K. Male'
|
27 Jul 2020 | Mon 17:46
The repatriation took place on Monday
The repatriation took place on Monday
Maldivian
Repatriation of expats
200 more Bangladeshi nationals repatriated from Maldives
 
Over 4,000 undocumented workers have been expatriated thus far
 
The government aims to repatriate at least 20,000 expats by the end of 2020
 
The repatriation took place on Monday

An additional group of Bangladeshi nationals have been repatriated from the Maldives.

The country’s national airline, Maldivian carried out the repatriation on Monday afternoon, via a flight bound to Dhaka from Velana International Airport (VIA).

The repatriation is part of the government’s efforts to evacuate volunteering expatriate workers from the Maldives, due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Efforts are being undertaken by the Ministry of Economic Development to resolve the issue of expatriate workers in the country.

These efforts are being carried out in collaboration with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Bangladeshi High Commission in the Maldives, with the assistance from the Bangladeshi government, after an announcement by President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih during May following a surge in the number of Bangladeshi nationals testing positive for the global Covid-19 pandemic.

The announcement was to repatriate undocumented Bangladeshi nationals from the Maldives.

Earlier, the Economic Minister Fayyaz Ismail stated that the government aims to send back at least 20,000 undocumented workers prior to the end of the ongoing year. Fayyaz noted that expatriate workers will not be send back home, without their consent.

On Saturday, the government revealed that the number of undocumented expatriate workers repatriated from the Maldives was at 4,205 by then.

Close to 14,000 expatriate workers who volunteered to go back home under the government-initiated repatriation program, have been evacuated thus far.

The state is to begin imposing fines on expatriate workers residing in the nation without proper documentation such as the employer visa from next week onwards, a procedure for which will be publicized soon.

Earlier, the government revealed that close to 100,000 undocumented workers are residing illegally in the Maldives without valid documentations and/or passports.

The majority of Covid-19 cases reported in the Maldives have been among Bangladeshi's, who were found to be vulnerable to the disease due to the lifestyles they are forced to adapt to as well as the confined living spaces they are forced to live in in large groups.

Last updated at: 4 months ago
Reviewed by: Aman Haleem
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
comment