From the BBC:
“Saudi
Arabia eases 'kafala' system restrictions on migrant workers”
Saudi Arabia
has announced it will ease some of the contractual restrictions giving
employers control over the lives of some 10 million migrant workers. The
reforms will allow private sector workers to change jobs and leave the country
without an employer's consent. The Saudi government said it was seeking to
"improve and increase the efficiency of the work environment". Rights
groups say the current "kafala" (sponsorship) system leaves workers
vulnerable to abuse and exploitation. One activist described the reforms as
significant, but cautioned that parts of the system remained in place and
called for it to be abolished fully. The Saudi ministry of human resources said
the Labour Reform Initiative it unveiled on Wednesday would apply to all
expatriates employed in the private sector and would take effect in March. Those
workers will no longer be required to obtain their employers' consent to leave
or change jobs, and they will be allowed to travel outside the kingdom without
their employer's approval. They will also be able to apply directly for
government services, and their contracts with their employers will be
documented digitally. "Through this initiative we aim to build an
attractive labour market and improve the working environment," Deputy
Minister Abdullah bin Nasser Abuthunain told reporters in Riyadh. He said the
reforms would also help achieve the objectives of Vision 2030, the country's
plan to diversify its oil-dependent economy. Rothna Begum, a senior researcher
at Human Rights Watch, told the BBC that the ministry's announcement was
"significant and could improve conditions for migrant workers". "However,
this is not a full abolition of the kafala system." Ms Begum said it
appeared workers would still be required to have an employer act as their
sponsor to enter Saudi Arabia, and that employers would retain the power to
renew or cancel workers' residency permits at any time. "This can mean
that workers can still face abuse and exploitation, as employers hold this
power over them," she warned. "Moreover, this reform does not
apparently apply to migrant domestic workers, who are some of the most
vulnerable workers in the country." Ms Begum said Human Rights Watch had
documented how many employers had forced domestic workers to work long hours
without rest or days off, denied them their wages, or confined them to their
homes. Some workers had even been subjected to physical and sexual abuse, she
added. "There are also hundreds of thousands of undocumented workers in
Saudi Arabia, and the authorities have not said whether they will allow such
workers, many of whom became undocumented through no fault of their own, to be
able to regularize their status, including by finding new employers."
^ Even though
we were only Tourists in Kuwait for 2 days me and my Parents had to deal with
the Kafala System – when the hotel tried to keep our Passports to make sure we
paid – they eventually accepted keeping our Kuwaiti Visas instead. The Kafala System
is discriminatory and needs to be completely abolished everywhere. ^
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