India Prioritizes Safety of Nationals in Gulf Amid West Asia Conflict

India's Ministry of External Affairs is closely monitoring the situation in West Asia, with the safety of Indian nationals as the top priority. A dedicated control room and round-the-clock mission helplines are providing advisories and assistance. Special attention is being given to students and seafarers to ensure their welfare and academic continuity. The government is facilitating travel through alternate routes and neighboring countries due to airspace closures in the conflict zone.

Key Points: India's Safety Measures for Nationals in West Asia Conflict

  • 24/7 helplines & advisories from missions
  • Special control room operational
  • Focus on students & seafarers
  • Facilitating travel via alternate routes
4 min read

Ensuring safety of Indian nationals in Gulf top priority: MEA's Aseem R Mahajan amid West Asia conflict

MEA's Aseem R Mahajan details India's 24/7 efforts to ensure the safety and welfare of its citizens in the Gulf and West Asia region.

"Ensuring the safety, security and welfare of the large Indian community in the region remains our highest priority. - Aseem R Mahajan"

New Delhi, April 6

External Affairs Ministry Additional Secretary Aseem R Mahajan on Monday said that India is closely monitoring the evolving situation in the Gulf and West Asia region, stressing that the safety and welfare of Indian nationals remains the top priority.

Addressing an inter-ministerial briefing here, Mahajan said, "The Ministry of External Affairs continues to closely monitor the evolving situation in the Gulf and the West Asia region. Ensuring the safety, security and welfare of the large Indian community in the region remains our highest priority."

He highlighted that a dedicated special control room in the Ministry is operational for Indians abroad.

"To support Indian nationals and their families, a dedicated special control room in the Ministry is operational. We continue to closely coordinate with the state governments and Union territories to share information and align our efforts," the ADDL. Secretary said.

"Across the region, our missions and posts are operating round-the-clock helplines and issuing regular advisories with updated information for nationals, students, seafarers and resident Indian communities. They remain in close touch with a large number of Indian associations, organizations and Indian companies spread across the region," he added.

Mahajan emphasised assistance being extended on the ground to Indian nationals amid the escalating tensions.

"They (the missions and posts) are proactively assisting Indian nationals, including facilitation for visas, consular services, facilitating transit through neighbouring countries where air restrictions apply and providing logistical support where required," he said.

The ADDL. Secretary said that the government has given high priority to the welfare of Indian students in the Gulf countries.

"Welfare of Indian students in the Gulf countries is of high priority for us. Every effort is being made to ensure that students' academic year is not impacted. Our missions are in regular touch and are proactively coordinating with the local authorities, Indian schools in the region, concerned educational boards and for JEE and NEET examinations with the National Testing Agency to address the concerns of students," Mahajan noted.

He also underlined the government's efforts for Indian seafarers, saying, "We are paying special attention to the welfare of the Indian crew members on vessels across the region. Our missions continue to provide support to them, including coordination with local authorities, extending consular assistance, facilitating communication with their families in India and facilitating requests for return to India."

Providing an update on travel and flight details amidst the conflict, Mahajan said, "Flights continue to operate from the region to India from countries where airspace is open. Since February 28, around 7,30,000 passengers have travelled from the region to India."

He added that around 90 flights are expected to operate from the UAE to India.

He said, "Airlines continue to operate limited non-scheduled flights based on operational and safety considerations between the UAE and India. Around 90 flights are expected to operate from the UAE to India today. "

On regional connectivity, Mahajan said, "Flights are operating from various airports in Saudi Arabia and Oman to different destinations in India. With the Qatar airspace partially open, Qatar Airways is expected to operate around 8 to 10 flights to India today."

Highlighting disruptions amidst the conflict, he said, "Kuwait airspace remains closed. Jazeera Airways of Kuwait and Kuwait Airways are operating non-scheduled commercial flights from Dammam airport in Saudi Arabia to various destinations in India. Bahrain airspace remains closed. Gulf Air of Bahrain is operating non-scheduled commercial flights from Dammam airport of Saudi Arabia to various destinations in India."

On evacuation and alternate routes, he said, "Due to flight restrictions and airspace closure, we continue to facilitate travel of Indian nationals from Israel through Egypt and Jordan to India, from Iran through Armenia and Azerbaijan to India, from Iraq through Jordan and Saudi Arabia to India and from Kuwait and Bahrain through Saudi Arabia to India."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
The focus on students is crucial. My cousin is in medical college in Oman. The fact they are coordinating for NEET/JEE exams shows they are thinking about long-term impact, not just immediate evacuation. Good job MEA.
A
Aman W
While the efforts are commendable, I hope the communication on the ground is as smooth as described. During past crises, helplines were often jammed. Hope they have scaled up capacity sufficiently this time.
S
Sarah B
The logistical details are impressive—coordinating flights from Dammam for Kuwaiti/Bahrain airlines shows real on-ground problem solving. The Gulf is home to millions of Indians, their safety is paramount.
V
Vikram M
Seafarers are often forgotten in these situations. Glad to see specific mention of support for crew members on vessels. Their families in Kerala and Goa will breathe easier.
K
Karthik V
7.3 lakh passengers since Feb 28 is a massive number. It shows the scale of the Indian diaspora in the Gulf. The government seems to have a handle on the evacuation process. Fingers crossed the situation de-escalates.

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