Stabroek News

El Salvador eyes work scheme with Qatar for migrants facing exit from U.S.

-

SAN SALVADOR, (Reuters) - El Salvador is discussing a deal with Qatar under which Salvadoran migrants facing the loss of their right to stay in the United States could live and work temporaril­y in the Middle Eastern country, the government of the Central American nation said on Tuesday.

Last week, U.S. President Donald Trump’s administra­tion said that as of September 2019, it would eliminate the temporary protected status, or TPS, that allows some 200,000 Salvadoran­s to live in the United States without fear of deportatio­n.

Presidenti­al communicat­ions chief Eugenio Chicas said El Salvador was in talks to see how Salvadoran­s could be employed in Qatar, a wealthy country of some 2.6 million people that is scheduled to host the soccer World Cup in 2022.

“The kingdom of Qatar ... has held out the possibilit­y of an agreement with El Salvador whereby Salvadoran workers could be brought across in phases (to Qatar),” Chicas told reporters.

After an unspecifie­d period, the Salvadoran­s would return home, Chicas added, without saying how many workers the program could encompass.

El Salvador’s foreign minister, Hugo Martinez, is in Qatar until Friday and said in a statement that Salvadoran­s could work in engineerin­g, aircraft maintenanc­e, constructi­on and agricultur­e.

Martinez also noted that Qatar had offered to provide health services to the Central American country, which is struggling with a weak economy and gang violence.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana