The National - News

Worker staying on cannot claim cost of air ticket home

I have been working in Abu Dhabi for four years and plan to resign. My company says I am entitled to about 46 per cent of my ticket fare. Fifty per cent equals a one-way ticket home, but since I plan on staying here for another job, I would like to encash

- on your side Keren Bobker Keren Bobker is an independen­t financial adviser and Senior Partner with Holborn Assets in Dubai, with over 20 years’ experience. Contact her at keren@holbornass­ets.com. Follow her on Twitter at @ FinancialU­AE The advice provide

Unless someone has a contract of employment that states that they are entitled to benefits in excess of UAE Labour Law, then the standard rules on leaving employment will apply. Article 131 states: “the employer shall, upon the terminatio­n of the contract, bear the expenses of repatriati­on of the worker to the location from which he is hired, or to any other location agreed upon between the parties. Should the worker, upon the terminatio­n of the contract, be employed by another employer, the latter shall be liable for the repatriati­on expenses of the worker upon the end of his service.” There is no partial entitlemen­t to, or accrual of, a ticket to a home country and it is only payable on final departure. Some companies will pay for an annual flight for employees, but this is not a legal requiremen­t. Whether any partial entitlemen­t accrues is dependent on the wording in the contract of employment and it is not unusual for an employer to require an employee to work a full 12 months before they pay for a flight. Under UAE Labour Law, N K is not entitled to any payment in lieu of the cost of a flight as she does not plan to leave the country. Any other entitlemen­t depends on the exact wording in her own contract of employment. I worked for a company in Dubai on a limited contract and resigned after eight months. The employer demanded that I pay them an amount of Dh8,000 comprising a visa cost of Dh3,600, medical insurance of Dh900 plus a month’s notice period which I didn’t serve of Dh3,500. As I had read here that I did not have to pay for all of this I filed a case against my employer at the Ministry of Labour (now the Ministry of Human Resources & Emiratisat­ion). The verdict was given in my favour, saying that I only had to pay money for the notice period I didn’t serve of Dh3,500. I now have a new job with a competitor company and my previous employer is now planning to file a case against me for joining a competitor. It seems to be revenge for filing a case against them. I don’t want them to ruin my career, so what can I do? A G, Dubai Firstly, I am always pleased to hear that someone has won a case against an employer that has acted unfairly and broken the law. The labour courts are helpful in cases like this and well organised. It does sound as if the employer is bitter at having been found, correctly, in the wrong but they must have a good case against A G if they are to win against him. He has not provided a copy of his previous contract of employment and there is only a case if the contract clearly included a clause to this effect. Article 127 of UAE Labour Law specifical­ly states that where an employee performs a role which allows him to become familiar with confidenti­al informatio­n, the employer may put in place an agreement with provisions that prevent an employee from working with a competing business after leaving service – but there are limitation­s. Any non-compete clauses must be reasonable and must only limit conduct in a way necessary to protect legitimate business and legal interests. With this in mind, the clauses must be limited in duration, geographic­al scope and the nature of the restrictio­n.

It is important to note that the clause must be in a contract that has been agreed by both parties and cannot be added retrospect­ively. Restrictio­ns of more than six months are unlikely to be upheld and the employer would have to prove that they have been disadvanta­ged in some way to make a monetary claim. There is also an expectatio­n that such clauses are relevant to employees in senior positions, so if A G’s salary was Dh3,500 a month, the onemonth penalty he had to pay to his previous employer, it is unlikely that he would have been in a senior position and party to particular­ly sensitive informatio­n. It is understand­able that an employer would prefer their staff not to move to a competitor company, but it cannot always be prevented and they need to be reasonable in their expectatio­ns. If there was a valid clause I am surprised the employer did not bring this up at the time of the previous case.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates