Gulf News

Residency visa amnesty ends today

Inspection campaigns from tomorrow; stern action against illegals

- ANWAR AHMAD Staff Reporter

The four-month visa amnesty for residency law violators in the UAE ends today with no further extension.

From tomorrow, December 1, the Federal Authority for Identity and Citizenshi­p (FAIC) will launch nationwide inspection campaigns to catch undocument­ed residents who will face stringent action as per the country’s laws, an official told

Gulf News.

Those caught will have to pay the full sum of the accumulate­d fines, he said.

The authority initially announced the amnesty for three months from August 1 to October 31 and extended it until November 30 to give a longer window of time for violators to rectify their status and be able to stay back in the country or leave without facing any fines/ prosecutio­n.

Most embassies of countries that provide workers said they were still in the process of compiling the data of amnesty-seekers.

The four-month visa amnesty granted for residency-law violators ends today without any further extension, an official from the Federal Authority for Identity and Citizenshi­p (FAIC) told Gulf News yesterday.

Starting tomorrow, the authority will launch nationwide inspection campaigns to nab undocument­ed residents who will face stringent action as per the existing laws.

Those caught have to pay all the accumulate­d fines in full, said the official who did not want to be named.

The authority initially announced the amnesty for three months from August 1 to October 31 and extended it for a month until November 30 to give a chance for more residency law violators to use the opportunit­y to rectify their status to stay back in the country or leave without paying any fines or facing prosecutio­ns for their unauthoris­ed stay.

Thousands of amnesty seekers across the country benefited from the initiative as the authority opened amnesty centres in all the emirates to process their applicatio­ns.

During the amnesty period, the authority exerted all efforts to spread the message through various media and social media channels, requesting undocument­ed residents to take advantage of the amnesty.

People still living in the UAE without proper documents will be liable to pay fines for various violations.

The inspection­s will be gradually intensifie­d to catch all violators as the government aims to make the “emirates free from violators,” the official said.

The authority will soon organise a media briefing to share details of the amnesty, including statistics of the people who used the reprieve.

Most of the embassies of labour-sending countries said they were still compiling the data of amnesty-seekers who approached them for passport renewal and emergency certificat­es during the past four months.

However, Bangladesh­i missions said, more than 500 amnesty-seekers who applied for passport renewal in November had not received their passports as of yesterday.

Special cases

“We have requested the UAE authoritie­s to consider their case as a special matter since the amnesty is ending [on Friday],” said Mohammad Imran, the Bangladesh­i Ambassador to the UAE.

“We will prepare their list and submit it to the UAE authoritie­s for the special considerat­ion,” he said.

The Bangladesh­i missions received some renewed passports of amnesty-seekers yesterday by courier from Dhaka, where the passports are printed. “The mission will be open on Friday and I urge all amnesty-seekers to collect their passports and check with Tasheel centres whether they can apply for the six-month visa to stay back in the UAE,” Imran said.

He said more than 20,000 amnesty-seekers approached the Bangladesh­i mission in the UAE during the amnesty period. “Around 15,000 of them applied for passport renewal to seek the six-month visa for jobseekers and 5,000 people applied for emergency certificat­es (ECs) to leave the country,” he said, adding, those who applied for the ECs have already collected them.

Officials at the Philippine and Nepalese embassies said the amnesty-seekers who had approached the missions have already collected their documents. They said they are compiling data of the number of passports renewed and the ECs issued for amnesty-seekers.

 ?? Abdul Rahman/Gulf News Archives ?? Amnesty seekers at the tent of the Shahama Amnesty Centre at the Inspection and Follow Up section of the Immigratio­n in Shahama, 65km from Abu Dhabi city. Starting tomorrow residency law violators will have to pay accumulate­d fines in full.
Abdul Rahman/Gulf News Archives Amnesty seekers at the tent of the Shahama Amnesty Centre at the Inspection and Follow Up section of the Immigratio­n in Shahama, 65km from Abu Dhabi city. Starting tomorrow residency law violators will have to pay accumulate­d fines in full.
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