Arab News

Sri Lankan minister explores opportunit­ies for migrant workers in KSA

The trip has ‘all the ingredient­s to be a fruitful visit’: Ambassador Amza

- Mohammed Rasooldeen Colombo

The Sri Lanka labor minister is visiting Saudi Arabia to seek employment opportunit­ies for the crisishit nation’s workers in the Kingdom’s labor market.

Labor and Foreign Employment Minister Manusha Nanayakkar­a arrived in the Kingdom for a fourday official visit on Tuesday to meet his Saudi counterpar­t, Human Resources and Social Developmen­t Minister Ahmed bin Sulaiman Al-Rajhi.

Sri Lanka’s Ambassador to Riyadh Packeer Mohideen Amza, who is accompanyi­ng the labor minister, told Arab News on Thursday that the trip has “all the ingredient­s to be a fruitful visit.”

The visit has several objectives, he said: “One is to enhance the existing labor relations arrangemen­ts between the Kingdom and Sri Lanka and to find employment opportunit­ies for skilled and semi-skilled workers, as well as for profession­als in the ongoing gigaprojec­ts.”

Another aim of the minister’s trip, Amza added, is to enhance foreign remittance­s to Sri Lanka.

Foreign inflows are crucial for Sri Lanka, where the devastatin­g economic crisis — the worst since independen­ce in 1948 — has left people struggling with daily power cuts and shortages of basic commoditie­s.

The island nation of 22 million officially defaulted in April, and without foreign currency reserves has been left unable to pay for the most basic imports.

Remittance­s from overseas Sri

Lankan workers have long been a key source of foreign exchange for the country. They used to bring in about $7 billion a year before the pandemic-imposed lockdowns in 2020.

During the pandemic, the inflows dropped to $5 billion in 2021, and as the country went bankrupt, no more than $3 billion was expected this year.

The most important source of foreign remittance­s has historical­ly been the Middle East, which is home to more than 1 million Sri Lankan nationals — 66 percent of the country’s migrant workers.

On Thursday, the labor minister visited NEOM, a $500-billion gigaprojec­t in the northweste­rn Saudi province of Tabuk, where Amza said he would look for opportunit­ies for Sri Lankan profession­als in the fields of engineerin­g, architectu­re and design.

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