Islamabad says Saudi will bar firms from laying off Pakistani workers for 3 months

PM’s aide Syed Zulfi Bukhari in a meeting with Saudi Vice Minister of Labor & Social Development on issues of Pakistani migrant workers at his office Islamabad on 21st April, 2020. (Photo courtesy: Ministry of Overseas Pakistanis & HRD)
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Updated 22 April 2020
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Islamabad says Saudi will bar firms from laying off Pakistani workers for 3 months

  • Kingdom also extended entry and exit visas for Pakistani workers until December
  • Those already laid off by their employers would get official cooperation, ministry of overseas Pakistanis says 

ISLAMABAD: The Ministry of Overseas Pakistanis said on Tuesday that Saudi Arabia would bar companies from laying off Pakistani employees for three months and ask the owners and management of these organizations to continue paying salaries during the period.

Sayed Zulfikar Abbas Bukhari, the prime minister’s special assistant on overseas Pakistanis, said he had requested the measure to support Pakistani workers during his video call meeting with Saudi Deputy Minister of Labor and Social Development Dr. Abdullah bin Nasser.

In an official handout, the Pakistani ministry quoted Dr. Nasser as saying, “Saudi companies will not lay off laborers for the next three months” and that “all employees will continue receiving their salary during this three months’ time.”

The Kingdom also decided to extend the duration of entry and exit visas for Pakistani workers, the ministry said. 

“Pakistanis labor force will enjoy free of cost visa extension until December,” the statement quoted the Saudi minister as saying. 
Last month, the Saudi authorities decided to extend the period of validity of exit and reentry visas that expire between Feb. 25 and May 24 for another three months without any charge.

The Kingdom’s decision to extend the visas will benefit the downsized workers in Saudi Arabia and those laborers who were not in the country when the COVID-19 lockdown was announced by Riyadh and they could not return to their employment places before international flights were suspended.

According to the Pakistani ministry’s press release, those who had already been laid off by their employers would also get official cooperation and the Kingdom’s relevant authorities would ensure that their dues were properly cleared.

Officials from both sides agreed to further strengthen bilateral relations during crisis and soon discuss the idea of resuming flight operations between the two countries.


China’s Xi extends condolences over blast in Pakistani capital claimed by Daesh

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China’s Xi extends condolences over blast in Pakistani capital claimed by Daesh

  • In Friday’s attack a man detonated a bomb that killed over 30 people, as well as himself, and injured more than 170
  • While bombings are rare in heavily guarded Islamabad, this is the second such attack in about three months

BEIJING, China: Chinese President Xi Jinping on Monday sent a message of condolences to Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari over last week’s deadly explosion in Islamabad.

On Friday an attacker opened fire at the gates of a Shiite Muslim mosque in Islamabad before setting off a suicide bomb and killing at least 31 people in the deadliest attack of its kind in Pakistan’s capital in more than a decade.

Xi “strongly condemned the violence and terrorist acts against innocent civilians,” and said China would support Pakistan in fighting terrorism, according to the state-run Xinhua news agency.

The Daesh group claimed responsibility for the attack in a statement on the Telegram messaging app.

Minister of Interior Moshin Naqvi told a press conference last week four people, including the alleged mastermind of the attack, had been arrested following an operation in Peshawar and Nowshera. During the operation one counter-terrorism officer was killed and three more were wounded, he said.

While bombings are rare in heavily guarded Islamabad, this is the second such attack in three months and — given a recent rise in militancy — they have triggered fears of a return to violence in Pakistan’s major urban centers.