119 Indians, 5 foreigners stranded on Diamond Princess reach Delhi

119 Indians, 5 foreigners stranded on Diamond Princess reach Delhi

119 Indians, 5 foreigners stranded on Diamond Princess reach Delhi

The special Air India flight arriving in New Delhi on February 27, bringing back 119 Indians and five foreign nationals who were stranded on board the Diamond Princess cruise ship docked off at Yokohama in Japan. (Photo Courtesy: @MoHFW_INDIA/Twitter)

 

NEW DELHI, February  27 (IANS): A special Air India flight arrived in New Delhi on Thursday, bringing back 119 Indians and five foreign nationals who were stranded on board the Diamond Princess cruise ship docked off at Yokohama in Japan.

 

A Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) statement said that apart from the 113 crew members and six passengers of India, two Sri Lankans, and one national each of Nepal, South Africa and Peru were evacuated.

 

The foreigners were evacuated "in line with India's neighbourhood first policy and Indo-Pacific vision", the government said.

 

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar also said in a tweet: "Air India flight has just landed in Delhi from Tokyo, carrying 119 Indians and 5 nationals from Sri Lanka, Nepal, South Africa and Peru who were quarantined onboard the #DiamondPrincess due to #COVID19. Appreciate the facilitation of Japanese authorities. Thank you @airindiain once again." Meanwhile, all the evacuees will undergo a 14-day quarantine at a facility set up by the Indian Army in Manesar, Haryana.

 

Three Indian crew members didn't board the special flight and conveyed their wish to continue their stay on the cruise ship to complete the period of extended quarantine put in place by the Japanese government, the MEA statement added.

 

Out of the total 138 Indian nationals originally on-board the Diamond Princess, 16 Indian crew members have tested positive for the coronavirys and were receiving necessary medical care and treatment at the onshore medical facilities in Japan.

 

The government said that the Embassy of India in Tokyo has established contact with patients and is continuously following-up on their recovery.

 

The ship was put under quarantine by the Japanese government on February 5 for 14 days, as one of the passengers who had disembarked from the ship tested positive for the deadly virus.

 

The quarantine period was extended by Japan as the crew members were performing their regular duties during the initial quarantine period of 14 days.

 

Minister hails evacuations 

Union Health Minister Harsh Vardhan, here on Thursday, hailed the coordination between various wings of government and services for evacuation of Indians and foreign nationals from coronavirus-hit zones.

 

He said 124 evacuees from Japan and 119 from China had been quarantined at Manesar and Chawla, respectively.

 

Health Ministry officials of the rank of Joint Secretary and above are visiting states to assess their preparedness to tackle COVID-19. "These visits will ensure strengthening of the state surveillance machinery and address their concerns. A checklist has been provided to them for compliance. They will submit the report by March 2," he said.

 

As many as 4,82,927 passengers have been screened from 4,787 flights. Screening at 21 airports, 12 major and 65 minor seaports and land crossings, particularly bordering Nepal, is on.

 

Passengers are being further monitored through IDSP network on a daily basis. At present, 23,531 passengers are under community surveillance through IDSP.