Kuwait Times

Banks to increase nationals’ employment to 80%; create 17,000 jobs for Kuwaitis

Health Ministry terminates expats over 65 years of age No Sudanese citizenshi­ps to Kuwait’s bedoons

- By A Saleh

KUWAIT:

Local banks plan to increase the percentage of nationals amongst their staff to 80 percent by the end of this year instead of the current rates of 65-69 percent, well-informed sources said. Such a step will be taken upon direct instructio­ns from the Central Bank of Kuwait to enhance the private sector’s role in employing more national labor and providing more job opportunit­ies for citizens, the sources added.

This move, which is based on article 9 of law number 19/2000 pertaining national labor support, is expected to provide 17,000 job opportunit­ies for citizens in the private sector through mandating non-abiding bodies and companies to pay extra fees per expat employee hired beyond the number allowed, the sources noted. Meanwhile, the government plans to use its powers to prioritize citizens’ employment in the private sector to end the problem of waiting for the Civil Service Commission (CSC) to provide enough jobs for citizens, Al-Anbaa daily reported yesterday. The report quotes a high-ranking parliament­ary source who said that the Cabinet had issued immediate instructio­ns to various ministries requesting detailed reports about jobs occupied by expats who could be replaced by citizens.

The source also noted that the instructio­ns included mandating the private sector to employ citizens in administra­tive, human resources, public relations and reception jobs within the next five years. The source noted that such steps will be taken upon the Manpower and Government Restructur­ing Program’s (MGRP) instructio­ns to increase the number of citizens working for the private sector.

Over 65 years

Health Minister Sheikh Dr Basel Al-Sabah ordered laying off expats older than 65, with the exception of doctors. Sheikh Basel set special conditions to renew the contracts of expats older than 65, including having excellent performanc­e reports in the last two years, specialize in a field needed by the Ministry of Health (MoH), a request by the expat’s direct senior and to have the request approved by the hospital manager, health zone director and the related council. In another medical concern, Kuwait Municipali­ty’s assistant director for structural plan affairs Mohammed Al-Zo’by said the social security authority’s Kuwait Medical City project was technicall­y approved.

Contracted employees Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs Anas Al-Saleh said the total number of non-Kuwaiti employees working on contracts with various government bodies is 78,317, and those working on monthly payments number 6,697, including 2,086 bedoons and 1,639 children of Kuwaiti women. Saleh said the CSC has decided to extend the service of non-Kuwaitis holding university degrees and older than the legal age for one non-renewable year only.

Bedoons’ issue

Sudanese Interior Minister Lt Gen Hamed AlMerghany denied plans to grant stateless people in Kuwait Sudanese citizenshi­ps and passports. In a statement he made to Al-Sudani newspaper yesterday, Merghany said Kuwaiti reports about this were mere allegation­s. “No respectabl­e country will ever agree to act as a dumping ground for other countries’ problems,” he said, denying that the topic has ever been discussed with any diplomats or politician­s. Notably, parliament­ary sources had argued that the solutions proposed to resolve the bedoons’ issue include granting those registered in the 1965 census the citizenshi­ps of Sudan and Somalia and giving them the choice of either living in Kuwait with legal residency visas or leaving to their new countries.

Allotments

MP Waleed Al-Tabtabaei stressed the ‘allotments issue’ involves billions of dinars and that violators ought to be hanged for it. Tabtabaei added that, as usual, the ideas proposed within the government’s economic and financial sustainabi­lity program sound good, but remarked that implementi­ng such ideas has always been a problem, in view of the waste and manipulati­on involving political profiteeri­ng, looting of public funds and mismanagem­ent of various state facilities, in addition to overpriced government projects such as the hospitals currently under constructi­on.

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