As thousands of Yemen immigrant workers are facing immediate deportation in Saudi Arabia, following a change in labor law, Yemen Minister of Expatriate Affairs is trying to avert the country yet another crisis.
According to a 2011 survey conducted by al-Riyadh, a local Saudi newspaper, there is an estimated 800,000 Yemeni workers in the kingdom, all abiding to Saudi Arabia strict employment law.
A new amendment to Article 39 of Saudi Arabia Labor Law now stipulates that foreign workers are forbidden from running their own business and strictly tied up to their original sponsors for all work related activities.
In other words, the hundred of thousands of Yemenis who through the course of their stay in Saudi Arabia sought new employment, outside that given by their sponsors or after they left their initial sponsors, will face deportation.
Many Yemenis have short-circuited Saudi Arabia sponsorship rules in the past by paying one sponsor/employer while working for another or setting up their own enterprises; buying off the privilege of being sponsored to retain their residence.
Such practices have now been made illegal.
It is important to note that beyond the human tragedy deportation will bring to hundreds of thousands Yemenis, the economic repercussions such a mass-returned migration will represent to Yemen will be enormous and potentially dramatic on many levels.
Tens of thousands of families across Yemen are very much depending on their relatives income from Saudi Arabia to survive. Cutting this economic life line will only radicalize poverty and risk destabilize Yemen's economy furthermore.
Minister of Expatriate Affairs, Mujahid al-Kohaly has now called on Saudi officials to postpone their decision, hoping to find a compromise with Riyadh on labor law.
The Ministry of Expatriate Affairs which is facing harsh criticism, said it will endeavor to address all expatriates concerns and will seek to resolve the matter to everyone's benefit promptly.
Minister al-Kohaly added he had already sent a memo to Prime Minister Mohammed Salem Basindwa, urging him to take immediate actions with his Saudi counterpart.
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