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http://arabnews.com/saudiarabia/article56308.ece

Recruitment offices support ban on Indonesian workers
By ARAB NEWS 



Published: May 22, 2010 17:10 Updated: May 22, 2010 17:10 

RIYADH: Almost all Saudi recruitment offices favor the abolishment of 
recruiting Indonesian labor, according to a vote that took place at the Riyadh 
Chamber of Commerce and Industry on Wednesday.

According to estimates, about 1.5 million Indonesians currently work in the 
Kingdom. Even though any restriction on Indonesian workers would hurt Saudi 
recruitment offices, it did not stop 98 percent of owners favoring of a total 
ban at the chamber, Riyadh daily reported.

The result of the vote is believed to be legally binding.

Head of the Riyadh chamber's National Committee for Recruitment Saad Al-Baddah 
said recruitment offices claimed their counterparts in Indonesia were demanding 
commission and wages that were too high.

Al-Baddah said that more than 40 investors and recruitment office owners 
gathered to discuss the situation with Indonesian representatives, but to no 
avail.

Al-Baddah said his committee would start urging newspapers to stop advertising 
for labor from the Southeast Asian country.

Recruitment offices were also urged to explore other alternatives in countries 
like Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia.

It was claimed that the cost of recruiting labor from Indonesia had risen 300 
percent from SR2,800 to SR7,500 over the past three years.

Recruitment firms have already rejected the latest SR375 increase ordered by 
the Indonesian government in April. They claim the total cost for hiring an 
Indonesian maid is at least SR9,000.

Saudi firms also accuse their Indonesian counterparts of failing to fulfill 
most of their commitments, including the provision of one month of training and 
orientation for maids coming to the Kingdom. They say that this exacerbates the 
problem of runaway maids.

In a previous interview published in Arab News, Jamal Al-Mofavaz, a Saudi 
investor in the recruitment market, said that the number of Indonesian domestic 
workers in the Kingdom fluctuates between 1.2 and 1.5 million.

"Saudi families spend more than SR20 billion on these workers a year. However, 
they also incur losses to the tune of 30 percent of this amount due to the 
failure of housemaids to fulfill the provisions of labor contracts," he said, 
attributing this mainly to the absence of effective regulations protecting the 
rights of Saudi families.

According to Al-Mofavaz, Saudi citizens are forced to pay at least SR2,500 to 
Indonesian recruitment offices and their respective agents to recruit a single 
domestic worker.

"This is unjustifiable and incomprehensible. The current relations between 
Saudi recruitment offices and their Indonesian counterparts are one-sided," he 
said, while underlining the need to establish mutually balanced relations based 
on the principles of partnership and reciprocal respect.

He also noted that Saudi recruitment offices agreed nearly two years ago to 
increase the monthly wage of Indonesian maids from SR600 to SR800 after demands 
from Indonesia.





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