Filipino nurses, engineers to find more jobs in Qatar

Philippine and Qatari delegates take part in a bilateral Joint Committee meeting in Pasay City, Philippines, Aug. 7, 2024. (Philippine Department of Migrant Workers)
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Updated 10 August 2024
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Filipino nurses, engineers to find more jobs in Qatar

  • Philippine, Qatari officials agree to improved employment contracts, working conditions
  • Countries are reviewing their labor agreements to ensure fair recruitment, safe migration

MANILA: Filipino nurses, architects, and engineers will have more job opportunities in Qatar, the Philippine Department of Migrant Workers said on Friday, as it agreed with the Gulf state to improve labor protections for expat workers.

Most of the about 2 million overseas Filipino workers live and work in Gulf countries, especially Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Qatar employs about 264,000 of them, annually contributing remittance inflows to the Philippines to the tune of $900 million.

The majority of Filipinos based there have been employed in the construction and service sectors but following this week’s meeting of the Philippines and Qatar Joint Committee in Pasay City, the opportunities are going to be expanded.

“Qatar expressed its interest to hire more skilled Filipino workers, such as nurses, architects, and engineers. Both sides agreed to work together to facilitate the deployment of OFWs (overseas Filipino workers) under improved terms and conditions,” the DMW said in a statement.

“DMW Undersecretary Patricia Yvonne Caunan and Qatar Ministry of Labor Assistant Undersecretary Sheika Najha Abdulrahman Al-Thani signed the joint statement, which featured significant breakthroughs in promoting the rights and welfare of OFWs.”

DMW Secretary Hans Leo Cacdac welcomed the agreements forged during the meeting as “milestones in ensuring the security and well-being of Filipinos.”

According to the joint statement, the countries have adopted improved employment contracts, offering Filipino workers better conditions.

“The enhanced employment contract for Filipino workers in Qatar prescribes improved working conditions, the entitlement of workers to end-of-service benefits that are higher compared with other countries, medical and social care, and decent accommodation that respect workers’ cultural and religious needs,” it said.

“The contract protects the job security of workers by stipulating a shorter probationary period of three months for new workers and by establishing clear guidelines for contract termination by both the employer and the worker.”

The DMW and the Qatari Ministry of Labor also announced the establishment of a joint committee to “review and enhance” existing and pending bilateral labor agreements for “fair and ethical recruitment, safe migration, and decent work for migrant workers.”


Bangladesh remains calm a day after tribunal issues death sentence for Sheikh Hasina

Updated 58 min 29 sec ago
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Bangladesh remains calm a day after tribunal issues death sentence for Sheikh Hasina

  • The International Crimes Tribunal handed down death sentences in absentia to Hasina and former Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan
  • She said the charges were unjustified, arguing that she and Khan “acted in good faith and were trying to minimize the loss of life”

DHAKA: Bangladesh’s capital and major cities were calm Tuesday despite a call for a nationwide shutdown by the former ruling party of ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina after she was sentenced to death over her crackdown on a student uprising last year.
The International Crimes Tribunal handed down death sentences in absentia to Hasina and former Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan on Monday for their involvement in deadly force used against protesters last year.
Hasina’s former ruling Awami League party rejected the court proceedings Monday, calling it “a kangaroo court” and called for a nationwide shutdown the next day.
Hasina’s opponents clashed with police and soldiers until late Monday and attempted to use excavators to demolish the home of her father, Bangladesh independence leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. Local media reported the home of former President Abdul Hamid, a veteran Awami League leader, was vandalized in the northeastern Kishoreganj district.
But on Tuesday, there was no closure of services or shops and schools, although some people expressed tension and confusion over what lies ahead for the South Asian nation, a parliamentary democracy of 170 million people.
Mohammad Saikot Hossain, a Dhaka businessman, said there is “no real rule of law here” and he worries about his children’s future.
“Those who ruled the country before shaped the law in their own way, and those who are ruling now are also shaping the law in their own way,” he said. “Our next generation is growing up in this environment. They have no aim and no future. I am very worried about where they will go and what they will do in the days to come.”
Hasina, 78, was convicted Monday on five charges of crimes against humanity. She also was sentenced to prison until natural death for making inflammatory remarks and ordering the extermination of student protesters with helicopters, drones and lethal weapons.
A former police chief was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment after pleading guilty and becoming a state witness against Hasina.
Bangladesh experienced weeks of student-led protests in July and August last year. Demonstrators voiced discontent over a quota system for allocating government jobs that critics said favored those with connections to Hasina’s party. More than 800 people were killed and about 14,000 were injured, Bangladesh’s interim government reported. The United Nations in February estimated that as many as 1,400 people were killed.
The uprising led to the collapse of Hasina’s 15-year rule on Aug. 5, 2024. Hasina and Khan fled to India, which has declined to extradite them, making it unlikely they would ever be executed or imprisoned.
Hasina cannot appeal unless she surrenders or is arrested within 30 days of the sentencing. She and Khan did not designate defense lawyers and rejected a state-appointed defense attorney for the tribunal.
On Monday, she said the charges were unjustified, arguing that she and Khan “acted in good faith and were trying to minimize the loss of life.”
“We lost control of the situation, but to characterize what happened as a premeditated assault on citizens is simply to misread the facts,” she said in a statement.
The UN said Hasina’s sentencing marked “an important moment for victims of the grave violations committed during the suppression of protests last year.”
New York-based Human Rights Watch expressed misgivings, saying the trial process raised “serious human rights concerns” and questioned statements by the witnesses and the conduct of the defense appointed by the state.
“There is enduring anger and anguish in Bangladesh over Hasina’s repressive rule, but all criminal proceedings need to meet international fair trial standards,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, Human Rights Watch deputy Asia director.
Those responsible for the “horrific abuses” under the Hasina administration should be held to account after “impartial investigations and credible trials,” Ganguly said.
Amnesty International Secretary General Agnès Callamard protested the death sentence and said “this trial and sentence is neither fair nor just.”
“This was not a fair trial,” Callamard said in a statement Monday. “The victims of July 2024 deserve far better. Bangladesh needs a justice process that is scrupulously fair and fully impartial beyond all suspicion of bias and does not resort to order further human rights violations through the death penalty.”
The sentencing came as Bangladesh grapples with stability under an interim government headed by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus, who took over an interim government three days after Hasina was ousted. An election is planned for February, although specific dates have not been announced.