There are 173 Australian children currently stranded in India separated from their parents

A Senate inquiry has been told there are 173 Australian children in India separated from their parents, who are desperate to reunite on home soil.

Children wearing face masks play during a one day curfew to curb the spread of COVID-19 in Srinagar.

Children wearing face masks are seen in Srinagar, India. Source: Sipa USA Idrees Abbas/SOPA Images/Sipa

Parents are pleading with the federal government to develop a plan to help reunite them with their children who are stranded in India.

The Senate's COVID-19 inquiry was told on Friday there are 173 unaccompanied Australian minors in India.

The inquiry heard from parents who are desperate to be reunited with their children, who are staying with family in India as the nation grapples with a record-breaking virus outbreak.

Qantas does not allow children to fly unaccompanied on repatriation flights.

Harjinder's three-year-old son has been with his grandparents in India since September 2019.

Drisya and Dilin have not seen their five-year-old daughter, who is also with grandparents, for more than a year.

The couple moved to Australia in early 2020 while their daughter was visiting her grandparents, with the pandemic and travel restrictions putting their reunion in disarray.
"There are many parents who have been separated from their children," Dilin said.

"I plead, on behalf of all of them, to please consider the option of bringing in minors unaccompanied, either through repatriation flights or even private chartered flights."

Senior Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade official Lynette Wood said a flight specifically for children had not been considered.

Officials were working directly with families to sort out options, she said.

Australia's High Commissioner to India Barry O'Farrell said 20 unaccompanied minors had been helped home since December.

Strict limits on the number of people who can return to Australia each week have been in place during the health crisis, with a ban currently in place on flights from India.

The inquiry also heard from Melbourne man Sunny, who remains stranded in Delhi with his elderly mother.

He travelled to India last May to help care for his father, who died while Sunny was still in quarantine after landing.

Sunny and his mother have been trying to return since then.

"We stay holed in at the house and fear for our lives on a constant basis," he told the inquiry.

"We think it just a matter of time when we may get infected and get into serious trouble, considering the healthcare system here is overwhelmed and almost dysfunctional.

"People are dying on the streets because of lack of oxygen. The Australian government should not abandon us in this life-threatening situation."
Speaking to reporters in Brisbane on Saturday, Labor's leader in the Senate Penny Wong said Mr Morrison "doesn't have a plan to get Australians home".

"If he had a plan to get Australians home, we would not have nearly 10,000 Australians stranded in India. We would not have had Australians stranded overseas and we would not have 173 kids - unaccompanied minors - who are stranded in India," Ms Wong said.

"Now I want to say this: we have been calling, since the borders have been closed, just after the borders were closed, for safe national quarantine. Because the only way you keep Australians safe both here and overseas is to have a quarantine system that is fit for purpose.

"Scott Morrison has refused to put one in place and as a consequence of that people are stranded."

India recorded another grim global world record on Thursday with more than 412,000 new coronavirus cases and almost 4000 deaths.

There are 9,500 Australians who want to return home, including 950 considered vulnerable.

Sunny and his mother had a flight booked to return in July last year to Melbourne, which was delayed and then ultimately cancelled because of Victoria's extended lockdown.

They were then meant to return last week but the government announced a ban on flights.

The Morrison government is facing widespread backlash after it threatened jail and fines for people who tried to beat the ban.

Repatriation flights will slowly restart on 15 May but questions remain over when commercial flights will begin.


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4 min read
Published 7 May 2021 7:03pm
Updated 22 February 2022 6:23pm
Source: AAP, SBS


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