modest free zone business importing coconut peat as fertiliser­s. “She was doing well and when all else failed, I decided to join her business. That same year a huge consignmen­t of coconut peat, which we had imported from India and Sri Lanka and paid for in advance, got rejected. Our suppliers had not delivered the quality they had promised in the sample.”

For months, the couple struggle to pay off the debt, Abbas said he had draw from his savings to start repaying their debts.

“My wife’s business became bankrupt in 2017. She served a jail sentence for over 10 months on account of unpaid dues. She had to pay a rental for the facility and was jailed for additional 52 days. She even got a travel ban as she owed Dh52,000 in rental dues. I also accumulate­d credit card debts worth Dh200,000. With no job in sight. I do not know how I am ever going to repay this money or go back home,” said Abbas.

Albert George Hettiaratc­hy, manager of the Sri Lankan Welfare Associatio­n, which is trying to help the family, told Gulf News: “We can confirm that Abbas and his family are in dire straits. His is a genuine case and we have been trying to provide food and other basic necessitie­s.”

 ?? Clint Egbert/Gulf News ?? Mohammad Fehrat Abbas with his wife and two sons. The family wants to fly back home. However, outstandin­g payments prevent their exit.
Clint Egbert/Gulf News Mohammad Fehrat Abbas with his wife and two sons. The family wants to fly back home. However, outstandin­g payments prevent their exit.

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