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Thursday, April 25, 2024

DFA set to evacuate some 115 Pinoys from crisis-hit Sri Lanka

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Some 115 Filipinos in Sri Lanka said they want to return to the Philippines amid the economic crisis in the South Asian country, Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Eduardo de Vega said Wednesday.

“Of the 700 Filipinos in Sri Lanka, about 115 have expressed intention to go home to the Philippines because life is hard there, and we are now working on that,” De Vega said in a radio interview.

De Vega, the undersecretary for Migrant Workers Affairs, said the Philippine government will shoulder the airfare for the commercial flights of the Filipinos who will be repatriated.

Filipinos may bring their children who were born in Sri Lanka with them, but their Sri Lankan spouses are not covered by the repatriation program, he added.

According to De Vega, concerned Pinoys might be able to return home by the end of July.

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“We want repatriation to start before July ends,” he said in Filipino.

Repatriated Filipinos will undergo a reintegration program and receive assistance from the government, De Vega said.

In a separate interview at the Laging Handa public briefing, De Vega said the Department of Foreign Affairs is facing problems in sending financial aid to Pinoys there due to some regulations in Sri Lanka.

“The problem is that sending money to Sri Lanka is not easy because the government has implemented some actions because of inflation and other regulations,” he said.

According to him, Filipinos who will stay in Sri Lanka will receive cash assistance from the Philippine government.
De Vega called on Filipinos in Sri Lanka not to participate in protests for their safety. He said some Filipinos reportedly joined rallies amid the economic crisis.

So far, no Filipinos were reported injured in these protests, he added.

The DFA has raised Alert Level 2 (restriction phase) for Filipinos in Sri Lanka, which has been rocked by mass protests due to its ongoing economic crisis.

Under Alert Level 2, there will be no new deployment of overseas Filipino workers and only those with existing employment contracts are allowed to return to the country.

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