City
Epaper

Five workers from J&K killed in Kuwait road accident

By IANS | Updated: April 9, 2026 18:55 IST

Jammu, April 9 Five workers belonging to J&K have been killed in a road accident in Kuwait, and ...

Open in App

Jammu, April 9 Five workers belonging to J&K have been killed in a road accident in Kuwait, and the families demanded the return of their bodies on Thursday.

The five persons comprised one from Thanamandi in Rajouri and four from Surankote in Poonch.

The families of the killed workers have appealed to authorities for the return of their bodies.

The victims, all reported to be labourers working in Kuwait, had travelled to the Gulf country to earn a livelihood for their families when the accident occurred. The incident has triggered grief across their native areas, particularly in Thanamandi and Surankote, where relatives and residents are mourning the loss of the deceased.

Family members of the victims have urged the Jammu and Kashmir Lt Governor and the Chief Minister to facilitate the return of the bodies at the earliest so that last rites can be performed in their hometowns.

Reports said that all five people were killed after two vehicles collided on a Kuwait highway. The identities of all the deceased are expected to be confirmed formally as authorities coordinate with relevant agencies and diplomatic channels.

Locals from Jammu and Kashmir frequently migrate to Gulf countries, including Kuwait, in search of employment, particularly in labour-intensive sectors, to support their families back home.

Thousands of students typically visit Iran for low-cost education and cultural ties, with many now facing disruptions to their studies and livelihood, including the Kashmiri handicraft export sector.

Approximately 1,200 Kashmiri students, primarily studying medicine (MBBS), were recently evacuated from Iran due to regional conflicts, with most safely returning via Azerbaijan by early April 2026.

Most of these Kashmiri students were studying medicine in cities like Qom and Isfahan.

Following regional instability and a ceasefire in early April 2026, about 1,100 students returned home, with the remainder departing through the Azerbaijan border.

Iran is a popular choice for Kashmiri students due to low tuition fees, English-medium programmes, and close cultural/religious affinities, particularly for those from Shia communities.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketPakistan to Host Zimbabwe in Historic White-Ball Series Ahead of T20 World Cup 2026 - Check Schedule

BusinessPM Modi highlights World Bank chief Ajay Banga’s praise for India model

NationalBengal 2026 polls: EC removes 149 lower-level police officers from election duty

Other Sports'Don't overthink': Mukul reveals Pant's advice that sparked his heroics against KKR

BusinessIndia-UK trade deal likely by May 1; Europe deal expected by year-end

National Realted Stories

NationalNCERT unveils new Class 9 Hindi textbook 'Ganga': A fusion of devotion, valour, and modern values

National'Womaniya' initiative leads 2.1 lakh women MSEs onto GeM with 13.7 lakh orders

NationalThree-year-old boy trapped in borewell in MP's Ujjain; rescue operation underway

NationalJustice Yashwant Varma of Allahabad HC resigns

NationalTelangana HC grants one week anticipatory bail to Pawan Khera in case filed by Assam CM's wife amid passport row