Tag: Nepali

  • UK secretly deported 100 Nepali guards who protected staff in Kabul

    UK secretly deported 100 Nepali guards who protected staff in Kabul

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    More than 100 Nepali guards who risked their lives to protect British embassy staff in Afghanistan before the Taliban seized back control were secretly returned to Nepal against their wishes shortly after being airlifted to safety in the UK, the Guardian can reveal.

    Hundreds of Nepali nationals and a smaller number of Indian nationals who protected key institutions in Kabul were brought to the UK on an RAF flight during the chaotic evacuation of the Afghan capital by western countries in August 2021, as victorious Taliban forces closed in.

    It has now emerged that days after they arrived in the UK, more than 100 of these evacuees were forcibly removed to their home countries even though many had been issued with six-month visas on arrival.

    The Guardian has interviewed some of the deported guards, who believed their lives were in danger in Nepal. Some were forcibly removed from hotel rooms in the UK in areas including Northampton, Reading, Oxford and Swindon before completing what at the time was a mandatory 10-day period of Covid-19 pandemic hotel quarantine for new arrivals in the UK.

    Nepal was designated as a red-list country, with UK government instructions that people should not travel there, when the former guards were flown back in 2021.

    Some have managed to find their way back to the UK since 2021 and have claimed asylum.

    In March, at least 10 Nepali guards who protected the British embassy staff in Kabul and were still living in the UK were arrested in a raid at their west London hotel and detained by the Home Office.

    After the detentions came to light, the Home Office issued a statement saying that the removals of those detained had been paused “pending further review”. It said the evacuees were flown from Kabul as “a gesture of goodwill” with the understanding that they were expected to return to their home countries.

    More than 100 of those forcibly removed from the UK have written to Rudra Dhakal, a British resident of Nepali heritage who is supporting them, with the Home Office, Foreign Office, Ministry of Defence, Nepalese government and UNHCR copied in, in a letter titled “Urgent appeal for further humanitarian protection in the UK”.

    The deported guards wrote: “We were misled by the UK border security force. Therefore they forcefully deported us to Nepal against our will. At the time of our deportation we were never given the choice of staying in the UK for further humanitarian protection.”

    Dhakal, who is continuing to support the guards, said: “These bravest of the brave veterans said they provided frontline security … but they were left behind in the end. They were used as proxies on the frontline of the war.”

    One of those deported is Deepak Punmagar, 42. “We were always under threat in Afghanistan,” he told the Guardian. “We didn’t know if we would survive. When I arrived in the UK I felt safe but I was deported to Nepal on 17 August.”

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    Some of the Nepali guards evacuated from Kabul in 2021 who were doing almost identical work in Afghanistan as those forcibly removed were granted indefinite leave to remain in the UK, including two of the 10 arrested in March, who remain in immigration detention.

    Jamie Bell, of Duncan Lewis Solicitors, who is representing some of those currently detained, said: “These brave men were evacuated from Afghanistan and thereafter had their applications for permanent leave prepared and processed in the UK. They were never told of a gesture of goodwill and there was no understanding that they were liable to removal, let alone detained after a morning raid on their hotel. It is deeply concerning now to hear how many have been affected by this appalling situation.”

    A Home Office spokesperson said: “We remain committed to providing protection for vulnerable and at-risk people fleeing Afghanistan and so far we have brought around 24,500 people to safety in the UK.

    “A number of Nepalese nationals who were not deemed eligible for consideration under ACRS [the Afghan citizens resettlement scheme] were evacuated from Afghanistan as a gesture of goodwill. This came with the understanding that once in the UK, these individuals would arrange and be offered support for onward travel to the country of their nationality.”

    The Nepalese embassy has been approached for comment.

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    #secretly #deported #Nepali #guards #protected #staff #Kabul
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Qatar-based Nepali expat wins Rs 51 Cr in Big Ticket Abu Dhabi

    Qatar-based Nepali expat wins Rs 51 Cr in Big Ticket Abu Dhabi

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    Abu Dhabi: A Qatar-based Nepali expatriate won the grand prize of 23 million Dirhams (Rs 51,49,24,920) in the Big Ticket Abu Dhabi weekly draw on Friday.

    The winner of the draw, Ranjit Kumar Pal— bagged the prize after buying ticket 232936 for the raffle draw number 248, which he had purchased online on January 16.

    Ranjit Kumar Pal, works at a money exchange company in Qatar. He has been living in Qatar from the past seven years.

    Pal has been purchasing Big Tickets for the past 15 months with a group of 20 friends and he plans to continue doing so.

    “I am thrilled. I hope to spend this money on my family back home in Nepal,” Pal was quoted as saying by Khaleej Times.

    Pal is automatically entered into the weekly electronic draw and has a chance to win 1 kg of 24 carat gold.

    In the next draw on March 3, the lucky winner will get 15 million Dirhams (Rs 33,58,20,600). The second prize is one million Dirhams (Rs 2,23,88,040), the third is 100,000 Dirhams (Rs 22,38,804) and the fourth is 50,000 Dirhams (Rs 11,19,402).

    Tickets can be purchased online through the Big Ticket website or by visiting the store counters at Abu Dhabi International Airport and Al Ain Airport.

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    #Qatarbased #Nepali #expat #wins #Big #Ticket #Abu #Dhabi

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • UAE: 2 Filipino, Nepali expats take home Rs 22L each in Mahzooz Draw

    UAE: 2 Filipino, Nepali expats take home Rs 22L each in Mahzooz Draw

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    Abu Dhabi: Three United Arab Emirates (UAE) based expatriates from the Philippines and Nepal won the grand prize of Dirhams 100,000 (Rs 22,21,113) in Mahzooz’s 113th Super Saturday draw.

    The winner of the draw— Marc jed Visande Legario and Kervin Cabalar Lovitos from the Philippines, Faguni Ray Kurmi from Nepal— matched five out of the six winning numbers during the weekly live draw held on Saturday, January 28, 2023.

    Mahzooz’s 113th Super Saturday draw saw 1,670 participants win Dirhams 1,872,600 (Rs 4,15,91,887) in total prize money.

    While the grand prize of Dirhams 10 million went unclaimed this week, the draws saw up to 31 participants match four out of five numbers and take part in the second prize of Dirhams 1,000,000 (Rs 2,22,11,850), securing Dirhams 32,258 (Rs 7,16,549) each.

    Entrants can participate in Mahzooz by registering via the Mahzooz website and purchasing a bottle of water for Dirhams 35 (Rs 777) which enables them to enter various draws, the Fantastic Friday Epic Draw and the Super Saturday Draws, through two different select set numbers.

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    #UAE #Filipino #Nepali #expats #home #22L #Mahzooz #Draw

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Sikkim to file petition in SC on mention of Sikkimese Nepali community as foreigners

    Sikkim to file petition in SC on mention of Sikkimese Nepali community as foreigners

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    Gangtok: Sikkim Chief Minister Prem Singh Tamang on Monday said his government will file a review petition in the Supreme Court with a prayer for rectification of its “inadvertent mention of the Sikkimese Nepali community as foreigners” in an order two weeks ago.

    “Let me reiterate and reassure that no injustice will be meted out to anyone with regard to the inadvertent mention of Sikkimese Nepali Community as foreigners in the observation part and not in the judgment part of the verdict of Hon’ble Apex Court in the matter of income tax exemption for the old settlers of Sikkim,” he said in a social media post.

    “I express my solidarity not only with Sikkimese Nepali Community but with all the communities of our dear state. We all are one, and will always remain united,” Tamang said.

    The state government has already initiated steps for filing the review petition for addressing the concerns of the Sikkimese Nepali community, the chief minister said.

    Tamang said he has already spoken to Union Law Minister Kiren Rijiju and the latter has assured that the Government of India will support the review petition of the Government of Sikkim, and if required will file a review petition itself as well on similar lines.

    Tamang appealed to all people to be patient and keep faith in the judiciary. It is just a matter of time that this issue will be addressed for the good of one and all, he said.

    The Supreme Court in its order dated January 13, 2023, had directed the Centre to amend the definition of ‘Sikkimese’ in Section 10 (26AAA) of Income Tax Act 1961 for including income tax exemption to all Indian citizens domiciled in Sikkim on or before the merger date of April 26, 1975.

    “The Union of India shall make an amendment to Explanation to Section 10 (26AAA) of IT Act, 1961, so as to suitably include a clause to extend the exemption from payment of income tax to all Indian citizens domiciled in Sikkim on or before 26th April, 1975.

    “The reason for such a direction is to save explanation from unconstitutionality and to ensure parity in the facts and circumstances of the case,” said the apex court while disposing of two writ petitions filed by Association of Old Settlers of Sikkim (AOSS) and others with a prayer for grant of income tax exemption at par with the Sikkimese people as given under Section 10 (26AAA) of IT Act following an amendment in 2008 by the Parliament.

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    #Sikkim #file #petition #mention #Sikkimese #Nepali #community #foreigners

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )