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Fighting still going on in Sudan; return home a miracle, say evacuated Keralites

Talking about the situation in violence-hit Sudan, hailing from Kakkanad Biji Alappat said there was a scarcity in fuel supply and an increase in looting

PTI Kochi Published 27.04.23, 03:14 PM
Indians evacuated from violence-hit Sudan under Operation Kaveri arrive at Chennai Airport

Indians evacuated from violence-hit Sudan under Operation Kaveri arrive at Chennai Airport PTI picture

Keralite families who returned to the state after being evacuated from strife-torn Sudan were relieved to be back and said their escape was miraculous.

They reached the international airport here in the morning from New Delhi.

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"We reached back home because of the blessings of the Almighty. Despite a ceasefire in place, fighting is still going on in many parts of Sudan," Biji Alappat said in an anxious voice.

Hailing from Kakkanad here, Biji is among the first batch of Keralites, who reached back home to the state this morning from the African nation after being safely evacuated by the External Affairs Ministry on Wednesday.

While talking to the media outside the airport, Alappat said life in Sudan had been peaceful for the past several years and he never ever thought there would be a fight between two army factions.

At least 6,000-7,000 Indians lived in Sudan, he said.

"A large number of Indians have already moved to other places from Khartoum via bus. I think, if we can evacuate 500-600 people daily, we can complete the mission in 10 days," Alappat, who was working in an oil company in Sudan, said.

Talking about the situation in violence-hit Sudan, Alappat said there was a scarcity in fuel supply and an increase in looting. "As the tension and violence continue, we do not know when we can go back to Sudan. That is the challenge we are facing," he added.

Besides Alappat, his wife and three children also reached here in the morning.

Sharon, his wife, said she was very much relieved to have reached home safely and join the other family members. "Me and the children actually went there for a five-day vacation. We never thought that things would turn out like this. Now, feeling very relieved as we are back home," she told PTI.

For Thomas Varghese and Sheelamma Thomas, a couple from Kottarakkara who also reached the state this morning, their return to the home state was "just like a miracle".

"We never thought that we could come back. We have been living there for 18 years and never faced such sitations before. Life was so miserable after the war broke out," Thomas told reporters outside Thiruvananthapuram airport.

His family thanked the Centre and the state government for their immediate intervention and the evacuation mission.

The wife and daughter of Albert Augustine, a retired soldier from the state who was killed by a stray bullet in Khartoum in Sudan earlier this month, also reached the state this morning. After reaching Kochi airport, they left for their hometown Kannur in a car reportedly arranged by the External Affairs Ministry.

India has evacuated a total of 670 Indian nationals from Sudan and is looking at rescuing more of its citizens from the strife-torn African nation before the end of a tenuous ceasefire between the regular army and a paramilitary force.

A C-130J military transport aircraft of the Indian Air Force brought to Jeddah 392 Indians from Port Sudan in three flights on Wednesday, a day after an Indian Navy ship rescued 278 citizens from that country.

Sudan has been witnessing deadly fighting between the country's army and a paramilitary group that has reportedly left around 400 people dead.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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