Foreign remittance, Sri Lanka’s top foreign exchange earner, is suffering as tens of thousands of Sri Lankans employed over seas are laid off due to the global financial crisis.
More than 30,000 Sri Lankans employed in the construction sector in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and South Korea are at risk of being laid-off owing to the global recession, the Sunday Times newspaper in Sri Lanka reported quoting Foreign Employment Minister Keheliya Rambukwella.
“A highly reputed international financial institution in South Korea had recently terminated the jobs of some 4000 white collar employees including many Sri Lankans though the exact number was not known. This shows that not only labour staff but even those in higher posts might lose their jobs,” Rambukwella told Sunday times.
Foreign Employment Bureau chairman Kingsley Ranawaka said the construction industry in the UAE had suffered a body blow and thousands of Sri Lankans might lose their jobs, reported Sunday times.
Sunday Times further added that according to Ranawaka of the 238,000 Sri Lankans working in the UAE, 102,000 were men with most of them working in the construction industry. He said it was not only labour staff who would be hit but also quantity surveyors, engineers, architects and other professionals.
Ranawaka further told the newspaper that many construction projects were at a standstill and that people were unable to get jobs in the UAE and he feared the situation might get worse.
Ranawaka further said other West Asian countries also were affected, especially some construction projects in Qatar.
Suraj Dandeniya, Former president of the Association of Licensed Foreign Employment Agencies (ALFEA), said the demand for construction sector workers in the UAE and other Gulf countries had drastically dropped and most of the job agencies here would also be affected, reported Sunday Times.
According to the newspaper, S. Rajah, an official of Professional Manpower Recruiting Services Ltd, said that UAE employers and contractors had informed Sri Lanka of a 30 percent reduction in job opportunities and visas were not issued for jobs in some sectors.