ISLAMABAD: Over 300 Pakistanis have arrived in Islamabad from Beirut on a chartered flight as Pakistan continues evacuation operations to bring home citizens stranded in Syria since opposition forces toppled former president Bashar Assad’s regime, the prime minister’s office said on Friday.
More than 1,300 Pakistanis were stranded in Syria since last week when opposition forces seized the capital of Damascus unopposed following a lightning advance that sent Assad fleeing to Russia on Sunday.
While Pakistan’s foreign office initially said the Pakistanis would be evacuated once the Damascus airport reopened, PM Shehbaz Sharif on Monday sought his Lebanese counterpart Najib Mikati’s “personal intervention” to evacuate citizens via land routes through the border with Syria.
“318 Pakistani citizens in Syria, including pilgrims and staff, have been brought to Islamabad, Pakistan, from Beirut, Lebanon, in a chartered plane,” the Pakistani PM’s office said in a statement.
On the directions of Sharif, the National Disaster Management Authority, in collaboration with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, had prepared a “comprehensive plan” and finalized arrangements for the safe evacuation of Pakistani citizens, the statement added.
“Prime Minister also thanked the Prime Minister of Lebanon, Mr. Najib Mikati, whose government provided all possible cooperation and assistance for the return of Pakistanis via Beirut,” the PMO said. “The Prime Minister has also directed the relevant authorities to continue taking immediate steps to evacuate more Pakistani citizens from Syria.”
Pakistanis Arab News spoke to this week described 12-hour-long bus rides, multiple check posts, interrogations and bills piling on as they left the war-torn nation by road through neighboring Lebanon.
The closure of Syria’s airports and borders with Jordan and Oman had posed a “major challenge” to the repatriation effort, the foreign office said.