Annapurna
Post
Sunday
02 April,2017
Kathmandu - The International Relations and Labor Committee under the
Legislature-Parliament which had declared a role of immigration employees in
illegally sending Nepali women to the Gulf countries a week back, has directed
the Council of Ministers to completely ban the sending of Nepali workers to
such countries until they came with a substantive law relating to domestic help
and made a bilateral labour agreement with Nepal.
A
meeting of the Committee held Sunday also instructed the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
and the Ministry of Labour and Employment to make initiations at a higher level
for an immediate rescue and return of those Nepali migrant workers facing
difficulty in the Gulf countries.
The
Foreign Ministry and the Ministry of Home Affairs have been told to identify
those Nepalis involved in human smuggling by staying outside the country, get
them back to the country and bring to book. The government has been instructed
to start initiations at the diplomatic level to even punish those foreign nationals
having a connection to the smuggling of Nepali.
The
meeting demanded action against those employees either of Tribhuvan
International Airport (TIA) or the Department of Immigrations, who have the
hands of sending Nepali women to the Gulf countries illegally.
Moreover,
the government has been instructed to regularly supervise problems of foreign
employment and address them by forming a robust joint mechanism.
Foreign
Minister Dr. Prakash Sharan Mahat, Minister for Labour and Employment Suryaman
Gurung, Minister of State for Home Indra Bahadur Baniya and the secretaries at
the respective ministries were present at the meeting.
In
the meeting, lawmakers claiming the hand of immigration employees in illegally
sending Nepali women to the Gulf countries as domestic help insisted on action
against the offenders.
A
team headed by Committee President Prabhu Saha returned home on March 28,
completing a field visit aimed at finding the status of Nepali migrant workers
in four Golf countries Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab
Emirates.
The
committee came with the finding that of those women leaving country illegally
for abroad jobs, 60 percent used the TIA with the support of the immigration
employees.
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