NEW DELHI :
Students describe the experience in Iran as a nightmare and say, they saw missiles, heard bombs in neighbourhood
Thanks Indian Government for evacuating them first to Armenia and then bringing them back home
“WE SAW missiles in the sky and
heard bombs in our neighbourhood. We were petrified,”
said MBBS student Mir Khalif,
his voice still trembling with fear,
as he stepped out of the Delhi
airport after being evacuated
from war-hit Iran under
Operation Sindhu.
Khalif arrived in the national
capital early on Thursday in the
first evacuation flight carrying
110 Indian students of the Urmia
University of Medical Sciences
in Iran’s Urmia city as part of the
special operation launched by
the Indian Government in
response to the escalating IranIsrael conflict.
The students, including 90
from Jammu and Kashmir,
were moved from Tehran to
Armenia earlier this week as
explosions and aerial attacks
rocked Iranian cities.
The rescue was coordinated by the
Indian Embassy.
Khalif described the experience in Iran as a nightmare and
thanked the Indian Government
for evacuating them first to
Armenia and then bringing
them back home.
“We saw missiles and
heard bombings. It was a war
zone. Our building shook during the attacks. I hope no student has to face what we did,”
he said.
“There are students still stuck
in Iran. They are being relocated to safer places. We hope they
will also be airlifted to India
soon,” he added.
Varta, a resident of Kashmir,
recalled the fear she lived
through. “We were the first ones
to be evacuated from Iran. The
situation was quite critical. We
were terrified. We thank the
Indian Government and the
Indian Embassy, which worked
swiftly to bring us here.
“Our neighbourhood was
attacked. When the Indian
Government came to our
doorstep, it felt like home,” she
told PTI Videos.
Huzaif Malik, another student
from Kashmir, told PTI, “There
are 90 of us from Kashmir. We
landed this morning, and now
we are heading to Kashmir in
sleeper buses. Some students
also left for their homes by
flights.” Ali Akbar, who hails from
Delhi, said the destruction was
visible everywhere.
“We saw a missile and a drone
fall from the sky while travelling
in a bus. Tehran is in ruins.
The images on the news are real,
the situation is very bad,” he
said.
Minister of State for External
Affairs Kirti Vardhan Singh
reached the Delhi airport to
receive the students.
Later, in a post on X, he said,
“Warmly welcomed home the
first group of 110 Indian nationals evacuated from Iran as
part of Operation Sindhu,
reaffirming India’s steadfast
commitment to the safety
and well-being of its citizens
abroad.”