Laborious act!
Long-awaited changes to Qatar’s controversial “kafala” labour law for foreign workers will come into force in December next year, media reports said yesterday.
The law reforming rules that oversee exit visas and work contracts in the gas-rich Gulf state was published in Qatar’s official gazette.
The Arabic-language daily Al Sharq reported that the changes would take effect on December 14 next year, 14 months after first being approved.
This is the first time a definitive date has been given for the new laws to come into force.
The reforms will allow foreign workers wishing to leave Qatar to apply for permission up to 72 hours in advance to the Interior Ministry.
If such permission is initially denied, employees seeking to leave can then complain to a grievance committee established under the new law.
Currently, workers need an exit visa approved by their sponsor to be able to leave the country. The changes also allow foreign workers to switch jobs at the end of a fixed-term contract. Under the current system, workers, who leave a job at the end of a contract, have to wait two years to return to Qatar to take up a new position, if their old employer objects to the new job.
The reforms were announced following a high-profile international campaign by critics over labour laws in the country, which will host football’s World Cup in 2022.
Qatar has faced fierce criticism from rights groups for its slow pace of reform.
The measures being instituted next year have failed to placate critics over their substance, however, with the International Trade Union Confederation describing the proposed changes as a “sham”.
The system applies to around two million foreigners, who make up about 90 per cent of the population in the State.
The number of foreign workers, many of them labourers on major infrastructure projects directly or indirectly related to the World Cup, is expected to reach 2.5 million by 2020.
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