<p>For Adithya Shetty, getting a seat on the first evacuation flight from London to Bengaluru was a massive relief after a desperate wait for a month. “I feel very happy to be here. Bengaluru feels so much safer, with even the lockdown getting eased,” he told <span class="italic">DH</span> on arrival at the Kempegowda International Airport early Monday morning. </p>.<p>“I had booked a flight in March itself before this sudden lockdown got me stuck there,” recalled the student of MS in International Business Management, who paid a hefty fare for the ticket. It was getting pretty expensive back in London for him, bearing hostel bills and more.</p>.<p><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-india-live-updates-total-cases-deaths-covid-19-tracker-worldometer-update-lockdown-30-latest-news-835374.html"><strong>For latest updates on coronavirus outbreak, click here</strong></a></p>.<p>Shetty was among four people, all of whom were headed to a three-star hotel in Whitefield for the 14-day quarantine. But unlike him, it was a mixed feeling for Priyanka Dasari, a pregnant software engineer who had to return without her husband. “I was supposed to return with my husband Anil Kumar, who has a job in London. He could not be accommodated on the flight as the first preference was given to pregnant women and elderly people,” she said.</p>.<p>The high cost of accommodation in London was what forced Chirag M G, a student of astronautics to take the first flight home. “It was not sustainable. Now that I am here, I feel India is much safer. Quarantine is fine with me,” he said.</p>.<p>In the words of Pawan, an engineer who found a place on the flight just in time with his wife and child, the pandemic is spinning out of control in London. “Nobody is following any restrictions.”</p>
<p>For Adithya Shetty, getting a seat on the first evacuation flight from London to Bengaluru was a massive relief after a desperate wait for a month. “I feel very happy to be here. Bengaluru feels so much safer, with even the lockdown getting eased,” he told <span class="italic">DH</span> on arrival at the Kempegowda International Airport early Monday morning. </p>.<p>“I had booked a flight in March itself before this sudden lockdown got me stuck there,” recalled the student of MS in International Business Management, who paid a hefty fare for the ticket. It was getting pretty expensive back in London for him, bearing hostel bills and more.</p>.<p><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-india-live-updates-total-cases-deaths-covid-19-tracker-worldometer-update-lockdown-30-latest-news-835374.html"><strong>For latest updates on coronavirus outbreak, click here</strong></a></p>.<p>Shetty was among four people, all of whom were headed to a three-star hotel in Whitefield for the 14-day quarantine. But unlike him, it was a mixed feeling for Priyanka Dasari, a pregnant software engineer who had to return without her husband. “I was supposed to return with my husband Anil Kumar, who has a job in London. He could not be accommodated on the flight as the first preference was given to pregnant women and elderly people,” she said.</p>.<p>The high cost of accommodation in London was what forced Chirag M G, a student of astronautics to take the first flight home. “It was not sustainable. Now that I am here, I feel India is much safer. Quarantine is fine with me,” he said.</p>.<p>In the words of Pawan, an engineer who found a place on the flight just in time with his wife and child, the pandemic is spinning out of control in London. “Nobody is following any restrictions.”</p>