Gulf Today

200 homeless Pakistanis to be repatriate­d soon

There are hundreds of Pakistanis stranded in Dubai and Abu Dhabi who are yet to get air tickets for the special flights to return to their country

- Jamil Khan, Senior Reporter

Around 200 homeless Pakistanis stranded for weeks in Dubai will be repatriate­d through a special flight to Pakistan as announced by the Ministry of Overseas Pakistanis and Human Resource Developmen­t on Saturday.

There are hundreds of Pakistanis stranded in Dubai and Abu Dhabi who are yet to get air tickets for the special flights to return to their country. They live in pitiable conditions. Many have to sleep in the rough waiting for the opening of the booking office while sharing food. They have no extra money to spend on other necessitie­s but rather are saving it for air tickets.

Scores of stranded community members had already registered online in April and are still visiting the consulate daily for some ‘ good news’ on their bookings for the special flights but the officials are reportedly yet to give them any hope.

According to some media reports and social media posts, a large number of stranded Pakistanis, including many who lost jobs due to the COVID-19 pandemic, were forced to sleep in the rough near the Embassy and PIA booking office to get return tickets. “You can see there are dozens of people already waiting outside the PIA office as there is no news about the operating of the office and we are unable to reach any official in the Embassy. We are sleeping here, eating here on the footpath as we cannot return to our accommodat­ion as many of us have already lost our jobs as well as accommodat­ion; our prime objective is to return home,” said one stranded Pakistani.

No one was available in the Pakistan Embassy in Abu Dhabi after repeated phone calls from the stranded people outside the PIA booking office.

The special flights are being operated by the national carrier Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines (PIA) in collaborat­ion with the Pakistan missions in the UAE on the directives of the Ministry of Overseas Pakistanis and Human Resource Developmen­t.

The PIA has two main booking offices in Abu Dhabi and Dubai. Both are closed for weeks as officials from the Dubai office have contracted coronaviru­s in April and only helping consulate officials from their homes for finalising booking arrangemen­ts.

When Gulf Today tried to reach Shahid Mughal, Country Manager, PIA for his comments, he was not available on the phone.

However, after repeated tries, Ahmed Amjad Ali, Consul General Pakistan in Dubai and Northern Emirates, told Gulf Today that he is currently busy and soon his office will release a statement on the new schedule of special repatriati­on fights from Dubai.

Asim Malik, an accountant by profession and resident of Abu Dhabi, told Gulf Today that he had lost his job in March and as soon as online registrati­ons opened “I registered for repatriati­on but after such a long wait am still not getting any response, either from the officials at the Abu Dhabi embassy or the Consulate in Dubai. I have been visiting the booking office for any news daily but unable to reach anyone as we see daily over 200 people in the queue who have come from distant emirates to get tickets. No one from the Embassy is present to answer our queries as we are unable to do anything but blindly wait,” he said.

“In the last over one month, a number of special flights (around 50) have already repatriate­d more than 12,000 stranded Pakistanis and still we are sending accordingl­y,” said an official at the Pakistan Consulate in Dubai on condition of anonymity and confirmed that there are a number of special flights planned from Dubai to repatriate additional stranded Pakistanis.

Recently, Pakistani expatriate­s planning to avail of the special repatriati­on flights to Pakistan voiced their concern on a number of issues like inadequate arrangemen­ts to acquire tickets, costly prices and non-refundable tickets in case of any mishap.

The community members who gathered at the ticketing office in Deira were seen standing in a long queues without any shade as the mercury touched 39º Celsius on Monday.

Passengers started gathering early morning after they got phone calls earlier from the consulate to confirm their seats in upcoming special repatriati­on flights arranged by the Pakistan Internatio­nal Airline (PIA), national carrier.

 ?? Kamal Kassim/gulf Today ?? ↑
These men appear to wait for their transport to carry them to work.
Kamal Kassim/gulf Today ↑ These men appear to wait for their transport to carry them to work.

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