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| Foreign labourers leave the construction site of the Al-Wakrah stadium in Doha, Qatar, after finishing work on May 4, 2015 (AFP Photo/ MARWAN NAAMANI) |
Doha (AFP) - Long-awaited reform of Qatar's controversial exit visa system, which requires foreign workers to obtain their bosses' permission to leave the country, came into force on Sunday, the government said.
"Law
No. 13 of 2018... regulating the entry, exit and residency of expatriates is
being implemented starting today," the interior ministry announced on
Twitter.
Qatar
announced in September it had approved legislation to scrap the visa system --
a lynchpin of the country's "kafala", or sponsorship, system which
many liken to modern-day slavery.
Under the
new law, all but five percent of a company's workforce -- reportedly those in
the most senior positions -- can leave without prior permission from employers.
Those not
allowed to leave Qatar "for any reason" can file a complaint to the
Expatriate Exit Grievance Committee that will "take a decision within
three working days", the ministry said.
Some
anxious workers took to government social media websites on Sunday, to ask how
they could find out if they were among the five per cent.
Qatar's
labour minister, Issa al-Nuaimi, said he was "exceptionally pleased"
with the implementation of the new law.
"We
are proud that the state of Qatar has become an example and a model for labour
reform in the region," he told AFP.
Nuaimi
added that Qatar wanted to give workers in the country, the "best
standards possible".
Scrapping
the exit permit is the biggest announcement made so far since Qatar agreed last
November to enter into a three-year agreement with the UN's International
Labour Organization (ILO) to oversee reform.
The ILO's
Houtan Homayounpour, head of the labour agency's project office in Doha, said
on Twitter that the reform "will have a direct and positive impact on the
lives of migrant workers".
The
football World Cup 2022 host has come under intense pressure to reform its
labour laws, which have been repeatedly denounced by human rights groups.
Critics
have long argued for abolition of the exit visa system.
Research
published last year by rights group Migrant-Rights.org found around a quarter
of all exit visa requests were denied by the government.
Vani
Saraswathi, associate editor and director of projects with Migrant-Rights.org,
said the reform was "long overdue and welcome", but added a warning.
"We
have to be cautious about celebrating it as a huge development," she said.
"Passport
confiscation is still rampant and the law also allows for employers to hold
passports with the workers' permission."
She also
noted that the law does not cover domestic workers, often seen as the most
vulnerable.
Rights
groups have argued that without the proper safeguards, relaxation of the visa
system could lead to unscrupulous employers holding workers' passports.
A study
earlier this year by Qatar University's Social and Economic Survey Research
found that 53 per cent of migrant workers said their bosses held their
passports.
There are
some two million foreign workers in Qatar.

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