The Philippine Star

117,000 OFWs need repatriati­on — DFA

- By DELON PORCALLA

The national government has so far repatriate­d 50,000 overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) and is set to repatriate the remaining 117,000, an official of the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) told the House of Representa­tives yesterday.

Sarah Lou Arriola, Undersecre­tary for migrant workers affairs of the DFA, told the House public accounts committee headed by Rep. Mike Defensor that they can carry out the repatriati­on “with the assistance of other government agencies.”

At the same time, she also announced that there will be two consecutiv­e Philippine Airlines flights to Qatar this month – on July 17 and 19 – to ferry OFWs with confirmed PAL tickets. The latter flight will be a chartered one.

“We’re also working on another chartered flight before the end of the month,” Arriola told Defensor and vice-chairman Rep. Jonathan Sy-Alvarado, whose committee has been conducting a probe on the repatriati­on of thousands of stranded OFWs.

The DFA official said each PAL plane can carry about 350 passengers.

Arriola also disclosed that Vietnam has finally allowed PAL to fetch about 80 stranded OFWs in Vietnam on July 25. “That is the final date. And yes, they’re coming home very soon,” she told the lawmakers.

At the first committee hearing on the issue two weeks ago, labor and foreign affairs officials promised to repatriate more workers, then numbering 167,000, including 88,000 in Saudi Arabia.

The officials blamed their failure to bring in more workers on the daily limit of 1,000 workers set by the inter-agency task force (IATF) on COVID-19 response.

“They committed to bring this problem to the attention of IATF and to arrange for more repatriati­on flights. Since the IATF has relaxed travel restrictio­ns, it should allow more inbound planes – whether commercial or charter – bringing in stranded OFWs,” he said.

Those to be flown home include more than 300 who died in Saudi Arabia.

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