Labour drive fails to eliminate ‘tasattur’

December 21, 2013
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Riyadh, Dec 21: The crackdown on violators of visa and resident regulations in the Kingdom has unveiled a vast network of cover-up businesses commonly known as tasattur which is prevalent in Jeddah, Riyadh, Dammam and the cities in the south.

More than 97 percent of small-scale enterprises come under tasattur which is posing a challenge as these businesses are a breeding ground for illegal expatriate workers in the Kingdom.

Only a fraction of tasattur businesses involved expatriates who had fallen out with their sponsors and who left during the correction period extending from July to November. The rest continue to flourish unabated.

The vegetable market sector, which was dominated by expatriates, mostly illegal workers, is the only business which is constantly monitored by multiple government committees and the governorate’s representatives. As a result, several Saudis have taken up the vacant positions and are now doing business in the fresh vegetable market.

Afghan nationals who are mostly involved in food business, especially in “foul tamiz” and Bukhari restaurants, are facing problems due to inspection campaigns. Many of the restaurants have been reduced to a single employee while others have closed shop. This sector is not attractive to Saudis workers because of the hard work and long hours required.

But other sectors are largely unaffected and functioning smoothly as the expatriates running the businesses have managed to rectify the status of their employees.

Various mechanical workshops, welding, carpentry, appliance and automobile repair shops, clothes and fancy dress shops, drivers of water trucks all remain largely managed by expatriates who are using coverup practices or tasattur.

There are thousands of workshops being operated by expatriates in Kilo 5, 7, 2 in South Jeddah and Nuzha in the north which fall under Tasttur. Most of the business houses in Batha and Hera in Riyadh and King Abdulaziz Street commonly known as Seiko building in Dammam also come in this category.

The manpower supply businesses in the Eastern province were totally run by expatriates under tasattur. Although some of the activities drew to a halt owing to the inspection campaigns, it is still business as usual for many of them.

Other medium and large enterprises involved in the education, health, consultancy and building construction sectors remain unaffected, according to sources.

“Coverup business is posing a grave challenge to the Kingdom’s economy and prosperity. It is eliminating employment prospects for genuine aspirants and draining the economic resources of the country,” said professor Khalid Al-Bassam of King Abdul Aziz University. Al-Bassam is also a consultant at the Jeddah Chamber of Commerce and Industry (JCCI).

He said that expatriates involved in coverup businesses sent home almost SR130 billion in 2011-12. “It is a hidden economy and more should be done to unearth it,” he added.

He said that coverup businesses or tasattur made room for illegal workers because foreigners preferred to hire their own ethnic community in their businesses.

Prominent businessman and director of JCCI Abdullah Bin Mahfouz was equally concerned about the harmful effects of tasattur on the economy. “More needs to be done to eliminate the phenomenon of coverup businesses from Jeddah city. It’s a dangerous disease which has to be dealt with firmly through a proper mechanism,” he said.

Professor Abdulaziz Diyab of King Abdulaziz University, who has done research on coverup businesses, said that approximately 30 percent of expatriate employees are working in coverup businesses in the Kingdom.

Expatriates involved in tasattur are under their sponsors but are running businesses in the name of a Saudi citizen. Most of these businesses are small and medium scale enterprises with an income of between SR50,000 and SR1 million on average a month.

“I am working as a salesman under my sponsor. How can you say that I am running the business,” asked an Indian business executive who has had a business in downtown Jeddah for 34 years.

Officially, it is not possible to prove the existence of tasattur because of the support it receives from Saudi individuals who work closely with the expatriates. According to a study by the Riyadh Chamber of Commerce and Industry, there are an estimated 200,000 such business units in the Kingdom. Most of these business entities are engaged largely in the business sector and fall in the small and medium enterprises category.

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Agencies
June 18,2020

Riyadh, Jun 18: Minister of Tourism Ahmed Al-Khateeb said that Saudi Arabia will resume tourist activities at the end of Shawwal (June 21) after a hiatus of more than three months due to lockdown measures imposed following the outbreak of coronavirus pandemic.

The minister made the remarks during a television interview after chairing the emergency meeting of the Arab Ministerial Council for Tourism on Wednesday. He said that the current indications are positive and that the Kingdom is ready to launch the summer program, which will be a boost for domestic tourism.

“It was revealed in a research study carried out by the Tourism Authority that 80 percent of Saudi citizens want to take advantage of domestic tourism. We will launch the domestic tourism program for the public after having made necessary coordination with the Ministry of Health and the concerned higher authorities,” he said.

Several Arab tourism ministers and officials of the relevant organizations attended the meeting, which discussed the challenges that the region’s tourism sector is facing due to the pandemic. Al-Khateeb pointed out that the Arab Ministerial Council for Tourism, headed by Saudi Arabia, held the virtual session in exceptional circumstances to discuss ways to get out of this pandemic and revitalize the tourism sector.

“Saudi Arabia has initiated a package of financial stimulus activities with a total value of more than $61 billion to protect jobs and businesses and reduce the economic burden of the crisis. The domestic tourism sector has benefited from it as one of the important economic sectors, as it covered 60 percent of salaries of Saudi employees in the private sector for a period of three months,” he added.

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Agencies
July 31,2020

Makkah, Jul 31: Organising this year's scaled-down hajj required "double efforts" by Saudi authorities amid the coronavirus pandemic, King Salman said Friday after being discharged from hospital following gall bladder surgery.

Only up to 10,000 people already residing in the kingdom are participating in this year's pilgrimage, compared with 2019's gathering of some 2.5 million from around the world.

"Holding the ritual in the shadow of this pandemic... required reducing the numbers of pilgrims, but it obliged various official agencies to put in double efforts," 84-year-old King Salman said in a speech read out on state television by acting media minister Majid Al-Qasabi.

"The hajj this year was restricted to a very limited number of people from multiple nationalities, ensuring the ritual was completed despite the difficult circumstances," he said.

The speech came on the occasion of Eid al-Adha, the Muslim festival of sacrifice, a day after the king left hospital following a 10-day stay for surgery to remove his gall bladder.

The hajj, which began on Wednesday, is one of the five pillars of Islam and a must for able-bodied Muslims at least once in their lifetime.

Authorities implemented the "highest health precautions" during the rituals, the king said.

Pilgrims, who were all tested for the virus, are required to wear masks and observe social distancing.

For Friday's "stoning of the devil", the last major ritual of the hajj, Saudi authorities offered the pilgrims pebbles that were sanitised to protect against the pandemic.

In a sign that its strict measures were working, the health ministry reported no coronavirus cases in the holy sites on Wednesday or Thursday.

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News Network
May 5,2020

Dubai, May 5: A Saudi ministerial decision issued on Monday allows companies in the private sector to reduce salaries by 40 per cent and allows termination of contracts owing to the economic hardships resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic, according to daily newspaper Al Sharq Awsat.

The new decision was still not published by the cabinet according to the newspaper.

The decision which the newspaper saw a copy of was signed by Saudi Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development to regulate the labour contract in the current period, allows employers to reduce the employees salaries by 40 percent of the actual effective wage for a period of 6 months, in proportion to the hours of work and allowing the termination of employee contract after 6 months of the COVID-19 circumstances.

The new decision has also included a provision in which the employer would be allowed to cut wages even he or she benefits from the subsidy provided by the goverment, such as those for helping pay workers wages or exemption from government fees.

The decision also stressed that employers are not allowed to terminate any employee, unless three conditions are met.

1.            First the passing of six months since the measures of salary cut has been taken

2.            Reducing pay, annual leave and exceptional leave were all used

3.            Company proves that its facing financial troubles due to the circumstances.

The memo, which goes into affect as soon as its published in the government’s official newspaper, ensures that the employee will receive his/her salary if on annual leave within the period of 6 months.

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