Saudi want ban on Lankans

lkdood

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Apr 7, 2008
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Saudi agencies want total ban on Lankans


The Saudi Chamber of Commerce and Industry and the Kingdom’s National Recruitment Committee have asked their government to impose a total ban on recruitment of workers from Sri Lanka.


The decision was taken by the two bodies at a meeting in Kassam, a suburb of Riyadh.

The Sunday Times reported last week that Saudi Arabia, which imposed a temporary ban on the recruitment of Sri Lankan workers was last Sunday expected to decide whether to continue it.

Association of Licensed Foreign Employment Agencies (ALFEA) Secretary Faizer Mackeen who confirmed the outcome of the meeting in Kassam, told the Sunday Times the two bodies have called upon their government to recruit workers from countries like Cambodia, Vietnam and Nepal to meet any shortfall of labour requirements when recruitment from Sri Lanka is banned.

Foreign Employment Bureau Chairman Kingsley Ranawaka told the Sunday Times “we are yet to receive any official word on the proposed ban.” He said the Government would respond when only officially informed. A spokesman for the Saudi Embassy in Colombo declined to comment. “We cannot say anything,” he said.

At present there are more than 500,000 Sri Lankans employed in Saudi Arabia. Most of them are housemaids. The problem has been compounded by another development. Last year, 43,000 Sri Lankan housemaids took up jobs in Saudi Arabia.

ALFEA officials say 19,000 of them breached their contracts and returned after working only two to three months. This is the latest issue that has caused concern among the two Saudi bodies which made the recommendation to their government. Earlier, the allegation of domestic aide A.K. Ariyawathie who complained her employer injected needles into her body and a dispute between the Bureau and the Saudi National Recruitment Committee over the minimum fee charged as commission from would-be employees had set off the crisis.

ST

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Anura8241

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Aug 22, 2010
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Galpaya
saudiyata yaa yuththe piligath usas rekiyaawalata pamanai,
saamaanya sewakayan prathishathayak vidiyata gaththoth vishaala pirisak,
vishaala washayen shaareerika haa maanasika wadavedanaa walata lakvena ratak....
maa denatath sevaya karanne saudi wala...........
 

izzardahamad

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  • Feb 11, 2007
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    Kandy
    http://arabnews.com/saudiarabia/article158438.ece


    RIYADH: The Saudi Arabian National Recruitment Committee (SANARCOM) decided Sunday to request the authorities concerned to stop the recruitment of housemaids from Sri Lanka until Colombo agrees to implement the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) that was signed between the SANARCOM and the Association of Licensed Foreign Employment Agencies (ALFEA) two months ago in Riyadh.

    Following the meeting held in Qassim on Sunday, SANARCOM Chairman Saad Al-Badaah explained that his organization signed an agreement with ALFEA to reduce recruitment charges from SR8,500 to SR5,500, and that the government of Sri Lanka has failed to honor the agreement which was to take effect from September this year.

    The SANARCOM is the umbrella organization for Saudi recruiting agencies in the Kingdom. It is a body that chalks out recruitment procedures, particularly for domestic workers.

    “We are suggesting the ban based on various reasons that include the issue of the MoU, the bureaucratic attitude of the Sri Lanka Bureau of Foreign Employment (SLBFE) and the recent case of Sri Lankan housemaid, Ariyawathi, who was allegedly tortured by a Saudi sponsor,” Al-Badaah said.

    He added that Ariyawathi’s case generated adverse publicity against the Kingdom both in and out of Sri Lanka.

    The allegations were eventually proved to be baseless, he added. He insisted that the rights and reputation of citizens should be upheld and justice should be done during such disputes.

    “We will also take appropriate action against recruiting agencies which have violated the local labor regulations both in and out of the Kingdom.

    “We will also lodge a complaint with the Foreign Ministry against some foreign missions in the Kingdom, which directly interfere with citizens on various labor issues,” Al-Badaah said.

    Last year, Sri Lanka sent 42,906 domestic helps to the Kingdom and has already sent 19,000 during the first half of this year.

    There are some 500,000 Sri Lankan workers in the Kingdom including housemaids. Sri Lanka earns around $1 billion from remittances sent by housemaids in the Kingdom.

    L.K. Ruhunuge, additional general manager of the SLBFE, told Arab News from Colombo that the government did not accept the agreement signed between SANARCOM and ALFEA since the country’s attorney general declared the accord null and void since ALFEA is not lawfully authorized to sign international agreements on behalf of the Sri Lankan government.

    ALFEA, he said, is an umbrella association with an estimated membership of some 200 out of the 800 recruitment agencies in the island.

    “It has no right to enter into such agreement.” He added that SLBFE has no problem with the amount agreed in the MoU, but insisted that ALFEA is not the body authorized to deal with this issue. “We only want our housemaids salary to be SR650 per month,” he said.

    The SLBFE, which functions under the auspices of Sri Lanka’s Ministry of External Affairs, is a statutory body that oversees recruiting agents as well as the island’s overseas workers.

    Referring to Ariyawathi’s case, Ruhunuge described it as an isolated incident that should not have an impact on bilateral trade.