Saudi Arabia: Expats shocked by unfair sponsors’ tactics

May 19, 2016

Riyadh, May 19: Despite the many regulations put in place by the government with the aim of protecting expats, many continue to suffer at the hands of their Saudi sponsors and employers.

expatFor Ahmed Mahsoub, an Egyptian driver, the trouble started when he asked his sponsor, which happened to be an educational institute, for a salary certificate in order to buy a new car. As soon as he got the small family van, his sponsor asked him to use it to transport their students but he refused to do so since he had bought it for the use of his own family and not for work.

Mahsoub said they stopped him from working and suspended his salary until he handed over the car. One of his friends then advised him to lodge a complaint with the labor office.

Surprisingly, the labor office staff claimed that he would be deported because he had allegedly insulted some employees. Mahsoub noted that his current employers are not his original sponsor; therefore, he questioned how they could possibly force him to leave if he did not comply with their demands.

The case of Ahmad M., a Pakistani taxi driver, is equally shocking. He said that his sponsor asked him to pick up some luggage from the airport, but the flight with the luggage was delayed. Angered by the delay, his sponsor sent him an SMS containing information of a final exit visa for him.

He was deeply shocked and asked some friends to intervene in order to ask his sponsor to cancel the final exit visa. Despite all this, Ahmad says that the important issue here is that it is very easy for an employer to ruin someone’s life without considering that the person has a family to support.

A female expatriate, who requested anonymity, faced a similar ordeal. When she and her daughter who both worked for the same sponsor told the employer that they wanted to leave their positions and that they would continue working until a suitable replacement is found. However, the sponsor would not agree to this and instead told them that if they left, he would have the woman’s daughter deported.

Comments

Muthhu
 - 
Thursday, 19 May 2016

This is not What our Prophet peace be upon him taught us in ISLAM .....but unfortunately this is happening in his own birth place

S.A.
 - 
Thursday, 19 May 2016

Same thing happened with me. I have many years experience in saudi arabia but when I went to saudi on a new visa to a new sponsor I suffered a lot. He is a Syrian national doing business in saudi arabia. I went to labour court also but no use since he is having contacts with big shots. Whoever comes to work with him suffers a lot. I to india on a vacation but dod not go back to saudi. Now I can not go there for three years. His name is Abu Sulaiman of Sony Mobile in king fahd street in al khobar 11th cross. He calls himself an engineer but he is an uneducated person. He submitted false documents to become an aramco contractor.

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Agencies
January 11,2020

Muscat, Jan 11: Oman's Sultan Qaboos bin Said has died, Aljazeera reported citing state television on Friday.

Qaboos was 79-year-old and was ill for a long time. He has served as the ruler of Oman since 1970 when he ousted his father in a bloodless coup.

Qaboos had no children and has not publicly named his successor.

Sultan Qaboos travelled to Belgium for a week in December for what was described then as "medical checks." He returned to Oman but speculations of his deteriorating health were rife.

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News Network
January 16,2020

Dubai, Jan 16: The UAE Ministry of Climate Change and Environment on Wednesday announced that it has banned the import of birds, some eggs and meat products from Hungary and Slovakia.

The ministry said the decision was taken following a notification from the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) on the outbreak of a highly pathogenic strain of bird flu, H5N2, in the two countries.

Accordingly, the ministry has banned "the import of all species of domestic and wild live birds, ornamental birds, chicks, hatching eggs, meats and meat products and non-heat-treated wastes from Hungary and Slovakia".

It has also regulated the import of poultry meat and non-heat-treated products, requiring a health certificate for the export of meat and meat products from the two countries to release consignments into the UAE.

A health certificate will be needed for the import of eggs, the ministry added.

However, thermally-treated poultry products (meat and eggs) have been cleared for import from all parts of Hungary and Slovakia.

Kaltham Ali Kayaf, Acting Director, Animal Development & Health Department at the ministry, said: "These measures reiterate the ministry's keenness in achieving its strategic objectives including enhancing bio-security levels and eliminating pathogens before they enter the country. In doing so, the ministry prevents the bird flu virus and related risks and impacts on the country's poultry health and safety, in addition to protecting public health and well-being."

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Agencies
August 4,2020

Beirut, Aug 4: A massive explosion has shaken the Lebanese capital of Beirut, with a very high number of casualties expected.

A warehouse at the Beirut Port caught fire on Tuesday afternoon, triggering a huge explosion, Lebanon’s official National News Agency (NNA) reported.

Several smaller explosions were heard before the bigger one occurred.

Abbas Ibrahim, the head of Lebanon’s General Security, said that “highly explosive materials” confiscated earlier had been stored at the site.

Footage shared on social media captured the moment of the bigger explosion, with a colossal shock wave seen traveling fast across several hundreds of meters and shrouding the area in thick smoke.

The blast left enormous material damage to the surrounding buildings and structures. But it was not immediately known how big an area was affected.

There was also no immediate casualty count. Graphic amateur video from the scene showed bodies strewn on the ground, with their clothes blown off.

The NNA said rescue operations were underway. Ambulances were seen heading toward the scene in central Beirut.

Lebanese LBC television channel quoted Lebanon’s Health Minister Hamad Hasan as saying that the blast had caused a “very high number of injuries” and “extensive damage.”

Beirut Governor Marwan Abboud said an unspecified number of firefighters dispatched to extinguish the initial fire had been killed in the explosion.

“As they were putting out the fire, the explosion took place and we’ve [lost them],” he said, breaking down on live TV.

The explosion comes at a time when the Arab country is passing through its worst economic and financial crisis in decades, and amid rising tensions with Israel.

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