Gulf News

Indian parents seek visit visas to bring home stranded children

INDIA IS NOT ON LIST OF COUNTRIES ELIGIBLE FOR VISIT VISAS, AMER SAYS

- BY SAJILA SASEENDRAN Senior Reporter

Indian expats, whose children are stranded back home are urging UAE authoritie­s to issue them visit visas to return here in a special arrangemen­t for flights between the two countries, which lasts until July 26.

India is currently not on the list of countries from which passengers are eligible to secure visit visas.

Indian parents, who spoke to Gulf News, urged the UAE Embassy in New Delhi to take up their humanitari­an cases with the immigratio­n authoritie­s in the UAE for special permission to bring their children home.

Dubai resident and a single mother, Varsha Nitin Adani said her daughter Pankti, who is studying architectu­re in Manipal Academy of Higher Education in Karnataka, is struggling alone and needs a visit visa to join her here.

Online exams

“Since my husband’s death three years ago, my daughter used to come to the UAE on visit visa. I got her visit visa on March 15. But the lockdown happened and the college closed on March 18 and they said the exams will happen online. Now my daughter is alone in the room as her roommate left for Bengaluru to return to the UAE,” Adani told Gulf News.

She said she had approached an Amer Centre and realised that the visit visa was cancelled automatica­lly after the Covid-19 developmen­ts and new visit visas are not being issued to passengers from India.

“I am very much worried about my daughter. I want to bring her here on one of the special flights that are operating until July 26. I hope authoritie­s will help me get a visit visa for my daughter,” said the concerned mother.

Another resident, Dheerendra Patil, said he has been desperatel­y

trying to bring back his son, Palash Patil, who just finished his engineerin­g course and had to move out of the hostel since it has been converted into a quarantine centre in India.

“My son studied until 12th grade in The Indian High School Dubai.

Hostel converted

“He went to NIT Surathkal for mechanical engineerin­g. He was on resident visa till last year and as I shifted my job, I had cancelled his visa,” said Patil.

“Now he has completed the engineerin­g course and wants to be back home. He needs a visit visa and an approval to board the repatriati­on flights.

He is staying with his friend as his hostel is converted into a quarantine shelter. Since he is now 22 years, I cannot get a residence visa for him. We request the government to issue visit visas on humanitari­an grounds.”

Boarding school closed

Sharjah resident Deepak Kumar Khare said he and his son Vedant, who studies in The Scindia School in Gwalior in Madhya Pradesh, had been stuck in Jhansi in Uttar Pradesh for four months.

“I am on investor visa and have ICA permission to return. But my son, who studies in ninth grade here, needs a visa to enter the country. I have to fly back to the UAE at the earliest as my wife and younger son are alone in Sharjah and they are having difficulti­es in managing things,” said Khare.

He appealed to the authoritie­s to help him get either a visit visa or a new entry permit for residence visa for his son.

“I have spoken to my free zone. They said they are not issuing any entry permit to anyone outside the country. My son’s boarding school will not open till January 21 and I cannot leave him here and go to the UAE,” he said over phone from India.

 ??  ?? Single mother Varsha and her daughter Pankti, who is stuck
■ in Karnataka in India. Her college closed on March 18.
Single mother Varsha and her daughter Pankti, who is stuck ■ in Karnataka in India. Her college closed on March 18.
 ??  ?? Deepak Kumar Khare and son Vedant have been stuck in
■ Jhansi in Uttar Pradesh for four months.
Deepak Kumar Khare and son Vedant have been stuck in ■ Jhansi in Uttar Pradesh for four months.
 ??  ?? Palash Patil
■
Palash Patil ■

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