Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Pandemoniu­m at passport office

People sleeping on the porticoes and camping out for days to get their documents stamped As one-day-service seekers wait for three days, department's photo uploading software crashes

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Thousands of people are flocking to the Immigratio­n and Emigration Department to get their passports and go abroad to seek better prospects as Sri Lanka's economic crisis continues.

People have been sleeping on the porticoes outside the buildings and camping out for days hoping to get their documents stamped.

Mohammed Farhan had been there for five days as of Thursday night. “I am trying to leave because of the economic crisis. I am having trouble finding work,” the 28-year-old from Ruwanwella said.

He had come with more friends, all of whom had hired a room nearby so they could take a shower. When the Sunday Times team visited the premises again the next morning, he had managed to hand his documents in.

As queues grew, so did agitation and queue jumping. To avoid conflict people from the queue had begun to self-regulate the line by forming a register of sorts. People in the queue were listed in order and the queue was checked periodical­ly to make sure everyone was in the right order.

"It is pointless working here now. We can barely save anything because everything is spent on basic needs," said Prabhath Neranjan, who works for a constructi­on accessorie­s company.

He said even saving was pointless because the value of money was reducing incredibly fast. He had been in the line for three days and like many others around him, was there to obtain the one-day-service for his passport.

“It is sad to see how far we have fallen,” said expatriate Kavidas Chotrani referring to the scores of people that were sleeping outside on Thursday night. He felt that the department was overworked and understaff­ed to deal with the surge of people coming in.

While officials were working tirelessly, the demand exceeds the supply and officials agreed that meeting the sudden surge with the current resources was difficult. Department officials said around 36,000 passports had been issued in the first ten days of June alone.

"People in the line are those who did

not get prior appointmen­ts," said a Department of Immigratio­n and Emigration spokespers­on Piyumee Bandara.

The passport office issues about 2500 one- day- service passports a day now, a stark rise from the 1000- 1200 ODS passports that were issued each day before. Normal service passport issuance had increased from 700 or 800 a day to 1000 a day.Those who made appointmen­ts were taken in through a designated gate.

"We take as many people as possible in from the queue because we can not turn people away," she said. The rest of the people in the queue were given a date ahead so they could come back for their appointmen­t and avoid wasting time.

But people refused to leave the queue in hopes that they would be in the next group that was taken in from the front of the line.

People were able to place an appointmen­t online and show up to a designated gate to avoid the queue altogether. However, many people were unaware or unable to do so since access to resources to place the appointmen­t were scarce.

“The volume of applicatio­ns for jobs abroad has increased by 286% compared to last year,” said Associatio­n of Licenced Foreign Employment Agencies Secretary (ALFEA) M. Arshad. About 120,000 people departed for jobs overseas last year, a low number--because of Covid-19--however as of June this year, 120,000 people have left for work overseas. According to the secretary, the domestic worker and hospitalit­y industries were where most migrant workers were taking jobs.

People were taking opportunit­ies below their pay grades and qualificat­ions, to find a way to leave the country. Profession­al nurse Nimesha Prabhani said she was hoping to go to Italy for a job as a day care worker.

Moreover, the photo uploading software attached to the Immigratio­n and Emigration Department crashed earlier this week.

“This is because the number of submission­s is just too high. The studios in the immediate vicinity worked well but studios in the outer areas crashed,” one studio owner near the Battaramul­la office said. He alleged that the crash was a deliberate attempt to control the flood of applicatio­ns coming in.

 ?? ?? Nimesha Prabhani
Mohammed Farhan
Crowds inside the Immigratio­n and Emigration Department
Nimesha Prabhani Mohammed Farhan Crowds inside the Immigratio­n and Emigration Department
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 ?? ?? department of immigratio­n and emigration
department of immigratio­n and emigration
 ?? Scan the QR code for video ?? Desperate for a better life: Night or day the never ending line outside. Pix by Eshan Fernando
Scan the QR code for video Desperate for a better life: Night or day the never ending line outside. Pix by Eshan Fernando

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