What Happened
- The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) confirmed that over 52,000 Indian nationals safely returned to India from the Gulf and West Asia region between March 1–7, 2026, amid the ongoing US-Iran-Israel conflict.
- Of those who returned, 32,107 travelled on Indian carriers; the rest used foreign airlines operating special and non-scheduled flights following the partial reopening of airspace in the region.
- Indian missions across the Gulf and West Asia have issued detailed advisories, set up 24x7 emergency helplines, and established a special control room to coordinate assistance.
- More flights are planned in the coming days as the airspace situation evolves.
- The MEA confirmed that Indian embassies and consulates in the affected countries — including Iran, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, and Qatar — are maintaining continuous contact with Indian nationals and monitoring the situation.
- The Indian government has set up an Emergency Management and Coordination Centre to track Indians in the region and facilitate return.
Static Topic Bridges
India's Diaspora in West Asia: Scale and Vulnerability
India has the world's largest diaspora (approximately 32 million people as of 2024, per the Ministry of External Affairs). The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries — Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, and Oman — collectively host approximately 9 million Indian nationals, making the Gulf the single largest concentration of the Indian diaspora.
These workers are primarily employed in construction, hospitality, healthcare, and domestic services. The Gulf also sends back the largest share of India's annual remittances: India is the world's top remittance recipient, receiving over US$120 billion in 2023, with the Gulf region accounting for over 35–40% of total inflows. A sustained Gulf crisis thus threatens both Indian nationals' safety and a major source of India's foreign exchange earnings.
- India's overseas diaspora: ~32 million (largest in the world as of 2024)
- Indian nationals in GCC countries: ~9 million (Saudi Arabia ~2.4M, UAE ~3.5M, Kuwait ~1M, Qatar ~750K, Bahrain ~350K, Oman ~700K)
- India's remittances 2023: US$125 billion (world's largest recipient)
- Gulf share of remittances: estimated 35–40% of total annual inflows
- Remittance-to-GDP ratio: approximately 3.4% of India's GDP
- Kerala, UP, Rajasthan, AP, Tamil Nadu: states with highest Gulf migrant populations
Connection to this news: The scale of Indian evacuation — 52,000 in one week — reflects the extraordinary scale of India's Gulf diaspora and the speed with which the MEA mobilised to protect them once partial airspace reopened.
MEA's Emergency Response Architecture
India's Ministry of External Affairs has developed a structured emergency response architecture for overseas crises, refined through successive operations: Kuwait 1990, Lebanon 2006, Libya 2011, Yemen 2015, Ukraine 2022. Key components include:
- Emergency Management and Coordination Centre (EMCC): round-the-clock crisis coordination hub in MEA headquarters, New Delhi
- Overseas Indian Community Welfare Fund (OICWF): finances emergency evacuations and distress assistance
- Indian Community Welfare Fund (ICWF): maintained at each Indian mission abroad for on-ground welfare support
- MEA Control Room: activated at mission level during crises; issues advisories, manages helplines
- Air India / Air India Express: state carrier deployed for evacuation flights under government directive
- Indian Navy coordination: for sea-based evacuations when airports are non-functional
- ICWF: maintained at every Indian mission; covers emergency travel, repatriation of mortal remains, legal assistance
- OICWF: central fund; provides up to ₹5 lakh emergency support to distressed Indian workers abroad
- MEA's 24x7 helpline: +91-11-2301-2113 (national control room)
- Air India commanded by government: can be operationalised for mass evacuation flights as non-scheduled service
- Passports and Visa Division, MEA: manages emergency travel documents for stranded nationals
Connection to this news: The 52,000 figure reflects the MEA's emergency architecture functioning at scale — coordinating Indian and foreign carriers, managing embassy helplines across 7+ countries simultaneously, and establishing the control room within hours of the crisis escalating.
Historical Precedent: India's Major Evacuation Operations
India's evacuation track record provides crucial context for the current Gulf operation. The 2026 Gulf evacuation — 52,000 in one week via commercial flights — is comparable in scale to India's largest-ever civilian evacuation, the Vande Bharat Mission during COVID-19 (which repatriated approximately 6 million Indians from over 100 countries across 2020–21).
For context in conflict-zone evacuations: the 1990 Kuwait Airlift (1,70,000 Indians airlifted — then described as the largest civilian airlift in history), Operation Raahat (Yemen, 2015 — 5,600 evacuated using naval ships and chartered aircraft), and Operation Ganga (Ukraine, 2022 — used neighbouring countries as exit corridors) are the key precedents.
- 1990 Kuwait Airlift: ~1,70,000 Indians; Air India operated 488 flights in ~59 days; Guinness World Record for largest civil evacuation
- Operation Sukoon (Lebanon, 2006): ~1,800 Indians evacuated by INS Jalashwa and other naval ships
- Operation Raahat (Yemen, 2015): ~5,600 evacuated; 7 sorties by IAF; 15+ naval ship sorties
- Vande Bharat Mission (COVID, 2020–21): ~6 million Indians repatriated; 67 countries; 16,000+ flights
- Operation Ganga (Ukraine, 2022): ~23,000 Indians evacuated via Poland, Romania, Hungary, Slovakia
- 2026 Gulf: 52,000 in 7 days via commercial flights after partial airspace reopening
Connection to this news: The speed of the 2026 Gulf return — 52,000 in 7 days using commercial aviation — demonstrates how a partial airspace opening, combined with MEA coordination and pre-positioned advisory infrastructure, can achieve rapid large-scale movement without the logistical complexity of military-led operations.
Key Facts & Data
- Indians returned March 1–7, 2026: over 52,000
- On Indian carriers: 32,107 (of the 52,000+ total)
- Mode: commercial flights, including non-scheduled services, following partial airspace reopening
- MEA advisories: issued across UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Iran missions
- 24x7 helplines: established at all Indian missions in the conflict-affected region
- Emergency Control Room: set up by MEA in New Delhi to coordinate the crisis response
- Indian nationals in GCC: approximately 9 million (pre-conflict)
- India's remittance receipts 2023: US$125 billion; Gulf accounts for ~35–40%
- 1990 Kuwait Airlift benchmark: 1,70,000 Indians in ~59 days by Air India alone