Saudi
Arabia is considering turning to India and Sri Lanka to meet soaring
local demand for domestic workers following labour disputes with the
Philippines and Indonesia and a decision to suspend hiring maids from
Ethiopia.
Indonesia and the Philippines, among the largest maid supplier to the
Middle East, have temporarily halted the travel of their domestic
workers to Saudi Arabia following disputes over payment, mistreatment of
maids by employers and other issues.
Several rounds of negotiations have so far failed to break the deadlock
despite concessions by the Gulf Kingdom, including higher salaries for
maids.
Saudi Arabia, the largest Arab economy and the world’s top oil
exporter, banned the recruitment of Ethiopian housemaids last month
following a series of deadly attacks by those maids on their employers.
One maid who killed a little Syrian girl told police she had committed the crime because she “was told so by an occult power.”
“There is a shortage of around 30 per cent in the supply of foreign
domestic workers to Saudi Arabia because of the suspension of the
recruitment of housemaids from Ethiopia and other countries,” said
Mutlaq Al Hazmi, a member of the expatriate labour hiring committee at
the Jeddah chamber of commerce and industry.
“There are plans to open the door for hiring domestic workers from
India and Sri Lanka. I believe that this will make hiring maids from
Indonesia unnecessary,” he was quoted as saying by Saudi newspapers on
Wednesday.
Nearly two million housemaids from Asia and Africa work in Saudi
Arabia, the largest base for expatriate domestic workers in the Middle
East. (Source: Emirates 24/7)
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