Kuwait Times

Qatar exit visa reform to go in force Oct end

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DOHA: Qatar’s decision to abolish its controvers­ial exit visa system will come into force by the end of October, a leading global trade union official said yesterday. Sharan Burrow, head of the Internatio­nal Trade Union Confederat­ion and once a prominent critic of the 2022 football World Cup host’s labor practices, was speaking in Doha after meeting Qatar’s prime minister and labor minister. “We’ve seen significan­t progress, first of all we have seen the end of the exit visa law and that will be now implemente­d by the end of October,” she said. “Everybody’s aware that this is a big shift and that it will actually take a period of time but formally it will be implemente­d by the end of the month.”

Qatar announced in September it had approved legislatio­n to scrap the visa system, which requires all foreign workers to obtain their employers’ permission to leave the country. Until now, no date had been given for when it would come into force. Under the landmark labor law, only a maximum five percent of each company’s workforce - thought to be those in the most senior positions - will still need permission to leave Qatar. There are some two million foreign workers in Qatar. Scrapping the exit permit is the biggest announceme­nt made so far since Qatar agreed last November to enter into a three-year agreement with the UN’s Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on to oversee reform. Other changes include the introducti­on of a minimum monthly wage, set at 750 Qatari riyals ($205), plus accommodat­ion. Burrow added that research was underway on whether that amount should be increased. Critics have long argued for abolition of the exit visa - a lynchpin of the country’s “kafala”, or sponsorshi­p, system which many liken to modern-day slavery. Research published last year by rights group Migrant-Rights.org found that around a quarter of all exit visa requests were denied by the government.

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