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Trinidadian Students, Stranded In Jamaica And Barbados, To Return Home On Special Caribbean Airlines Flight

Trinidad and Tobago's National Security Minister, Stuart Young.

Trinidadian Students, Stranded In Jamaica And Barbados, To Return Home On Special Caribbean Airlines Flight

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad and Tobago, May 11, 2020 (CMC) – Trinidad and Tobago university students, in Jamaica and Barbados, wishing to return home, in light of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, will have to spend 14 days in quarantine, in both countries, before being allowed to board a special Caribbean Airlines flight, National Security Minister, Stuart Young, announced today.

Young, speaking at the daily news conference of the Ministry of Health, on the measures to prevent the spread of the virus that has killed more than 300,000 people worldwide, said that discussions are taking place, with the principals of the campuses of the University of the West Indies (UWI), on the issue.

Trinidad and Tobago closed its borders, as part of the measures to combat the spread of the virus and, over the last weekend, Prime Minister, Dr. Keith Rowley, hinted that the border issue would be re-examined in June, as part of the phased re-opening of the local economy.

Young said he had been receiving requests from nationals, in several cities across the world, seeking to return to Trinidad and Tobago, and in the case of the students at the two UWI campuses, “we are going to be putting things in place”.

“I am dealing with the principals of the various institutions in Barbados, Cave Hill, and in Mona, Jamaica. This morning, I had a conversation with the principal of the University of the West Indies, St. Augustine campus. What we will be going to be looking at is, in the first week of June, and we have already spoken to Caribbean Airlines (CAL), we will be planning an operation for Caribbean Airlines to go to both Barbados and Jamaica to bring back our local students,” Young disclosed.

Young added, there would be “an important condition” attached to the initiative.

“The students, who wish to come back, this will be coordinated by the principals of these various institutions in Barbados and Jamaica. It is not a personal reach-out to a minister and a personal reach out to anyone here, in Trinidad. We are going to carefully coordinate it with the principals in Barbados and in Jamaica.

“Every student, who wants to return, via this very careful operation, is going to be quarantined in Barbados, and in Jamaica, for 14 days, that is the first condition,” Young said, adding “we are then going to coordinate with Caribbean Airlines, once we ascertain the number”.

He said that when the students arrive in Trinidad and Tobago, they will be put into state quarantine for a further 14 days.

Young said he also wanted to debunk allegations that the government has abandoned nationals, including students overseas, during the pandemic, saying “what we have done is carefully managed, after getting the advice and consultation of public health experts here…and as you have been seeing, we are carefully managing those returning to Trinidad and Tobago”.

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