25% airspace to be reopened after June 20: Zulfikar Bukhari.

KARACHI: Special Assistant to the Prime Minister (SAPM) on Overseas Pakistanis and Human Resource Development Syed Zulfikar Abbas Bukhari Wednesday said the government had decided to reopen 25 per cent of its airspace after June 20 to airlift maximum Pakistani expatriates, stuck at foreign countries due to the coronavirus pandemic.

"A formula is being prepared under which 25 per cent of total airspace will be opened and out of this 25 per cent, 70 per cent [flights] will be dedicated for the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council) countries such as Saudi Arabia, UAE (United Arab Emirates), Qatar, Kuwait and Malaysia where our labour is stuck," Zulfikar Bukhari, flanked by SAPM on National Security Moeed Yusuf, told the media persons here at the National Command and Operation Center (NCOC).

He said the initiative was being taken on instruction of Prime Minister Imran Khan who had ordered the immediate repatriation of stranded Pakistani workers, especially from the GCC countries.

"The PM's decision for your early repatriation brings a big responsibility on your as well as our shoulders. Have you not been completing your 14-day self-quarantine at your homes after the return, the situation, which is evolving with each passing day, may lead us to close the airspace again which would eventually hamper the return of your collegues, brothers and sisters, who are also stuck abroad," he said, appealing to the returnees to strictly adhere to the SOPs.

Zulfikar Bukhari said so far 80,000 stranded Pakistanis had been brought to the country shores, out of which 40,000 were the workers, who had been laid off by the companies in their host country. "Repatriation of such a large number of Pakistanis in such short span of time is a big achievement and the credit goes to the prime minister, NCOC and NCC (National Coordination Committee)."

He said around 600 bodies of Pakistanis had been brought to the country so far, whereas remains of 100 Pakistanis were in process of repatriation from Saudi Arabia.

The SAPM feared that the number of laid workers would gradually increase, but at this point of time, he said: "the number is controllable." The number might grow in days to come due to the evolving situation across the globe, he added.

"The existing number of laid off workers has not hit the economy badly as despite the coronavirus pandemic, the country has received $20.6 billion remittances in this May as compared to $20.1 billion in the last year's May."

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