City
Epaper

180 migrant labourers to be airlifted to Raipur from Bengaluru

By ANI | Updated: June 3, 2020 20:55 IST

180 migrant labourers from Chattisgarh, who were stranded in Karnataka, will be airlifted in a chartered flight to Raipur on June 4 amid the COVID-19 induced nationwide lockdown.

Open in App

180 migrant labourers from Chattisgarh, who were stranded in Karnataka, will be airlifted in a chartered flight to Raipur on June 4 amid the COVID-19 induced nationwide lockdown.

"The 180 migrant labourers from Chattisgarh who were stranded in Bengaluru and other towns of Karnataka will be flying back in a private chartered flight," said the state government in a statement. The Chattisgarh migrants will be reaching the Bengaluru airport at 8.30 pm tonight.

Recently, the Jharkhand government also airlifted 180 stranded migrants from Andaman and Nicobar Island.

The Ministry of Civil Aviation has resumed the domestic air travel by non-scheduled and private operators from May 25, which was halted for over two months in the wake of COVID-19 spread.

( With inputs from ANI )

Tags: Ministry Of Civil AviationUnion ministry of civil aviation
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalMinistry of Civil Aviation Seeks Detailed Report From Vistara Amid Over 100 Flight Cancellations and Delays

NationalSurat Airport in Gujarat Declared As International Airport

NationalMumbai Airport boosts capacity, expands security check area at T2

InternationalDGCA, EASA join hands to propel unmanned aircraft systems, air mobility

NationalAyodhya airport will be completed by September

National Realted Stories

NationalMadhya Pradesh: Fire Breaks Out at Plastic Warehouse in Gwalior’s Transport Nagar; No Casualties Reported (Watch Video)

NationalJaipur: Cong organises ‘Jai Hind Yatra’ to honour Armed Forces for 'Operation Sindoor'

NationalBihar artist’s unique tribute to ‘Operation Sindoor’

NationalHimachal Guv reviews state's preparedness amid India-Pakistan tension

NationalGujarat: Train services affected amid rising India-Pakistan tensions