Refeleksi :  Apakah janji sang menteri bisa dipenuhi, jika  duit yang biasanya  
mengalir ke kantong penguasa NKRI [slave driver]  berkurang? Ataukah seperti 
biasa mudah berjanji, tetapi pelaksanaan tidak dilakukan? 

http://arabnews.com/saudiarabia/article67811.ece

Indonesia promises to help bring down maid recruitment charges
By MD HUMAIDAN | ARAB NEWS 

Published: Jun 18, 2010 00:34 Updated: Jun 20, 2010 01:14 



JEDDAH: Indonesian Labor Minister Mohaimin Iskandar promised Saudi Deputy Labor 
Minister Abdul Wahid Al-Humaid on Thursday that he would take steps to end what 
has been categorized as exploitative pricing for Indonesian maids by their 
local recruiters who send them to the Kingdom. 

The exchange took place at the 99th Session of the International Labour 
Conference being held in Geneva.

Al-Humaid asked Iskandar to rein in local recruiters who have exorbitantly 
raised the charges of hiring Indonesian maids to up to SR7,500 per maid.

Hiring Indonesian maids has traditionally been less costly than hiring maids 
from other countries. Saudi households who hire maids legally pay up to around 
SR10,000 for fees, including the cost of the visa, red tape, two months wages 
in advance, air ticket and the fee charged by the recruiting firm. Saudis 
consistently complain of maids absconding after a short period of time and of 
rising recruitment costs.

Meanwhile, members of the foreign manpower recruitment committee at the Jeddah 
Chamber of Commerce and Industry (JCCI) on Wednesday dismissed any possibility 
of lowering the cost of recruiting housemaids from Indonesia. The JCCI says a 
large portion of this cost entails dealing between local recruitment firms and 
their partners in labor-remitting countries.  "What really controls the 
recruitment costs is the trade dealings between recruitment offices in the two 
countries," Yahya Hassan Al-Maqbul, chairman of the committee told Arab News. 
He said the rise and fall in recruitment charges is often liable to change 
depending on the transactions between recruiters and the providers of manpower 
in Indonesia. Time often plays a role in these transactions, he added. He said 
members of a Saudi labor recruitment committee are currently in Indonesia 
making efforts to bring down the costs of foreign manpower recruitment.

"The Saudi Embassy in Jakarta is also supporting these efforts," he added. The 
chairman hoped that prices of recruitment of housemaids from Indonesia would 
come down "especially that we are now starting the season of great demand for 
Indonesian housemaids who are well-trained on housework before they come here."

Demand for domestic workers peaks during the Ramadan when families host dinners 
and visitors.

Saeed Ali Hamdan Al-Ghamdi, a member of the committee of the JCCI, said 
recruitment charges of a housemaid from Indonesia is now between SR7,200 and 
SR7,500 and added that this year the demand for housemaids from Indonesia had 
increased by 40 percent.

The Arabic daily Al-Riyadh newspaper Wednesday said the Saudi Embassy in 
Jakarta was making strenuous efforts to bring down the cost of recruitment of 
Indonesian housemaids by at least 30 percent.


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