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With one small bag and little to show for his 13 years in Qatar, Roshan Kumar reached Katmandu on the
morning of October 18.
Around 7 a.m. the day prior, he stepped out of the detention centre, what he calls the jail. I was worried
my name was not on the list last two days, but it was on the emergency list. They are taking me to the
airport now. The excitement is palpable.
A few days earlier, a Qatar-based civil society organisation managed to pay the money required to fund
his ticket to Kathmandu.
But Roshans story started much before this. About 13 years earlier. You can read more about his story
here on Migrant-Rights.org.
Roshan Kumar of Nepal has been in Qatar for 19 years, but to say that he has lived in Qatar
would be too wide a statement. The last time he had been home was in 1996 and since 2001,
he has been in and out of jails and detention centres, and has headed to the airport half a
dozen times only to be stopped at immigration.
For the last 17 months, he has been in Block 7 of the Deportation and Detention center a
place of hope as far as he is concerned, as its one step away from taking a flight to his home
country, to see his wife and his three children after 17 long years. His youngest son was just a
babe in arms when he left home.
reached Kathmandu yet. However, several flight delays and long transits later, Roshan landed in
Kathmandu, and took a solo taxi ride through Kathmandu to reach home.
My country, so I cant forget the route, but so much has changed. And when I reached home, I saw my
family. Now all my sisters are home. Everyone is here, he said on a phone call, straining to be heard over
all the noise and revelry in the background. His children are now young adults 18, 21 and 24.
"Roshan's case raises some very serious questions about why the Ministry of Interior was unable to secure
his departure itself he should have been able to go home long ago. It also highlights the apparent
isolation people in the detention centre. Roshan should have had legal aid to help him sort out his court
issue. Instead he was marooned in a centre which does not even allow detainees to have mobile phones,
says Lynch, underlining the systemic legal and administrative issues migrants endure.
Meanwhile, Roshan, on a call from Kathmandu, makes a plea:
There are so many people in the detention centre. Some have committed crimes, but there
are few who are there for no reason at all, and no one to help them. Someone should help
them. All of you should help.
Posted In Documentation, GCC, Nepal, Qatar, Slavery, Workers, Working conditions
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