Freedom to Travel for Jobs within GCC Countries




Hello GCC Labours, hope you are doing well.
This time we are back with a good news not only for a particular country but for all Popular GCC workers exporting countries including Pakistan, India, Philippine, Thailand, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh & Nepal with a freedom to travel and move between Jobs in GCC countries.

Representatives from several Labours exporting Asian countries gather in Dubai to discuss best practices.

Flexibility of foreign workers from one employer to another in the UAE as well as movement between Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries might become a reality soon, Also, a proposal to set up a virtual market place that will include a database of names, nationalities and skills of workers to facilitate companies to procure local talent was one some of the key points discussed at the Abu Dhabi & Dubai Dialogue forum.

The two-day multilateral forum of Asian Labour sending and receiving countries was held in United Arab Emirates.

The forum is discussing internal mobility as a way of providing better bargaining rights to workers while protecting their human rights and also to benefit economies of the GCC countries. Officials of several Asian countries met here to discuss international best Labour practices for the UAE and other GCC countries including Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman.

The United Arab Emirates has an total work force of 4.2 million and a majority of them are from Asian countries. From 2011 to 2016, the UAE government has passed several ministerial decrees to relax the restrictions on mobility of foreign expats and many GCC countries are now following suit.
Dr Omar Abdul Rahman Salem Al Nuaimi, undersecretary assistant for policies and strategies at the Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation, said: “This is an open dialogue between governments of Labour-exporting countries from Asia and the GCC countries. We are addressing all worker-related issues. The key reason to begin this initiative in 2008 was the protection of the rights of the work force, especially the lower end of workers from the unskilled and semi-skilled category. At the forum we want to address the modern challenges of exporting Labour from many Asian countries to the GCC countries and want to formulate policies to uphold the human rights of workers and have transparency in recruitment policies.”

Dr Al Nuaimi cited projects undertaken following the multilateral discussions at previous forums to change employment conditions, improve wages, etc. “Recognition of the skills of a worker is a very important step towards encouraging them to go for additional and new skills training that is an important asset for facilitating internal mobility. “This project was undertaken by the UAE government in collaboration with the governments of India, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Kuwait. This project involved identifying skill sets required, respective governments providing the training and the governments of Kuwait and UAE testing those skills and certifying those who were successful.

Another project undertaken by the Government of UAE in collaboration with the government of the Philippines was about employment orientation for the workers. “This project involved the pre-departure and post-arrival orientation course for workers to adjust socially and culturally to their new milieu and has been very successful. We intend to extend it for other countries too,” said Al Nuaimi.

The conference was inaugurated by Mubarak Al Daheri, undersecretary of the UAE Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisation. In his address, Al Daheri said the forum would identify best Labour practices to strengthen cooperation between labour-importing and exporting countries of Asia. “We want to end negative practices that the Labour force may be subjected to and want to establish a high level of transparency in recruitment practices. The cooperation of all participating countries will collectively help establish a system of mobility among markets for Labourers that will protect the economic, social, legal and human rights of the workers as well as the interests of the employers.”

Representatives from United Nations Economic and Social Commission for West Asian countries (UNESCWA), researchers from US, India and federal policymakers from the human resources and Labour departments of countries like Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, UAE discussed challenges of the foreign work force with representatives from India, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Philippines and Thailand among other countries. They discussed topics of human rights, transparency in Labour recruitment, among other things, with their counterparts from Labour-exporting countries such as Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, the Philippines and Sri Lanka. The talks were held under the supervision of a neutral observer from the Swiss Government.

Labour reforms:
Ministerial Decree 764 of 2015 on ministry-approved standard employment contracts states that a worker must be presented with an employment offer that conforms to the unified contract and then must be signed by the worker.
Within Ministerial Decree 765 of 2015 on terminating employment, a series of articles outline conditions when a contract can be terminated for term and non-term contracts.
Under Article 1 of Ministerial Decree 766 of 2015, rules and conditions for granting a permit to a worker for employment by a new employer must meet a set of new rules, the ministry said.
Additionally, the third decree sets out terms and conditions of granting new work permits to workers who choose to end a working relationship with their employers.

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