Kuwait repatriates 121 Bangladeshi workers

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Staff Reporter :
The government of Kuwait today repatriated 121 more Bangladeshi workers who were imprisoned or in deportation camps on various grounds-including not having valid documents.
“Carrying the Bangladeshi workers, a special flight of Jazeera Airlines landed at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport at around 6:25pm this afternoon,” Group Captain
AHM Touhid-ul Ahsan, director of Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport, told the media.
Earlier on Monday, Kuwait repatriated 126 Bangladeshi workers.
Oman, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia also repatriated several hundred Bangladeshi workers amid the Covid-19 pandemic in the span of the last two weeks.
According to media reports, the Kuwait government has taken steps to repatriate the expat workers like other countries in the Middle East. Under the special amnesty of the Kuwait government, the nation started the process of sending expatriates from different countries including Bangladesh, India and Pakistan.
Coronavirus could double food insecurity in 9 African countries: UN AFP
The spread of Covid-19 risks devastating countries across East Africa, where food insecurity could more than double in just three months, the United Nations warned Tuesday.
The UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) estimates that some 20 million people currently do not have secure provisions of food across nine countries in the region: Burundi, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya, Rwanda, Somalia and Uganda.
Compared to other parts of the world, these countries have so far registered few confirmed Covid-19 cases, with numbers still counted in the dozens or hundreds.
However, due to their often weak economies and poor health infrastructure they are considered highly vulnerable to the impacts of the mounting crisis.
“WFP projections are currently that the number of food insecure people in the region is likely to increase to 34 or up to 43 million during the next three months due to the socioeconomic impact of Covid-19,” spokeswoman Elisabeth Byrs told journalists in a virtual briefing.
In the worst-case scenario, “food insecurity will have more than doubled,” she stressed, adding that nearly half of the projected 43 million people affected were expected to be acutely food insecure.
She said the WFP urgently needed more than $500 million for just the next three to six months to scale up its operations in the Horn of Africa and wider East Africa.

The pandemic, which to date has killed more than 212,000 people worldwide out of more than three million infected, has created an “unprecedented crisis,” Byrs said.
“It is not just a supply side problem, such as drought or locusts, or a demand side issue, such as a recession. It is both, at the same time and on a global scale,” she said.

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