Philippine Daily Inquirer

More Pinoys now wish to flee Syria at gov’t expense

- By Jerry E. Esplanada

MANY overseas Filipino workers (OFWS) in strife-torn Syria are finally availing themselves of the government’s free repatriati­on program, according to the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA).

From only about 200 in February, over 1,000 OFWS have since applied to be included in the repatriati­on program being overseen by the Philippine Embassy in Damascus, DFA spokespers­on Raul Hernandez told the INQUIRER on Sunday.

The applicants included OFWS trapped in dire conditions in Homs and other protest hubs in the troubled Middle East country, said Hernandez.

The next batch of OFW repatriate­s, some 100, will come from Syrian conflict areas where the violence has become “very alarming,” he said.

Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario, meanwhile, said the repatriati­on of Filipinos from Syria was “no easy feat.”

In a statement, Del Rosario explained that “repatriati­on involves negotiatin­g with employers for their release, including buying out their contracts, dealing with immigratio­n officials and paying their fines, and in some cases being met with the challenges of having to extract them from areas considered to be “no man’s land.”

The latest batch of repatriate­s, 35 OFWS, arrived on Feb. 26 at the Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport on two Emirates Airlines flights from the Syrian capital.

So far, no Filipinos of the 9,000 estimated to be in Syria have been killed or injured in the ongoing crackdown on protesters by state security forces, said the embassy.

More than 7,500 people have died in the 11-month uprising against the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-assad, according to the United Nations.

An Associated Press report on Sunday said the Syrian government had blocked a Red Cross convoy from delivering badly needed food, medical supplies and blankets to a rebellious neighborho­od in Homs cut off by a month-long siege.

Humanitari­an conditions in the former rebel stronghold of Baba Amr have been described as catastroph­ic, with extended power outages and shortage of food and water and no medical care for the sick and wounded.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines