Refleksi: Bagaimana  dengan pemerintah NKRI, apakah  juga melakukan langkah 
yang sama guna menlindungi para pahlawan devisa (TKW/TKI), ataukah kuatir 
menyinggung perasaan Arab Saudia dan oleh karena itu tidak bergerak dan 
membisu? 


http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=113284&d=24&m=8&y=2008&pix=kingdom.jpg&category=Kingdom

Sunday 24 August 2008 (23 Sha`ban 1429)

      Lanka plans insurance cover for maids, drivers
      Mohammed Rasooldeen I Arab News 
        
      RIYADH: The Sri Lankan government has called on Saudi insurance companies 
to submit quotations for mandatory insurance to cover Sri Lankan domestic aides 
such as maids and drivers in the Kingdom.

      Colombo has drafted the new insurance scheme because the Saudi 
government's current insurance system does not include domestic aides working 
in Saudi households. "We have already introduced the scheme in the United Arab 
Emirates and Jordan. The Kingdom, which has the largest concentration of Sri 
Lankan housemaids in the region, will be the third country to launch the 
program," said Kingsley Ranawake, chairman of the Sri Lankan Bureau of Foreign 
Employment.

      Ranawake said the decision to introduce the scheme follows talks in May 
between Ghazi Al-Gosaibi, the Saudi minister of labor, and Keheliya 
Rambukwella, the Sri Lankan minister for labor welfare.

      During the talks in Riyadh, Al-Gosaibi agreed to the system of providing 
insurance cover to Sri Lankan maids. Colombo is presently in the process of 
appointing a Saudi company to provide the insurance cover, the costs of which 
will be met by Saudi sponsors.

      "Such an arrangement will ease problems affecting employees, employers 
and the two governments in case of the eventuality of circumstances such as the 
repatriation of bodies, disabilities, emergency medical expenses and legal 
assistance," said Ranawake.

      "The insurance cover would also include return air tickets if a sponsor 
failed to meet a worker's costs of return travel," he added.

      Ranawake said the proposed scheme would provide security to workers, 
encouraging them to look at the Kingdom as a prospective destination of 
employment.

      More than 80 percent of the 550,000 Sri Lankan workers in the Kingdom are 
housemaids whose earnings make up a large portion of foreign remittances to the 
country. Remittances from Sri Lankan overseas workers are the island's second 
largest foreign exchange earner.

      Ranawake added that the Kingdom has agreed to increase the monthly wage 
of Sri Lankan maids and drivers to SR650 starting January. He warned that 
recruiting agents who fail to ensure the payment of salaries as stipulated in 
work contracts would be blacklisted.
     


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