Saudi Arabia registered over 30,000 cases of Ethiopian domestic workers walking out of their jobs over the past year, authorities said.
According to
official statistics from the Ministry of Labour, around 31,700 Ethiopian maids
ran awayfrom their jobs. Economists estimate that the citizens were left with a
heavy financial burden as a result of these cases.
The overall
number of domestic workers who left their sponsors high and dry was estimated
at 58,715 based on a report prepared by the Ministry of Labour.
The report
indicated that 54 percent of absconding expatriates were maids, while 45
percent were drivers.
Riyadh
registered the highest number of runaway housekeepers, followed by the Eastern
Province and Makkah. The Northern Province and Al-Baha witnessed the least
number of absconding domestic workers.
The report
also pointed out that around 500,000 expatriates were absent from their jobs in
various companies and establishments across the country during the first
quarter of the year, with rates of absenteeism pegged at 6 percent.
Around 59
percent of those who had walked out of their jobs had left the country on
multiple exit/re-entry visas, while 40 percent remained in the country.
The number of
absconding women working for private companies was 9,454.
The phenomenon
of runaway domestic workers was a cause for concern for many Saudi families
especially since domestic recruitment offices were previously not required to
supply families with alternative maids after the end of the three-month trial
period.
Khalid
Al-Azhari, an employee working at a domestic recruitment office, highlighted
that the new recruitment regulations provide clients with guarantees against
absconding maids, including providing an alternative housekeeper even if she
had one remaining month of service.
The new
regulations are considered to be an improvement to the previous system, which
compensated clients for absconding domestic workers only during the first three
months of employment.
No comments:
Post a Comment