KARACHI/NEW DELHI: Pakistan has sent a jumbo jet and a naval frigate to evacuate its citizens and diplomatic staff stranded in war-torn Yemen, as Saudi-led airstrikes hammered Houthi rebel targets, officials said Sunday.
Pakistan’s ambassador to Yemen Irfan Shami told state television that 482 Pakistanis will be evacuated on the first flight.
“The plane has landed at Hodeidah and boarding has started. On seeing the plane landing, stranded Pakistanis expressed their happiness by clapping,” the ambassador told Pakistan Television.
Meanwhile, India said Sunday it was preparing to airlift stranded citizens from Yemen despite the bombing of the country’s main international airport.
Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj said on Twitter: “Today we got permission to fly from Sanaa for three hours a day. We will use this slot for evacuating our citizens every day.”
“The end of runway of Sanaa airport was damaged. That is repaired. It is now functional,” she said.
Some 4,100 Indians are currently in Yemen, including 3,100 in Sanaa, 500 in Aden and the rest around the country, the minister said.
Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was personally monitoring the evacuation and had directed the officials to ensure safe return of every citizen, a spokesman of Sharif’s office said.
Earlier, PIA (Pakistan International Airlines) spokesman Hanif Rana told AFP that a 747 aircraft had been flown to Hodeidah.
A second, smaller plane with a capacity of 230 passengers was also being kept on stand by in Pakistan, he said.
A frigate had also been sent to assist.
“A Pakistan navy frigate today left Karachi to rescue stranded Pakistanis in Yemen,” a naval spokesman told AFP.
The frigate will remain on stand-by in the Gulf of Aden with full preparedness and, if the need arose, will participate in the evacuations, he said.
Pakistani Foreign Secretary Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry said late Saturday that around 3,000 Pakistanis lived in Yemen with some 1,000 trying to leave the country.
A convoy of 16 buses was carrying stranded Pakistanis from the capital of Sanaa to Hodeidah, he said, while some remained stranded in the southern government stronghold of Aden and were awaiting a lull in the fighting so they too could be rescued.
India will also send a ship to help evacuate its workers and other citizens, many of whom are nurses from the southern state of Kerala, she said.
Kerala Chief Minister Oommen Chandy said on Friday that New Delhi planned to send two ships to take the Indians to nearby Djibouti, from where they would be airlifted.
Chandy said workers had complained of having their passports and other documents seized by hospital authorities, preventing them from leaving.
India’s government last week asked all its nationals to leave Yemen.
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