15 more Filipinos, including minors, repatriated from Libya

The Philippine Embassy in Tripoli sends off the latest batch of 15 Filipinos to be repatriated from Libya on Wednesday. The repatriates, who include five minors and two students from the Islamic Call College, will arrive in Manila on Thursday.
DFA/Richard delos Santos

MANILA, Philippines — The Philippine Embassy in Tripoli has assisted 15 more Filipinos in returning to Manila after clashes between rival factions in Libya broke out months ago.

The latest batch of repatriates from Libya, including five minors and two Islamic scholars, is the biggest batch the embassy assisted under the Department of Foreign Affairs and Department of Labor and Employment's repatriation program.

According to Embassy Chargè d’Affaires Elmer Cato, the repatriates are expected to arrive in Manila by Thursday afternoon.

"The Embassy, at the same time, reiterated its appeal to the more than 1,000 other Filipinos still in Tripoli to accept the government’s repatriation offer because of intensified fighting in the immediate outskirts of the capital," the DFA said in a statement.

"The Embassy also appealed to their families in the Philippines to convince them to accept the offer or to at least move themselves to safer ground," it added.

The embassy expressed serious concern over the situation of at least 40 Filipinos located in areas where fighting continues.

The embassy had also lost contact with at least 14 Filipinos working for a certain Al Nahr Company. They insisted on staying in the company's compound, which was struck by artillery rounds last week and left several foreign workers wounded.

At least 18 Filipino nurses are also still working at the Al Afia Clinic that was hit by mortar rounds last month, the DFA said.

Earlier this month, the DFA raised Alert Level 4 in Libya amid escalating violence. This is the highest alert level that the agency assigns to destinations and orders evacuation or mandatory repatriation of Filipinos.

Alert Level 4 is issued "when there is large-scale internal conflict or full-blown external attack," according to the DFA website. — Patricia Lourdes Viray

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