New labor drive targets cover-up businesses

March 29, 2013

cover-upJeddah, Mar 29: In another significant move to Saudize jobs and prevent cover-up businesses, the Labor Ministry has instructed the so called “owners” of small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) to work for their firms full-time and register their names with the General Organization for Social Insurance.

“Saudi owners working in their own firms should not have any other jobs,” said Hattab Al-Anazi, spokesman of the Labor Ministry. He said the move was aimed at encouraging SMEs with not more than nine workers to employ Saudis.

He said foreigners dominate the workforce in the Kingdom’s SMEs. According to one report, there are at least 250,000 SMEs with not a single Saudi worker. “Most of these firms are run by foreigners who give their real Saudi owners a specific amount annually,” Al-Anazi said.

The ministry’s ongoing campaign, he said, was aimed at driving out illegal workers and stop cover-up businesses that eat away at the national economy. “We want to reorganize work at SMEs to prevent cover-up businesses.”

He added: “We also want to create a culture of real business among Saudis by encouraging real owners of SMEs to work at their firms and supervise their operations, in place of foreign workers.”

According to one report, annual foreign transfers of expats who run SMEs amount to SR 140 billion.

Meanwhile, the Labor and Interior Ministries have continued their joint campaign to track down illegal workers. “This time they are very serious and have got a clear mandate from higher authorities to flush out illegals,” said one prominent expatriate in Riyadh.

He said most shops in the Mursalat district of Riyadh, a well-known market for mobile phones and cable TV networks, have been closed down. “I have seen workers keeping away from their shops in Bathaa when they heard about raids in the popular expat market,” he added.

He believed that the move would have a negative impact on businesses as well as the national economy. “About 50 percent of foreigners are not working for their sponsors. If they do not come to work fearing raids, it will affect businesses and services.”

Most expatriates, who have been doing menial jobs at low salaries, do not want to renew their iqamas because of the SR 2,400 levy and other expenses. They are likely to leave the Kingdom shortly. “The market is not yet matured for total Saudization because Saudis depend on foreigners for many things,” he added.

An Indian business executive in Jeddah said the Saudi government is now resolute to reorganize the country’s labor market and prevent illegal businesses. He said many businesses in the Kingdom had to depend on foreign workers, who are not under their sponsorship, because they were not getting enough visas. “The new labor drive will make thousands of poor foreign workers jobless and it will affect their families back home,” he pointed out.

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News Network
April 20,2020

Riyadh, Apr 20: Six more people have died in Saudi Arabia after contracting coronavirus as 1,122 new coronavirus cases were reported on Monday.

The Saudi health ministry said that total number of cases in the Kingdom had increased to 10,484. It also recorded 92 new recoveries, raising the total to 1,490.

The ministry said precautionary measures shall remain to limit the virus spread.

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coastaldigest.com news network
August 3,2020

Sharjah, Aug 3: A 24-year-old Indian engineer has fallen to death from the sixth floor of a residential building on Eid al-Adha in the UAE's Sharjah, a media report said on Monday. 

The electrical engineer, identified with his single name Sumesh, hailed from the south Indian state of Kerala.

He lived in a building in Al Dhaid in Sharjah, from where he fell to death on Friday, the report said, adding that he was apparently talking over the phone and threw it down minutes before the incident.

Sumesh, who came to the UAE a year ago, worked as a designer in Sharjah's Muwaileh area. His roommates said that he had some "personal issues" that had been "bothering him for some time", according to the report.

"It was Eid al-Adha and our cook had made biryani for us. We were all cracking jokes and having a good time. In fact, even Cuckoo (Sumesh) was also laughing with us. He seemed happy. Nobody had anticipated this. I did sense a few times that something was troubling him and I even asked him about it, but he brushed it off," the report quoted his roommate Dileep Kumar as saying.

Shans KF, another roommate, said Sumesh was to travel to India for his annual leave but could not because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The police have launched an investigation and moved the body to the forensic lab for an autopsy.

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News Network
April 15,2020

Dubai, Apr 15: Saudi Arabia reported 493 new cases of coronavirus, bringing the total number of infections in the country to 5869, the Ministry of Health announced on Wednesday.

According to the ministry of health, the number of recoveries today are 42 cases, making total of recoveries in the kingdom 931. And 71 critical cases in intensive care.

The ministry also confirmed 6 deaths bringing the total number of deaths in the kingdom to 79.

Saudi Arabia imposed a 24-hour curfew and lockdown on the cities of Riyadh, Tabuk, Dammam, Dhahran and Hofuf and throughout the governorates of Jeddah, Taif, Qatif and Khobar. This week the curfew was extended until further notice.

Overall, Saudi Arabia has reported one of the lowest rates of infection in the region, with around 5,000 cases in a population of over 30 million. Mecca was one of the first Saudi cities to be placed under a full-day curfew, and authorities took unprecedented precautions, suspending religious tourism in February and closing mosques across the country in March.

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