Nitaqat paying off: Fakieh

June 13, 2013
nitaqat2
Geneva, Jun 13: Labor Minister Adel Fakieh said here on Wednesday that initiatives and programs launched recently in the Kingdom have given distinctive results in providing suitable job opportunities to Saudis and increasing women’s participation in the labor market.

Addressing an International Labor Conference, he said that the Nitaqat program for Saudization of jobs launched in June 2011 has helped increase the percentage of Saudi workers in the private sector from 10 to over 13.

At the end of 2012, 615,000 male and female Saudi nationals were employed in the private sector.

He said the percentage of Saudi women who were employed in full-time jobs in the private sector witnessed an unprecedented increase.

The number of Saudi women employed for the first time in the private sector in 2012 reached 180,000, three times more than the employment figure before Nitaqat.

He told the gathering that the employment of differently abled people received special attention in the Nitaqat program. Since the launching of Nitaqat in 2011 until the end of 2012, 17,000 physically challenged people were employed.

He said the Ministry of Labor also launched the system to protect salaries in the private sector. Firms have been asked to pay salaries through banks. He said the ministry has started implementing this system in phases as of June 2013.

Fakieh said the Labor Ministry has completed the procedures for inspections to increase efficiency and transparency.

It has also completed preparing the occupational health and safety file in the Kingdom.

Fakieh said that necessary procedures have been approved to join ILO’s convention on minimum age for employment.

The convention adopted in 1973 by the International Labor Organization (ILO) requires ratifying states to pursue a national policy designed to ensure the effective abolition of child labor and to raise progressively the minimum age for admission to employment or work.

Countries are free to specify a minimum age for labor, with a minimum of 15 years.

A declaration of 14 years is also possible when for a specified period of time. Laws may also permit light work for children aged 13–15 (not harming their health or school work).

The minimum age of 18 years is specified for work which “is likely to jeopardize the health, safety or morals of young persons.

In its latest report released on Tuesday in Geneva, ILO called for an end to child labor in domestic work and adequate protection of young workers against abusive working conditions.

Statistics of the new ILO report showed that an estimated 15.5 million children (i.e. below the age of 18) were involved in paid or unpaid domestic work in the households of a third party or employer other than their own families, carrying out tasks such as cleaning, cooking and looking after other children, the sick and the elderly.

Of these children, about 10.5 million were in child labor either because they were below the legal minimum working age or were working in hazardous or even slave-like conditions, among whom 6.5 million were aged between 5 and 14 years old, and more than 71 percent were girls, the report noted.

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Agencies
June 29,2020

Protests condemning the Israeli plan to annex parts of the occupied West Bank are set to take place in the United States and Europe on the same day prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu plans to begin the process.

The demonstrations will be held on Wednesday in Chicago, San Diego, Brooklyn, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Other Western cities will also witness similar protests, including Toronto, Madrid and Valencia.

Students for Justice in Palestine, Jewish Voice for Peace, and American Muslims for Palestine are among the pro-Palestinian groups organizing the protests.

The Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, one of the organizers, urged "direct actions and popular mobilizations in [Palestinian] refugee camps, cities and villages," and professed "loyalty to the martyrs" on its call for the events.

Another group, Al-Awda or the Palestinian Right to Return Coalition, decried "72 years of genocide, ethnic cleansing and dispossession" of Palestinians.

It also tied their demonstrations to the protests against anti-black racism in the US and beyond.

"We demand the defunding and dismantling of US police alongside the defunding and dismantling of Zionist colonialism and racist Israeli apartheid," Al-Awda said on its website.

Netanyahu has set July 1 as the date for the start of cabinet discussions on the annexation plan.

He has been driven ahead by US President Donald Trump, who unveiled a “peace” plan for the Middle East in January that effectively sidelines the Palestinians altogether.

The plan, which Trump himself has described as the “deal of the century,” envisions Jerusalem al-Quds as “Israel’s undivided capital” and allows the Tel Aviv regime to annex settlements in the occupied West Bank and the Jordan Valley. The plan also denies Palestinian refugees the right of return to their homeland, among other controversial terms.

The Palestinians want the West Bank as part of a future independent Palestinian state with East Jerusalem al-Quds as its capital.

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News Network
May 1,2020

Dubai, May 1: Saudi Arabia has reported 1,344 new coronavirus cases in the last 24 hours, bringing the total number of infections in the country to 24,097, the Ministry of Health announced on Friday.

The ministry also announced 7 more deaths and 392 new recoveries, raising the total number of fatalities and recoveries to 169 and 3,55 respectively.

Out of the 1,344 new cases reported today, 282 were confirmed in Riyadh, 237 in Madinah, 207 in Makkah, 171 in Jubail and 124 in Jeddah in addition to 114 infections in Dammam.

Authorities continue to urge people to stay at home unless necessary despite having relaxed some restrictions and curfews at the start of Ramadan.

Citizens and residents are allowed to go out for necessary needs between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. but must adhere to precautionary measures such as wearing a face mask and maintaining social distancing practices.

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News Network
May 4,2020

Dubai, May 4: An Indian salesman in the UAE has won a whopping 10 million dirhams at an Abu Dhabi draw, a media report said.

Dileep Kumar Ellikkottil Parameswaran, from Kerala’s Thrissur, works with an auto spare parts company in Ajman and earns 5,000 dirhams (USD 1,361) a month, Gulf News reported on Sunday.

Parameswaran, who won the 10 million dirhams (USD 2.7 million) prize at the Big Ticket draw in Abu Dhabi, will spend a big part of the money to repay a loan of 700,000 dirhams (USD 190,574 ), according to the report.

He said that a good part of the prize money will be spent on the education of his two children.

Parameswaran, who has been a resident of the UAE for 17 years, lives in Ajman along with his family.

Big Ticket is the largest and longest-running monthly raffle draw for cash prizes and dream luxury cars in Abu Dhabi.

A live monthly draw is organized at the Abu Dhabi International Airport on 3rd of each month.

Tickets are sold for 500 dirhams (USD 136).

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