You are here: HomeNews2019 09 12Article 780346

General News of Thursday, 12 September 2019

Source: abcnewsgh.com

Saudi Arabia deports eight more Ghanaians

Assist. Supt. Barbara Sam, PRO, KIA Assist. Supt. Barbara Sam, PRO, KIA

Eight more Ghanaians deported from Saudi Arabia for staying in the country illegally have arrived in Ghana, ABC News can report.

This follows the deportation of 22 other Ghanaians from Saudi Arabia in the past five days after they were detained in the country for four months.

Assistant Superintendent of Immigration (ASI), Barbara Sam, in charge of Public Relations at the Kotoka International Airport (KIA) confirmed the arrival of the eight deportees in an interview with ABC News Wednesday.

She, however, declined to give further details about the eight deportees as she was not in the position to do so.

“Almost every day we receive some arrivals. This is not mass deportation so we have some of them arriving individually. We have been informed that eight more will be arriving today so we are ready to receive them,” ASI Sam had said prior to the arrival of the deportees Wednesday noon.

Later in the day, she confirmed to ABC News that the expected deportees had arrived.

There has been an increase in the deportation of Ghanaians from a number of countries including Saudi Arabia in the past month, most of whom are females who went in search of greener pastures.

In August this year, 12 Ghanaian females were deported from Saudi Arabia for staying in the country without relevant documentation.

Barely three weeks later, 22 others were also been deported from Saudi Arabia into the country on the same grounds of illegal stay.

The deportees, all of whom arrived in the country within a week, comprised of one male and 22 females between the ages of 21 and 38.

A release by the GIS to announce their arrival indicated that the deportees, who had lived in Saudi Arabia since 2015, worked as domestic help and drivers during their stay.

According to a report by the GIS, over 2,000 young Ghanaian women were stranded in Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Lebanon barely five months after reaching the countries after being recruited by fake recruitment agencies that promised them lucrative jobs.