April 22, 2020
DUBAI: A government source disclosed that the United Arab Emirates and Pakistan are working to add more flights to repatriate Pakistani citizens stranded in the country.
Islamabad last week began repatriating some of Pakistanis from the UAE, which had earlier warned countries refusing to take back nationals stranded by the coronavirus pandemic that it could review labour ties.
A Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) flight carried home 227 Pakistanis on Saturday.
Thirteen more repatriation flights will depart the UAE between April 20 and April 28, the source said, adding that they will be operated by Emirates, Air Arabia and PIA.
“The governments of UAE and Pakistan continue to work to facilitate further flights to repatriate Pakistani nationals.”
Pakistan is a big labour supplier to the UAE, with more than a million Pakistanis living and working in the country, according to Pakistani diplomats. Over 40,000 Pakistanis have registered to return home, two UAE newspapers have reported.
Also read: Coronavirus pandemic: Pakistan starts evacuating nationals from UAE
The UAE had earlier warned it could review labour ties with countries refusing to take back nationals who have been stranded, lost jobs or been put on leave due to the coronavirus pandemic and want to return to their home countries.
The UAE capital Abu Dhabi on Wednesday formed a committee to ensure workers’ rights were being upheld and that they were provided with a “suitable living environment”, the emirate’s government media office said.
Foreign workers make up the bulk of the labour force in the UAE and other Gulf Arab states, which have reported an increasing number of coronavirus cases among low-income migrant workers living in overcrowded accommodation.
Also read: UAE to extend visas for Pakistani nationals amid coronavirus outbreak
The UAE has so far reported 7,755 infections from the virus and 46 deaths.
The Abu Dhabi Workers Committee, headed by the chairman of the emirate’s economic development department, would also ensure the existence of valid work contracts, that workers’ rights are upheld and that they are paid for their work, the media office said in a post on Twitter.