Thiruvananthapuram:
J K Menon, Director of NORKA and Chairman of ABN Corporation, attracted
attention at the Loka Kerala Sabha by raising key demands to address the
challenges faced by expatriate Keralites. He stressed the urgent need for a
comprehensive framework covering housing, financial security, and psychological
counselling, highlighting that these issues affect lakhs of Malayalis living
abroad as well as those returning home.

Highlighting
the housing difficulties, Menon noted that many expatriates’ dreams of owning a
house in Kerala remain unfulfilled due to banking limitations, documentation
hurdles, and legal obstacles in housing loans. He proposed a dedicated housing
scheme developed jointly by the Expatriate Welfare Board and financial
institutions, which would provide lasting relief, security, and dignity to
ordinary expatriates.
Menon
also called for safe and transparent investment avenues within public sector
undertakings for expatriates. Such initiatives, he said, would empower them to
invest confidently in Kerala while helping revive loss-making public
enterprises, creating a sustainable development model. He emphasized that
expatriates are eager to contribute to the state’s growth if provided with
structured opportunities.
Addressing returning expatriates, Menon pointed
out that thousands who come back after decades abroad often struggle to adapt
to Kerala’s job market and social systems. He recommended a reintegration
support programme including skill upgrading, entrepreneurial mentoring, job
placement, and professional networking, ensuring that returnees can contribute
effectively to Kerala’s economy and society. He also urged the government, in
collaboration with NORKA, to establish counselling centres and helplines to
support expatriates facing isolation, cultural shock, and mental health
challenges.
Concluding, Menon said the importance of the Loka Kerala Sabha lies in the government’s recognition that expatriate issues require systematic solutions rather than sympathy. While acknowledging that some concerns, such as voting rights, remain unresolved, he said the Sabha provides a platform for formally representing the social, economic, and cultural challenges of expatriates, who have played a vital role in Kerala’s progress.