Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Lankans in Bangladesh fear for their health and safety and want to come home

- By Tharushi Weerasingh­e

“The life of every Sri Lankan in Bangladesh is at grave risk,” said a 45-year-old NGO worker. “In Dhaka alone, there are approximat­ely 20mn people, almost the total population of Sri Lanka. They are planning to end the lockdown now which means we will have to go to work if we stay on here.” He did not wish to be named.

Many expatriate­s in Bangladesh express concerns about their health and safety, pointing out that the country lacks necessary infrastruc­ture to deal with the COVID-19 threat. Sri Lankan authoritie­s there circulated a Microsoft Excel sheet to collect citizen data last month.

But this worker has heard nothing since. Not only does he have hypertensi­on with bronchial asthma, he was due to return home in April to receive his quarterly stock of medication. Now, nearly two months past his appointmen­t, he is running short of medicines and has received nothing positive from the Sri Lankan High Commission.

Another Sri Lankan in Bangladesh said they were initially told there will be prioritiza­tion when it came to repatriati­on. “But there have been some obvious breaches in the rules," she pointed out. She, too, did not wish to be named.

"There's been an absolute lack of transparen­cy and it has turned into a ball-passing game where no one is willing to be accountabl­e, even to share accurate informatio­n,” she maintained. “Unlike other countries, the biggest concern here is that the public health infrastruc­ture is weak.”

“I'm a woman living here alone so what happens if I fall sick?" she asked. Like many other, she blamed lapses in administra­tion and communicat­ion to the mission in Dhaka not having a High Commission­er.

A flight carrying 275 short visa holders is set to leave Bangladesh on May 23. But none of the sources for this article were granted eligibilit­y to travel on it.

A communicat­ion lag, however, isn’t an across- the- board issue. Some Sri Lankans in Bangladesh said the Embassy was in contact via WhatsApp groups, etc. Many were disappoint­ed, however, in logistical management and said this could be because the Dhaka mission didn’t still have a High Commission­er.

“With 4000 Sri Lankans in top managerial positions, one thousand of whom want to go back, an acting High Commission­er isn’t enough,” said another Sri Lankan in Bangladesh who wished to remain anonymous.

Ninety percent of the Sri Lankan workforce in Bangladesh consists of profession­als that bring in a substantia­l amount of foreign currency to the country, he claimed: “We are willing and able to pay for our own quarantine. All we ask is for flight arrangemen­ts for people who want to go back home.”

Expats feel priority in repatriati­on must be given to those who faced contract terminatio­ns and would, consequent­ly, be unable to support themselves in a foreign country. Official sources in West Asia agreed.

Semi- skilled workers were now facing unemployme­nt in countries like Saudi Arabia. Although economic impact has been relatively well managed, employees in the food and beverage service sector were badly hit as entertainm­ent has been shut down. They want to go home.

Domestic workers, on the other hand, were less likely to request repatriati­on because their situation is more under control and they received pay hikes during Ramadan.

The majority of those clamouring to return to Sri Lanka were, by definition of Saudi authoritie­s, “illegal workers”. They did not have work papers. And Dubai is one of the biggest repatriati­on challenges in this region as approximat­ely 5,000 people want to go come home. To make matters worse, the Sri Lankan Embassy in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, was closed down on Thursday when five staff contracted the virus and were hospitalis­ed.

“It is one of the easiest countries in the region to enter and most people are on a short visa,” a Sri Lankan official said.

Over 38,000 Overseas Sri Lankans ( OSLs) in 143 countries were requesting repatriati­on, the Foreign Relations Ministry said. This comprises 3,078 students, 4,040 short term visa holders, 27,854 Migrant workers, 3527 dependents, 484 dual citizens and others.

Since April 21, the number brought back is 3,600 from 15 countries. They were mostly foreign students and Government officials who had been abroad on training, and their dependents.

The ‘Contact Sri Lanka’ web portal and Sri Lankan missions abroad are the two sources of informatio­n to identify vulnerable groups and coordinate repatriati­on with authoritie­s. The web portal also serves as a virtual help desk for OSLs.

Sri Lankans availing themselves of an amnesty from the Kuwaiti Government started coming back on May 19. Approximat­ely 460 migrant workers arrived on two Kuwait Airways flights on Tuesday. The general amnesty enables workers “out of status” to leave with no consequenc­es and later return to Kuwait to work legally.

Meanwhile, Secretary of Foreign Relations Ravinatha Aryasinha has expressed concern about the use of the “limited window” Sri Lankans were requesting repatriati­on from. He urged them to reconsider their requests owing to the availabili­ty of quarantine centres and to the fact that they will have to recapture jobs and education abroad when the immediate threat subsided.

Among other things, the difficulty of repatriati­on was due to citizens being spread all over. SriLankan Airlines flights, even cargo ones, did not fly to many of these capitals.

“So, while we are integratin­g them in flights already coming, how we bring them all back is a matter which, at the moment, is being discussed at the highest levels,” he said at an event this week.

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