Gulf News

Walk-in job interviews for amnesty-seekers

EMPLOYERS TO OFFER JOBS TO INDIANS WHO SOUGHT WAIVER

- BY BINSAL ABDUL KADER Senior Reporter

Job fair in Abu Dhabi will offer new opportunit­ies to Indians who want to continue working in the UAE |

Ajob fair in Abu Dhabi will offer new opportunit­ies to Indian amnesty-seekers who want to continue working in the UAE.

The Indian Social and Cultural Centre (ISC), the largest Indian social organisati­on in the capital, is organising the job fair in Abu Dhabi on Sunday, September 16, from 9am to 2pm.

The Indian Embassy in Abu Dhabi is facilitati­ng the event as part of its initiative to help the Indian amnesty-seekers looking for a job, Navdeep Singh Suri, the Indian Ambassador to the UAE, told Gulf News yesterday. “We expect 10 to 15 employers [at the job fair] will conduct on the spot interviews,” Suri said.

All Indian amnesty-seekers from across the UAE are welcome to attend the event, he said. Earlier the embassy had requested the candidates to approach the Pravasi Bharatiya Sahayata Kendra (formerly IWRC, the embassy’s support centre for Indians).

The job fair is an additional step to offer an opportunit­y for all candidates to attend job interviews, the envoy said.

Ramesh Panicker, president of the ISC, said the event was only for amnesty-seekers and other job seekers would not be entertaine­d. He said mostly skilled jobs would be on offer.

The Indian embassy had earlier said the number of Indians seeking the visa amnesty had been very low, compared to other Asian nationalit­ies.

Valid applicants

Only 349 Indians approached the BLS Internatio­nal, the embassy’s outsourced agent for consular services, in Abu Dhabi Emirate as of yesterday, a senior official told Gulf News.

Most of them [280] applied for travel documents [emergency certificat­es/ ECs] and the embassy had already issued 272 ECs. Of the 69 applicatio­ns for passport renewals, 62 renewed passports were also issued, he said. These figures do not include Indian amnesty seekers in Dubai and Northern Emirates, which come under the Indian Consulate in Dubai.

Amnesty-seekers who do not have a valid passport have to first get an emergency certificat­e from the embassy to go back home, or obtain a new passport to get a six-month visa or new job visa.

People who entered the UAE on a visa, but later became undocument­ed, can also visit their embassies in Abu Dhabi, provided they have an ID document issued by the UAE and want to leave the country.

All others can approach the amnesty centre or Tasheel centres to process their applicatio­ns in Abu Dhabi.

The Indian Embassy had announced its initiative to help the amnesty-seekers who want to get a job on August 8.

“Some large UAE-based Indian companies have come forward very generously to offer employment,” the ambassador had said at a press conference.

On August 13, hundreds of Indians in the UAE responded within five days, however only 12 of them were amnesty-seekers, he told Gulf News.

About the hundreds of other Indians seeking jobs, the envoy said the embassy is not in a position to help them.

“We cannot substitute the normal employment channels,” Suri said.

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