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Scramble to help Indians hit by Saudi work policy

Last Updated : 25 May 2013, 20:49 IST
Last Updated : 25 May 2013, 20:49 IST

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Indian External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid is here to discuss matters of bilateral interest, including the Nitaqat law, as the Indian missions in Saudi Arabia scramble to help over 55,000 Indian workers leave the kingdom in adherence to its new stringent work policy.

Khurshid, who arrived here on Friday, was welcomed by Saudi Deputy Foreign Minister Prince Abdul Aziz Bin Abdullah.

In his arrival statement, Khurshid said his visit was taking place, “At a time when the Indian community in Saudi Arabia is engaged in an effort to utilise the three months grace period announced by His Majesty for the expatriates to correct their legal status or to return to their motherland without penal action and with dignity”.

The Indian minister’s visit comes when the Indian Embassy in Riyadh and the consulate in Jeddah and other centres in Dammam and the Eastern Province have issued a second lot of 27,000 Emergency Certificates to enable Indian citizens to leave Saudi Arabia for home.

The kingdom last month announced a three-month grace period, which expires on July 3, after which they will begin to deport illegal workers.

Under Nitaqat, it is mandatory for local companies to hire one Saudi national for every 10 migrant workers. Over 3 lakh firms in Saudi Arabia reportedly do not employ any locals and the Nitaqat policy seeks to deal firmly with this.

The new law also makes it mandatory for foreigners to only work for their legal sponsors, and their spouses can’t take up jobs. The expatriates cannot perform any job other than the one mentioned in their job cards – a rule which many Indians were flouting.

There are currently 28 lakh Indian workers in Saudi Arabia. Before leaving for Jeddah, Khurshid said over 56,700 Indians are being repatriated from Saudi Arabia in the next one and half months as they have no valid passports and legal permits to stay in the kingdom. “As of now 56,700 Indian have registered with the Indian Mission for getting exit permit as they have no valid passports or other travel documents,” Khurshid on Friday told a group of Urdu editors in New Delhi.

On May 21, Indian Ambassador Hamid Ali Rao met the Saudi Deputy Minister for Interior Ahmed Al Salem during which they discussed the welfare of the Indian workers, including facilities for immigration and exit for Indian nationals.

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Published 25 May 2013, 08:06 IST

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