Arab News

Sponsors use Hafiz to their advantage

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TABUK: Col. Mansour Al-nasir, spokesman at the Passport Department in Tabuk, said there has been a tremendous increase in the number of complaints lodged by Saudi sponsors against runaway workers over the past few months.

The move is apparently to cash in on the Hafiz unemployme­nt assistance program. “There is a rush on the part of some Saudis to submit the passports of their workers at the Passport Office after putting them on the ‘hurub’ (run away list). Many Saudis who run small establishm­ents are also coming forward to cancel their commercial registrati­on with an eye on taking advantage of the Hafiz program,” he said, adding that this is more obvious in the case of individual sponsors who have a limited number of workers, such as housemaids and drivers, Al-watan newspaper reported Sunday. These Saudis are eager to register with the Human Resources Developmen­t Fund (HRDF) as jobless people to take advantage of the Hafiz assistance.

Col. Al-nasir, who is also director of the Halat Ammar border point passport office, said this trend has become a big headache for the passport officials. “The Passport Department is struggling to cope with the rising tide of complaints about runaway workers. We are forced to intensify inspection raids to catch the runaways,” he said, adding that this puts a heavy burden on the passport officials. “There are also difficulti­es in looking after a huge number of those arrested at the deportatio­n center,” he said.

Al-nasir said it was revealed to the passport officials after investigat­ions and inspection­s that most of these complaints about hurub are baseless. “Most of the workers who were put on runaway list have not escaped from their sponsors,” he said.

Echoing the same view, Mansour Al-sharif, director of labor office in Tabuk, said his department has received several complaints from workers against their sponsors during the last four months. “Their complaints were attached with evidence to support their claim that they are still with their sponsors and not runaways,” he said, while attributin­g such false complaints to sheer dishonesty.

Meanwhile, Abdullah Al-bazie, chairman of the Tabuk Chamber of Commerce and Industry, sees something positive in canceling the commercial registrati­on of smaller establishm­ents that are virtually nonexisten­t. “It is a blessing in disguise with regard to regulating the commercial sector if nonfunctio­nal commercial firms are scrapped from records,” he said.

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