December 29, 2014 | The Reporter Ethiopia, a Pro-TPLF press | By Yonas Abiye
The Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs (MoLSA) has announced on
Thursday that it is going to lift the travel ban that it imposed on
domestic workers who travel to the Middle East.
The ban which was ordered in October 2012, eventually led to the
barring of work permits of agencies that facilitate existing travels for
work, and other destinations popular for overseas employment.
Speaking before the House of Peoples' Representatives (HPR), Minister
of Labor and Social Affairs, Abdulfetah Abdulahi Hassen told MPs that
the government decided to lift the ban after it made bilateral
agreements on the safety of citizens with the governments of Qatar,
Kuwait and Jordan.
He also indicated that the government had to take time to deliver
trainings and proper education for domestic workers who seek to travel
to the Middle East.
"So far we have been undertaking important steps such as revising the
existing bilateral agreements and trying to amend them in order to
ensure the safety of our people", the Minister told Mps. However, he did
not mention when the ban is going to be lifted.
The banning of citizens from traveling to the region was prompted
after repeated reports that countless Ethiopians have lost their lives
and undergone untold physical and psychological trauma due to illegal
human trafficking.
The decision was meant to safeguard the wellbeing of the citizens,
and was effective until a lasting solution was found to the problem.
According to an International Labor Organization (ILO) report in
2011, migrant domestic workers in countries like Kuwait and Saudi Arabia
become trapped in exploitative or abusive employment because of the
sponsorship system.
They face criminal penalties if they try to leave a job without their
employer's permission, facing detention by government authorities if
they are reported as 'absconding' and deported, even if they have been
abused and are seeking redress.
In countries like Lebanon, a lack of accessible complaint mechanisms,
lengthy and costly judicial procedures, and restrictive visa policies
discourage migrant domestic workers from reporting abuse and
exploitation.
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