DFA repatriates over 327,000 Filipinos in 2020

A total of 264 repatriated Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) from the Kingdom of Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates are now back home as they arrived at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) on January 1, 2021. (Presidential Photo)

The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) today reported that its repatriation efforts in 2020 brought home a total of 327,511 overseas Filipinos. DFA said land-based repatriates make up 231,537 or 70.7% of the total numbers, coming from at least 90 countries around the world. The remaining 29.3% or 95,974 are seafarers from more than 150 cruise ships, oil tankers, and other bulk vessels. The breakdown of repatriates traveling or transiting through these regions are as follows: Middle East,  228,893 or 69.89%; Asia & the Pacific, 36,868 or 11.26%; Americas, 30,971 or 9.46%; Europe, 28,909 or 8.83%; and Africa, 1,870 or 0.57%.

Since Feb. 9, 2020 –the day when DFA mounted its first COVID-19 repatriation flight to Wuhan, China–the department has been relentless in bringing home overseas Filipinos despite the multitude of challenges it faced. A 10-member team from DFA and the Department of Health personally flew to Wuhan when it was still the epicenter of COVID-19 in February. The pioneer mission brought home 30 Filipinos from the Chinese city. Also in February, a three-person rapid response team flew to Japan to assist the Philippine Embassy in Tokyo in the disembarkation and repatriation of Filipinos on board the COVID-19 stricken Diamond Princess cruise ship. This marked the beginning of the pandemic’s immediate impact on the cruise line industry where thousands of Filipino seafarers were working. When countries started to close their borders in March, the tourism industry was heavily hit and cruise line companies were forced to suspend their operations. From March-June 2020, DFA facilitated the daily arrival of chartered flights — each carrying hundreds of seafarers from cruise ships docked all over Europe, North America, and the Caribbean. Many of the repatriated seafarers have only been onboard their ships for weeks when the pandemic struck. They had no choice but to come home, without certainty as to when they will be called again for work. When businesses started to close shop because of the effects of the worldwide lockdown, the repatriation of our land-based overseas Filipinos followed suit. In April, DFA chartered flights to Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, Maldives, and Italy to bring home 1,096 distressed overseas Filipinos who lost their jobs and had no means to come home from those countries. Calls for repatriation from the Middle East came in May 2020 as the DFA sent its first sweeper flight to the Middle East, via Riyadh and Dammam, Saudi Arabia. This marked the beginning of the mass repatriation of more than 220,000 overseas Filipinos from the region. In June 2020, DFA sent a sweeper flight to Africa which stopped by Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya before heading home to the Philippines with 287 distressed overseas Filipinos on board. In August 2020, DFA was confronted with two Herculean tasks. First was the repatriation of our compatriots in Uzbekistan where the Philippines does not have an embassy, let alone an honorary consulate. Through the Philippine Embassy in Tehran and coordination with leaders of the Filipino community, DFA worked on the repatriation remotely but was nevertheless able to bring home 257 Filipinos. The second Herculean task was the need for a swift organization of a repatriation flight for the Filipino victims of the blast at Port of Beirut. DFA sent a chartered flight to Lebanon and brought home 386 repatriates, many of whom sustained injuries from the blast. Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. welcomed the repatriates personally upon their arrival at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport. In September, DFA also organized a goodwill mission to Lebanon. Together with the Chief of Presidential Protocol, DFA traveled to Beirut and brought 5,000 boxes of relief goods for our overseas Filipinos in Beirut. Medical supplies such as vitamins and face masks were also donated to various Lebanese hospitals and other non-government organizations. On the return flight, another 317 distressed Filipinos were repatriated.

Even as DFA entered its 8th consecutive month of repatriation efforts, October still marked several “firsts” — the mass repatriation of more than 500 Agrostudies students from Israel, the first repatriation of 92 OFWs from Benghazi, Libya since 2017, and the first-ever repatriation by sea from Indonesia of 40 Filipino fishermen via the BRP Tubbataha. In November 2020, nine Filipino seafarers were brought home by DFA after their shipping vessel was abandoned by its owner at the Port of Djibouti. DFA, in coordination with its missions abroad, lobbied hard with the Djibouti representatives in IMO in London, the United Nations in New York, and the Djibouti Embassy in Tokyo to allow the disembarkation of the Filipino crew of MV Arybbas on humanitarian grounds. They arrived safely in Manila last November after being stranded on board their vessel for more than 14 months. December 2020 marked the highest monthly total of repatriated overseas Filipinos at 51,770 despite the cancellation of several flights as a precautionary measure to the spread of the new COVID-19 strain. Sweeper flights were also organized to bring home distressed overseas Filipinos from Syria, Lebanon, Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, in time for the holiday season.

“While these are some of the highlights of DFA’s repatriation efforts for this year, let us not forget the tireless dedication of our DFA front-liners who facilitated the return and provided airport assistance to hundreds of medical repatriates, victims of trafficking-in-persons, unaccompanied minor children, and senior citizens who were repatriated by DFA this 2020. As we start a new year, DFA remains committed to its assistance-to-nationals mandate and renews its promise to bring home every Filipino who wishes to come home,” DFA Undersecretary for Migrant Workers’ Affairs Sarah Lou Arriola said.