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The Government will hold a high-level meeting today to decide on a new mechanism to repatriate Sri Lankans, with a string of flights expected to commence in June, the President’s Media Division (PMD) said in a statement.
The program to bring back Sri Lankans who are undergoing many hardships due to the global spread of the COVID-19 commenced in January under the guidance of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa.
Around 33 Sri Lankans, including students arrived from Wuhan, China on 1 February. They left for their homes after successfully completing the quarantine process. A total of 839 Sri Lankan pilgrims who were stranded in several cities in India reached home on 19 March.
By 25 May, a total of 5,485 Sri Lankans from 20 different countries were brought back. Out of the total, 4,826 have been identified by the Ministry of Foreign Relations and Sri Lankan missions overseas. Only 05 or 0.01% out of them were found to be infected following diagnosis.
However, out of 197 who returned recently from Dubai, United Arab Emirates, 20 tested
COVID-19 positive. A total of 150 out of the 462 who came from Kuwait were subjected to PCR tests and 96 persons tested positive.
More than 300 are yet to undergo testing.
Almost all the returnees from Kuwait were detainees at welfare centres or deportation centres in that country. It is also a requirement to provide medical treatments to the infected. In this context, it has been decided to revise the repatriation process for Sri Lankans living overseas.
The Government has decided on humanitarian grounds to continue to bring back Sri Lankans considering their fate in the event of not having an opportunity to come home.
The Director General of Health Services Dr. Anil Jasinghe, Additional Secretary on Foreign Relations, Presidential Secretariat Admiral Jayanath Colombage, Specialist Epidemiologist Pabha Palihawadana and Director, Medical Research Institute Dr. Jayaruwan Bandara will participate in tomorrow’s discussion.