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105 passengers repatriated from UAE to Pakistan test positive for Covid-19

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At least 105 Pakistanis who were flown to Islamabad from the United Arab Emirates on a repatriation flight have tested positive for the coronavirus, Rawalpindi Deputy Commissioner retired Capt Anwarul Haq said on Monday.

The development, along with a rise in positive cases among passengers returning from other Gulf countries, has caused concern among officials and Special Assistant to Prime Minister on National Security Dr Moeed Yusuf said the matter has been taken up with UAE authorities.

The 105 passengers were among 209 nationals who were brought home on an Etihad Airways flight from Abu Dhabi on April 28, according to the government's Covid-19 portal.

The travellers were initially moved to the quarantine facility at the Fatima Jinnah Women University.

However, the 105 people who tested positive were eventually shifted to the Rawalpindi Institute of Urology (RIU) while 79 others who tested negative were allowed to go home with directions to self-isolate, Haq told DawnNewsTV.

He said the tests of 27 passengers were being conducted again to verify their status.

The government has been running a repatriation operation through the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) and other airlines to bring home Pakistanis stranded in other countries.

The development comes days after 190 passengers who were brought to Karachi through special flights from Dubai, Sharjah and Colombo tested positive for the virus.

Out of the 190, 92 belonged to Sindh, 56 to Punjab, 24 to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and 18 to Balochistan, according to Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah.

Also, Dawn reported last week that a total of 259 passengers who were among the 3,554 Pakistanis who came back to Punjab by 22 special flights from various countries during the last two weeks tested positive for the coronavirus.

More than 760 passengers, who returned from the UAE, Qatar, New York and Colombo on April 28 and April 29, had been quarantined to complete their incubation period before undergoing the testing process.

Issue taken up with UAE
Speaking on Geo News programme Aaj Shahzeb Khanzada Kay Saath, SAPM Yusuf said that after the government had opened airports for some flights on April 4, it was decided that the number of passengers being repatriated will be increased gradually to see if the country's health facilities can handle the new cases.

He said approximately 15,000-16,000 Pakistanis have so far been brought home and on certain flights, a "majority" of the passengers tested positive for Covid-19.

According to Yusuf, this was seen predominantly on flights coming from the UAE which carried labourers who often live in cramped and unhygienic conditions in the Gulf country.

"We have now formally taken this up with the UAE government," he said, noting that if arriving passengers continue to test positive, the provinces' health capacity will come under pressure and the government will have to reduce the number of people being repatriated.

He said the government wants to bring home a maximum number of people but in a "safe manner".

Citing data and health experts, he said it was wrong to assume that all the passengers get infected after travelling in an airplane, adding that many of them are positive prior to travelling but often don't show any symptoms.

Answering a question, he said other countries are often not willing to spend PCR Covid-19 tests on passengers travelling to Pakistan and tend to reserve them for their own citizens. They are ready to conduct other types of tests of the passengers but those aren't considered accurate by Pakistani health experts, Yusuf added.

He said although several thousand Pakistani workers in the Gulf countries are returning home because they have been laid off, many others have been suspended or given paid or unpaid leaves.

However, he acknowledged that all of these workers are among Pakistanis who send remittances home and therefore "a lot of work is being done and we are talking to other countries to save the jobs of as many labourers as possible".
https://www.dawn.com/news/1554510/1...om-uae-to-pakistan-test-positive-for-covid-19
 
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That will happen, when 10 labors are kept in small rooms. Gulf has a history of treating labors like caged animals.
 
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That will happen, when 10 labors are kept in small rooms. Gulf has a history of treating labors like caged animals.
The accomodation is so expensive low cost labour decides to share room with tens of people
 
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I dont believe it. All 105 passengers were tested positive? They must have contracted the virus during flight or staying in the poor quarantine facility in Pakistan.
 
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I dont believe it. All 105 passengers were tested positive? They must have contracted the virus during flight or staying in the poor quarantine facility in Pakistan.

Have you seen they way labors are accommodated in a single room. 6 beds in a small room. Very easy to spread the virus

 
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Have you seen they way labors are accommodated in a single room. 6 beds in a small room. Very easy to spread the virus

It is up to labourers how they choose to live. Accommodations are quite cheap here nobody is forcing anyone to live among 30-40 people.
 
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So UAE has gone all Iran on Pakistan as well. Such a pathetic way to deal with sick laborers despite having enough resources. Just shows in the end how the Arabs think of us at the end of the day.
 
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It is up to labourers how they choose to live. Accommodations are quite cheap here nobody is forcing anyone to live among 30-40 people.

You think labor make a lot of money?!! They dont. There salaries are very low, plus lot of times they are paid late. The labor that are working in Gulf, try their best to max the savings to send back home. If given the option of paying rent vs staying at company accommodation and not paying rent, they will go with the latter option cause then they have that extra saving to send home.
 
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You think labor make a lot of money?!! They dont. There salaries are very low, plus lot of times they are paid late. The labor that are working in Gulf, try their best to max the savings to send back home. If given the option of paying rent vs staying at company accommodation and not paying rent, they will go with the latter option cause then they have that extra saving to send home.
Dude no one saw it coming. US has more cases than any Gulf country. Saudi Arabia is providing free medical services even to violators without any legal consequences. See the positive things they are doing for your fellow countrymen who only get paid few thousand rupees back in Pakistan.
 
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Dude no one saw it coming. US has more cases than any Gulf country. Saudi Arabia is providing free medical services even to violators without any legal consequences. See the positive things they are doing for your fellow countrymen who only get paid few thousand rupees back in Pakistan.

Lol...Sacred gov will come for you? We were talking about you saying its not possible for them to get the virus in gulf, and now you switch over to look, they are taking care of our people in the gulf.

Do you know why they are providing free care. It cause the violators who are sick will not seek treatment, which would mean more cases will spread. And since they can't deport the violators after catching them, they are forced to treat them. Its not out of goodwill. Its cause that is the only way to stop the spread.

You should be concerned. KSA gov is building a narrative that revolves around expat being the main cause for the spread of the virus. Look at the pattern of news that reports the daily cases, and compare them to old ones. Notice how suddenly they have started adding "expat" in the reports.
 
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