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'Anger brewing inside me': Daughter's scathing letter to PM after dad dies

The Australian government "abandoned" a resident to die of coronavirus in India, his daughter says.

Sydney woman Sonali Ralhan is furious.

In an open letter to the Prime Minister posted to Facebook, Ms Ralhan, an Australian citizen, said she contacted embassy officials in India a few weeks ago with "great hopes" they would help her parents, long-term residents of Australia, return safely home.

Instead, within weeks she would be mourning her father's death.

"I write to you with so much anger brewing inside me," she wrote on May 6.

"I am an Australian citizen and highly disappointed to be one today.

Health workers move a  Covid-19 patient at Lok Nayak Jai Prakash (LNJP) Hospital, this week in New Delhi. Source: Getty
Health workers move a Covid-19 patient at Lok Nayak Jai Prakash (LNJP) Hospital, this week in New Delhi. Source: Getty

"What nation disowns their own citizens? [It] is a matter of wonder for the entire world."

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Ms Ralhan says her pleas for help were largely ignored.

Instead of offering any real assistance, consular officials only called Ms Ralhan's mother periodically to "note down her distressed condition".

India's death toll has topped 230,000 and the country has been setting records each day with the tally of new cases. Hospitals are overwhelmed and oxygen supplies are low.

As a result of the escalating crisis, the Australian government banned flights from India and announced anyone - including citizens - who attempted to defy the new rules would be hit with fines of up to $66,600 or five years in prison, or both.

More than 9000 Australians are in India registered as wanting to return, more than 650 of them registered as vulnerable.

A coronavirus patient pictured this week inside a banquet hall temporarily converted into a Covid care centre in New Delhi. Source: Getty
A coronavirus patient pictured this week inside a banquet hall temporarily converted into a Covid care centre in New Delhi. Source: Getty

Foreign Affairs Minister Marise Payne on Friday extended her sympathies to the family, who she did not identify.

"Let me extend my sympathy, and that of the government, to the family of this person and to so many families that we know are dealing with what is an extraordinary challenge, with infection rates surging," she told 2GB radio.

"There are very many families dealing with this challenge."

Contacted for comment, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade referred AAP back to the minister's interview.

Australia's high commissioner to India, Barry O'Farrell, on Friday told a senate committee DFAT was providing assistance to the family of a permanent resident who had died in India but had not yet confirmed the cause.

The Indian Australian woman said she was ashamed to be an Australian citizen after the government's response to the crisis. Source: Getty
The Indian Australian woman (not pictured) said she was ashamed to be an Australian citizen after the government's response to the crisis. Source: Getty (AFP via Getty Images)

However with the daily infection rate in the country being "greater than the population of Canberra", he said he did not believe "anyone can put hand on heart" and say no Australians were among the dead.

Ms Ralhan is now calling for the federal government to intervene and bring home her mother, who is dealing with her grief completely isolated from her children and her community in Australia.

"All I have left is my mother, who has been abandoned by her own government of Australia, with no way to come back to her children.

"We all want to cry our hearts out, but we are saving them for when we are all together again.

"With your current actions, there is not much to expect, but all I ask is to bring my mother home and gather the broken pieces of our souls together."

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