Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian To Return Home After Living Illegally In S Arabia For 24 Years

The Canadian Press, 14 Jun, 2017 12:04 PM
    52-year-old Indian national, who has been illegally living in the deserts of Saudi Arabia for 24 years, will soon return to India after the government announced a 90-day amnesty period, according to a media report.
     
     
    Gana Prakasam Rajamariyan came to Saudi Arabia in August 1994 to work as a farm-hand in a remote village in Hail province.
     
     
    Rajamariyan, hailing from Kanyakumari in Tamil Nadu, said he was paid only Saudi Riyal 100 a month for six months by his first employer.
     
     
    He was then “transferred” to another employer and a third a few months later. He has spent 24 years in the desert, without going home for once, a Saudi Gazette report said.
     
     
    “Of the three employers, I was not sure which one was my sponsor. Above all, I did not receive any salary from them, so I decided to abscond and live illegally out of compulsion,” the newspaper quoted Rajamariyan as saying.
     
     
    He said his destiny was the deserts where he spent half of his life.
     
     
    “My four daughters were very young when I left home. Now when I return, I have grandchildren of the same age,” he said.
     
     
    Rajamariyan said he was able to marry off three of his four daughters with his earnings in Saudi Arabia. He said he did not own a house nor did he have the Aadhaar card or a voter ID, all of which were introduced after he left the country.
     
     
    He made his last phone call to his wife, Ronikyam, before she was admitted to hospital in 2015. After that he did not call her as she was not able to speak and died a year later.
     
     
    Rajamariyan has completed all formalities for his return to India with the help of Hail-based social worker Sarfuddin Thayyil. He hopes to leave Saudi Arabia soon.
     
     
    Thousands of Indian workers stranded in Saudi Arabia after travelling there illegally and those who overstayed their visas, including a large number from Tamil Nadu, are ready to return to India under a 90-day amnesty period that the Saudi government has offered them.
     
     
    “By approaching the passport departments to solve their status from March 29, illegal workers “will be exempt from the consequences associated with the deportee fingerprint system and will be able to return to the Kingdom on the condition of pursuing legal methods to gain entry,” the General Directorate of Passports (GDP) in Saudi Arabia had said last month.
     
     
    Indian Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Ahmed Javed had reiterated that people listed as matloob (wanted) in criminal cases and those holding valid residence visas and passports were not covered by the amnesty.
     
     
    Javed had appealed to all illegal residents to utilise the amnesty period to leave the country, saying they could come back to work legally in Saudi Arabia at any time they wanted.
     
     
    The Indian Embassy in Riyadh and the Consulate General in Jeddah received a total of 26,713 applications for emergency travel passes and issued 25,894 since the general amnesty was announced 56 days ago.
     
     
    People from Uttar Pradesh formed the majority with 11,390 applicants while Telangana had 2,733 applicants, West Bengal 2,332, Tamil Nadu 2,022, Kerala 1,736, Bihar 1,491, Andhra Pradesh 1,120 and Rajasthan 853. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    The Bunnies Are Back In Town: Playboy Club Reopening In NYC

    The Bunnies Are Back In Town: Playboy Club Reopening In NYC
    NEW YORK — The tightly corseted Playboy Bunnies, with rabbit tails and ears, will soon be back in business in New York City.

    The Bunnies Are Back In Town: Playboy Club Reopening In NYC

    Transients Plead Guilty In Killings Of Canadian Tourist, Yoga Teacher

    Transients Plead Guilty In Killings Of Canadian Tourist, Yoga Teacher
    Two transients pleaded guilty Monday to murder in the deaths of a Canadian tourist who was camping in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park during a music festival and a yoga teacher walking his dog on a popular hiking trail.

    Transients Plead Guilty In Killings Of Canadian Tourist, Yoga Teacher

    Mother Of Canadian Killed Fighting ISIL Questions Delay In Returning Son's Body

    Mother Of Canadian Killed Fighting ISIL Questions Delay In Returning Son's Body
      Nazzareno Tassone, 24, was killed on Dec. 21 in the city of Raqqa, while fighting alongside the Kurdish People's Defense Units, a U.S.-backed group also known as the YPG.

    Mother Of Canadian Killed Fighting ISIL Questions Delay In Returning Son's Body

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Hints At New Money For Military After Meeting U.S. Counterpart

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Hints At New Money For Military After Meeting U.S. Counterpart
    OTTAWA — Canada's defence minister is hinting at new money for the military following a much-anticipated meeting with his U.S. counterpart in Washington this week.

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Hints At New Money For Military After Meeting U.S. Counterpart

    Public Safety Minister Says 200 People Have Lost Access To Nexus card

    bout 200 Canadian people have been unable to use their Nexus cards to cross the American border since U.S. President Donald Trump ordered a temporary halt to immigration from certain countries

    Public Safety Minister Says 200 People Have Lost Access To Nexus card

    B.C. Centre On Substance Use Releases Guidelines For Treatment Of Opioid Abuse

    B.C.  Centre On Substance Use Releases Guidelines For Treatment Of Opioid Abuse
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's fledgling network for research into drug abuse has released new provincial guidelines for doctors and nurses on treating people addicted to opioids.

    B.C. Centre On Substance Use Releases Guidelines For Treatment Of Opioid Abuse