Philippines to rescue stranded unemployed labourers in Saudi Arabia

The Philippines is making moves to repatriate thousands of stranded workers from Saudi Arabia who have been living in dire conditions since they lost their jobs.
2 min read
06 August, 2016
Thousand of Filipinos are employed in Saudi Arabia including domestic workers [stock image - Getty]

The Philippines said it will send government missions to Saudi Arabia next week to help thousands of jobless Filipinos left stranded across the kingdom after the plunge in oil prices.

The first batch of officials would fly to Saudi Arabia on Wednesday "to provide immediate humanitarian, legal, and other consular assistance to the overseas Filipino workers stranded in work camps across Saudi Arabia", a foreign department statement said.

The immediate target is to bring aid to "those without food and in dire need of medical care and other support services", it added.

"A high-level delegation of senior Philippine government officials will also be sent soonest to negotiate immediate and long-term solutions with counterparts in the Saudi government," the statement said.

"The directive of (President Rodrigo Duterte) is to bring all of them home as soon as possible," Labour Secretary Silvestre Bello told ABS-CBN television in an interview aired Saturday.

Labour rights monitors in the Philippines said last week some Filipinos have been forced to beg or sift through garbage to survive.

It comes after the workers have been left unpaid for months or after having been laid off from construction jobs.

The Philippine government estimates about 9,000 Filipino workers were affected, though the Manila-based labour rights group Migrante said as many as 20,000 could be in distress.

They could not leave because they lacked proper permits or were still awaiting months of back pay, Migrante added.

Asian activists and officials have said thousands of Indians and Pakistanis are also stranded in Saudi Arabia following the layoffs.

About 10 million Filipinos work abroad due to low wages or lack of jobs in their own country of about 100 million people.

Oil-rich Middle Eastern countries have been a key destination since the 1970s.