Kuwait Times

Ban leaves recruitmen­t agencies’ secretarie­s jobless in Kuwait

Kuwaiti agency owner hopes for temporary ban

- By Ben Garcia

KUWAIT: Since a total labor deployment ban to Kuwait was imposed by the Philippine government on Jan 15, many local recruitmen­t agencies have stopped operations temporaril­y. This led some agency secretarie­s to post on social media urging employers to hire them since they are now jobless. There are around 100 Filipina secretarie­s dealing with Filipino domestic helpers at approximat­ely 300 active local recruitmen­t agencies in Kuwait.

“Many secretarie­s working in recruitmen­t agencies are now jobless - others are still retained by employers hoping for a redeployme­nt of Filipino workers soon. But so far, we do not know how long the ban will last. We hope it will only be temporary,” said a secretary at a local recruitmen­t agency in Hawally. “Recruitmen­t agencies that were piggybacki­ng on somebody else’s licenses have completely stopped their operations. We are operating because some domestic helpers are returning to the agency, and it is part of our job to attend to their needs,” she said.

A Kuwaiti recruitmen­t agency owner told Kuwait Times he is in favor of a temporary ban. “Even if I don’t have business right now, I am very much in favor of a temporary ban,” he said. “The Kuwaiti government should realize the value of Filipino workers - they must implement the memorandum of agreement and I am hoping fervently that with the ban, employers here realize how important it is to have them as our workers. We should treat our housemaids like members of our family; if they cannot treat them fairly, better not get any worker. They are not here to work as slaves - they are human beings too,” he said.

Asked if he is planning to sack some of his Filipino secretarie­s, he replied in the negative. “No, they are under my responsibi­lity. My business is a recruitmen­t agency; perhaps if the ban continues, I will consider accepting domestic helpers from other countries. I am not planning to fire any of my employees,” he said.

He said his agency only deals with Filipino workers because they are easy to handle. “I noticed Filipinos are highly in demand. So we settled on recruiting Filipino workers only, since Kuwaitis like them to work in their houses. They understand English well and are well-mannered. Yes, there have been some issues reported like getting into relationsh­ips with drivers or sometimes with the boss, but these are few cases. We Kuwaitis must realize they are coming here to work we cannot generalize all of them to be like that,” he explained.

A secretary of an agency told Kuwait Times that because of lack of business from the Philippine job market, her two sponsored students back home would have to look for new foster parents. “I am sponsoring two students in the Philippine­s. They are at college level. I don’t know how to continue the support since I don’t have an extra income working as a secretary of the agency. I hope to get another job, but it’s not easy, since we are not allowed to work in another company without the permission of the boss. I am still hoping that everything will be okay and that the ban will be lifted soon,” she said. With the Manila deployment ban, only two countries are legally sending domestic helpers to Kuwait - Sri Lanka and India. Talks on the redeployme­nt of Ethiopian workers are still in progress.

 ??  ?? KUWAIT: Domestic labor recruitmen­t offices lined up at a complex in Kuwait. — Ben Garcia
KUWAIT: Domestic labor recruitmen­t offices lined up at a complex in Kuwait. — Ben Garcia

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