HomeNewsPoliticsIt’s high time India got its emigration act together

It’s high time India got its emigration act together

India needs to immediately update The Emigration Act, 1983, and should be prepared to have a flawless SOP in place to assist Indians abroad in the time of a crisis 

March 23, 2022 / 13:34 IST
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Of the 76,548 international students enrolled in Ukraine's universities, 18,000 are from India. (Illustration by Suneesh K.)
Of the 76,548 international students enrolled in Ukraine's universities, 18,000 are from India. (Illustration by Suneesh K.)

Over the years, India has done a fairly good job in the safe return of its citizens during the time of a crisis. However, could India have handled the repatriation of its students in the wake of the Russia-Ukraine war, and its citizens from different countries in 2020 after the COVID-19 outbreak in a better manner? Migration experts feel so.

“If we had an updated Emigration Act and a migration policy, we could have managed the rescue operations of Indian students from Ukraine without this confusion, says Rafeek Ravuther, a Kerala-based migrant rights activist for the last two decades.

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The lack of an updated policy meant that when a crisis came our officials in the Indian embassies in Ukraine, Poland, Hungary, and Romania were clueless in the initial days. The lack of a Standard Operating Procedure added to the confusion, Ravuther told this author.

India still manages migration, including student migration, on the basis of with The Emigration Act, 1983. Unfortunately — rather surprisingly — this Act does not have norms on student migration, and student visa. In 2019, the Government of India prepared an updated version of the Act, The Emigration Bill, 2019.