• Nearly 400,000 Indians have left the UAE for India since repatriation flights started in May. AFP
    Nearly 400,000 Indians have left the UAE for India since repatriation flights started in May. AFP
  • An immigration official checks documents of passenger at Dubai Airport. Wam
    An immigration official checks documents of passenger at Dubai Airport. Wam
  • Passengers at Dubai International Airport wait for their flight to Calicut in Kerala. Courtesy: Indian Consulate
    Passengers at Dubai International Airport wait for their flight to Calicut in Kerala. Courtesy: Indian Consulate
  • An Indian woman carries a child as she waits at the Dubai International Airport before leaving the country on a flight home on May 7. Karim Sahib / AFP
    An Indian woman carries a child as she waits at the Dubai International Airport before leaving the country on a flight home on May 7. Karim Sahib / AFP
  • Health workers check passengers who arrived on an Emirates Airlines flight from London at Dubai International Airport amid the coronavirus Covid-19 pandemic. AFP
    Health workers check passengers who arrived on an Emirates Airlines flight from London at Dubai International Airport amid the coronavirus Covid-19 pandemic. AFP
  • Health workers check passengers who arrived on an Emirates Airlines flight from London at Dubai International Airport amid the coronavirus pandemic. AFP
    Health workers check passengers who arrived on an Emirates Airlines flight from London at Dubai International Airport amid the coronavirus pandemic. AFP
  • Passengers of an Emirates airlines flight, departing to the Australian city of Sydney, wear protective gear at Dubai International Airport on May 22. Karim Sahib / AFP
    Passengers of an Emirates airlines flight, departing to the Australian city of Sydney, wear protective gear at Dubai International Airport on May 22. Karim Sahib / AFP
  • Passengers of an Emirates airlines flight line up to be checked by health workers at the Dubai International Airport. Karim Sahib / AFP
    Passengers of an Emirates airlines flight line up to be checked by health workers at the Dubai International Airport. Karim Sahib / AFP
  • Travellers walk through Dubai International Airport to board a repatriation flight. Karim Sahib / AFP
    Travellers walk through Dubai International Airport to board a repatriation flight. Karim Sahib / AFP
  • A passenger of an Emirates airlines flight checks in at Dubai International Airport. Karim Sahib / AFP
    A passenger of an Emirates airlines flight checks in at Dubai International Airport. Karim Sahib / AFP

Coronavirus: More than 50,000 Indians repatriated from Ras Al Khaimah since June


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Ras Al Khaimah has helped repatriate 53,000 Indians since June, officials said on Wednesday.

These Indian citizens left the UAE at the end of their employment contracts.

The repatriation operations were carried out by the Indian Government and Indian airline SpiceJet.

Nearly 300 special charter flights helped fly people to 21 destinations across India.

The Emirate is a longstanding friend of the Indian government and its people and we are always ready to help

Ras Al Khaimah authorities paid for the transport cost to the airport to help the returning passengers.

“The UAE is sparing no effort to ensure the safety and well-being of all its people and Ras Al Khaimah is part of the country’s drive to be at the forefront of the global response to this pandemic,” said Sheikh Saud bin Saqr, Ruler of Ras Al Khaimah.

“The Emirate is a longstanding friend of the Indian government and its people and we are always ready to help.

“With this in mind, Ras Al Khaimah International Airport has been playing an important role in the Indian government’s initiative to repatriate its citizens.

“SpiceJet and our airport staff have shown great dedication in their work and for this, I am truly grateful,” he said.

Sanjay Khanna, chief executive of Ras Al Khaimah International Airport, said that the operations will continue to help Indians reunite with their families back home.

“As soon as this pandemic struck, we worked with Ras Al Khaimah Airport [officials] to [start] dedicated flights to help stranded workers return home,” said Ajay Singh, chairman and managing director of SpiceJet.

Nearly 400,000 Indians have left the UAE for India since repatriation flights started in May.

More than 600,000 signed up to return amid the coronavirus outbreak.

Indian officials have said not all those returning home had lost jobs.

Several passengers were on expired visit visas or residents taking their annual vacation.

Indian residents in the Emirates no longer require to register with the consulate in Dubai and the embassy in Abu Dhabi but can book flights online.

Earlier, Indians in the UAE had to register details of their passport and their hometown with priority given to the elderly, pregnant women and workers who had lost their jobs.

The registration process has since been scrapped and Indians are now able to book flights operated by the UAE and Indian airlines after both countries reached an air bubble agreement to facilitate travel.

India shut down international air travel in March to slow down the spread of the coronavirus within its borders.

It resumed operations to a few countries including the UAE in May to bring back citizens who had lost jobs overseas or wished to return home.

  • Unemployed Indian workers are repatriated from Dubai with help from a Sikh motorcycle group that teamed up with a gurudwara or shrine in Jebel Ali. Courtesy: Guru Nanak Darbar Gurudwara Dubai
    Unemployed Indian workers are repatriated from Dubai with help from a Sikh motorcycle group that teamed up with a gurudwara or shrine in Jebel Ali. Courtesy: Guru Nanak Darbar Gurudwara Dubai
  • Workers are repatriated to India after losing their jobs across the UAE due to coronavirus. They were helped home by Sikh community groups in Dubai. Courtesy: Guru Nanak Darbar Gurudwara Dubai
    Workers are repatriated to India after losing their jobs across the UAE due to coronavirus. They were helped home by Sikh community groups in Dubai. Courtesy: Guru Nanak Darbar Gurudwara Dubai
  • Unemployed workers undergo medical tests before leaving Dubai for India on repatriation flights. Courtesy: Guru Nanak Darbar Gurudwara Dubai
    Unemployed workers undergo medical tests before leaving Dubai for India on repatriation flights. Courtesy: Guru Nanak Darbar Gurudwara Dubai
  • Members of the Sikh Khalsa Motorcycle Team Dubai help repatriate unemployed workers to India. Courtesy: Guru Nanak Darbar Gurudwara Dubai
    Members of the Sikh Khalsa Motorcycle Team Dubai help repatriate unemployed workers to India. Courtesy: Guru Nanak Darbar Gurudwara Dubai
  • Hundreds of unemployed Indian workers have been repatriated with the help of Sikh community groups in Dubai. Courtesy: Guru Nanak Darbar Gurudwara Dubai
    Hundreds of unemployed Indian workers have been repatriated with the help of Sikh community groups in Dubai. Courtesy: Guru Nanak Darbar Gurudwara Dubai
  • Thousands of unemployed workers from across the UAE are repatriated to northern Indian cities with the help of a Sikh motorcycle group and a gurudwara or shrine in Jebel Ali. Courtesy: Guru Nanak Darbar Gurudwara Dubai
    Thousands of unemployed workers from across the UAE are repatriated to northern Indian cities with the help of a Sikh motorcycle group and a gurudwara or shrine in Jebel Ali. Courtesy: Guru Nanak Darbar Gurudwara Dubai
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