The 25 evacuees including 16 from Nadia district, eight from North 24 Parganas district and one from Burdwan districts -- landed at the Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport here around 11 PM last night.
Relief was writ large on the faces of people like Jamir Mondal, Liton Haldar and Ananta Ghosh who were sent to Iraq by an agency as construction labourers.
"We had never thought that we will return home, particularly after the fight began," Mondal said.
Things turned to worse after the strife commenced over a month ago when they were working at a university in Basra, recalled Haldar.
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"The food supply became erratic. The air became heavy with the sound of gunshots and bombs. Thankfully we were not held hostage by any organisation," Haldar said.
"But still we got panicked. Hiding at various places we used to lament that we will not be able to see our village," he said.
"Somehow we managed to contact the Indian embassy via the Internet. The embassy officials with the help of the police then rescued us, forced the agency people to return our passports and arranged for our homecoming," he said.
State minister Jyotipriya Mullick was at the airport to receive the 25 people as a representative of the West Bengal government which also arranged for their transport to go to their respective places.