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5.03 lakh stranded Indians brought back through Vande Bharat Mission: Union govt

Vande Bharat Mission
Kerala, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Tamil Nadu are the top four states to which stranded Indians from abroad have returned via these flights.
Image for representation/PTI
The union government, on Tuesday, informed the Madras High Court that 5,03,990 Indians stranded in 137 countries have been brought back to the country through Vande Bharat Mission (VBM) in less than two months.
Tamil Nadu is at the fourth spot in the list of states that received the highest number of its residents through the mission, it said. “Kerala received the largest number of stranded Indians (94,085), followed by Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh,” R Sankaranarayanan, the Additional Solicitor General of India, said.
The largest number of stranded Indians returned by VBM flights are from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) (57,305), followed by Kuwait, Qatar, Oman, Saudi Arabia and the United States of America (USA). From Nepal 91,193 people returned through land border check posts, he added. In the fourth phase of the mission 218 more flights are scheduled to India from various countries, of which more than 25 will be landing in Tamil Nadu, he said.
Sankaranarayanan made the submissions in response to the PIL moved by Tamil Nadu’s main opposition party DMK, alleging that the state government was refusing clearance to flights of such missions in the state.
When the plea came up for hearing, senior counsel P Wilson submitted that earlier the problem was of the state government refusing clearance. Now since the state has made it clear that it has no objection to such flights, the Centre has to find a solution to bring back 25,939 residents of the state, who are still stuck in various countries, he said.
“We will require at least 146 more flights for the 25,939 to return to India,” Wilson said. Moreover, such stranded persons who need financial assistance must be provided such help from the funds available in the Indian Community Welfare Funds, which has so far not been provided, he said.
To this, Sankaranarayanan said that less number of flights to Tamil Nadu does not mean that residents of the state are not returning. Such flights do not necessarily land in Tamil Nadu. They are landing in different states and are then travelling back to the state, he said.
Recording the submissions, a division bench of Justice M M Sundresh and Justice R Hemalatha directed the centre to get instructions as to the plan for return of 25,939 residents of the state and inform the court by July 20.

 

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Source: TheNewsMinute.com