Gulf Today

Traditiona­lly reliant on workers from neighbours, Croatia is increasing­ly counting on labourers from Nepal and India

- Lajla Veselica,

Durga Phuyal had hoped to start anew when she landed in Croatia, but the Nepali migrant faced an uphill batle to adjust to life in the Balkan country. Phuyal is among the tens of thousands of migrants who have flocked to Croatia from as far afield as Asia, as the small EU country desperatel­y tries to overcome a chronic labour shortage. Traditiona­lly reliant on seasonal workers from Balkan neighbours, Croatia is increasing­ly counting on labourers from Nepal, India, the Philippine­s and elsewhere to bridge the gap.

Mass emigration and a shrinking population has created tens of thousands of vacant positions in constructi­on and the service industry in the tourism-dependent country, famous for its picturesqu­e beaches along the Adriatic sea. But not everyone has put out the welcome mat, with migrants facing cramped and expensive housing, and occasional anti-immigrant rhetoric that has spiked ahead of elections.

In Nepal, Phuyal paid 7,000 euros in total for the various fees, documents and travel expenses before landing Croatia. But ater barely a month ater arriving, she had lost her job and was offered no assistance by the agency that helped hire her.

“It was very difficult,” the 27-year-old said of the two-month ordeal. “I had no job, no accommodat­ion, no food.” The country provided nearly 120,000 non-eu nationals with work permits in 2023, a 40 percent jump over the figure from the previous year.

But in the run-up to general elections in April, right-wing parties have accused migrants of threatenin­g the country’s security and stealing jobs from Croatians. Migrants have also been regularly pilloried online, with social media users mocking them for gathering during New Year’s festivitie­s in Zagreb, calling the celebratio­ns “Advent in Kathmandu” and “Nepali New Year”. Ethnic Croats comprise more than 90 percent of Croatia’s population — nearly 80 per cent of whom are Roman Catholics — making it one of the more homogeneou­s societies in Europe. Language barriers along with conservati­ve attitudes toward outsiders have presented myriad obstacles to welcoming in the new labour force.

“Unlike countries that throughout their history had contacts with diverse cultures — like France or Britain — Croatia is facing for the first time a situation where it is encounteri­ng very different groups,” said Dragan Bagic, a sociologis­t at the University of Zagreb. According to forecasts by the Croatian Employers’ Associatio­n, the country of just 3.8 million could need as many as 500,000 foreign workers by the end of the decade. Newly arrived migrants have been most vulnerable during their search for housing, according to experts.

An investigat­ion in a local newspaper in the capital Zagreb said 32 foreign workers were found living in a cramped 83-square-metre (893-square-foot) apartment in the city.

Classified advertisem­ents aimed at foreign workers typically offer tiny apartments with nearly a dozen beds, priced at 200 euros ($216) per person. A Nepali workers representa­tive said their wages in Croatia range between 560 and 1,000 euros per month.

To meet the challenge, the Croatian government is preparing to amend the law on foreigners to beter regulate accommodat­ion, provide language classes and oversee the growing number of temporary employment agencies.

Arcely Bhing, a 48-year-old Filipina who works at a printing company, said Croatia was not “physically or mentally” ready for this wave of immigratio­n.

Atending mass in English every Sunday in Zagreb, where she is joined by dozens of other Filipinos, has helped fight homesickne­ss. “It’s a big thing for us Filipinos because we are also a Catholic country, most of us go to church,” she said. Andjelko Katanec, a priest at the Saint-blaise church that has been holding mass in English since 2019, said integratin­g into Croatian society was a “big challenge” for migrants.

“They risk being isolated outside work,” he said. “The history of mankind is the history of migrations,” Katanec said. “We have to organise beter ... to welcome the immigrants beter, offer them more opportunit­ies and beter conditions.”

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