Labour Cabinet Secretary Kazungu Kambi has revoked the licences of agencies recruiting Kenyans to work in the Middle East.
The
agencies also face major losses running into millions of shillings
after Mr Kambi also temporarily suspended the recruitment and movement
of domestic workers to the Gulf region and Middle East.
Citing
the existence of many briefcase agencies and the suffering of migrant
workers, Mr Kambi said the 930 firms would have to undergo rigorous
vetting before acquiring licenses.
This could mean
Kenyans whose contracts ended on Monday will be stranded in their host
countries as they wait for the agencies to undergo fresh and thorough
vetting by the government.
Others travelling to their work stations from Kenya through the firms will also miss their job opportunities following the ban.
“The
government has a responsibility to protect its citizens including those
who are outside the country. In view of the foregoing, the government
has decided to revoke all accreditation certificates issued to private
employment agencies,” said Mr Kambi during a press conference at his
Nairobi office.
The minister said the move would enable
the government put in place “adequate structures” for the effective
management of labour migration and protection of migrant workers.
MOVE 'WRONG'
However,
an association of about 200 agencies opposed the move saying as much as
there were clandestine firms and several cases of violation against
Kenyan domestic workers in Saudi Arabia, the government’s action to cast
a blanket ban even on genuine agencies was wrong.
Kenya
Association of Private Employment Agencies (Kapea) secretary Hussein
Adnan said the government should have given the agencies a grace period
of one month before announcing the ban.
“We are shocked
by the move and we have no yet received communication from the
ministry. We met with the Cabinet Secretary last week and we agreed that
he would vet us afresh only for him to revoke our licenses today
(Monday)” Mr Adnan told the Nation by phone.
“We
do not just send domestic workers to those countries, we also send
expatriates including former army officers who get employed in countries
like Afghanistan,” he added.
No comments:
Post a Comment