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Phl rejects appeal from Saudi Arabia to cut minimum wage for Pinoy maids

- Mayen Jaymalin -

Manila, Philippines - The Philippines has rejected an appeal from Saudi Arabia to cut the minimum wage for Filipino maids by half and will not be sending new domestic helpers until the dispute is solved, Labor Secretary Rosalinda Baldoz said yesterday.

Baldoz said the Saudi government wants the minimum monthly salary for Filipino maids lowered from $400 to $200.

“As far as the POEA (Philippine Overseas Employment Administration) governing board is concerned, we will continue to enforce the $400 minimum monthly salary for HSWs (household service workers),” Baldoz disclosed.

Saudi officials have complained that the Philippine government has imposed other strict measures on Saudi employers, including giving out their personal data and information on their income. In March, the Saudi Foreign Ministry announced it was suspending processing of new contracts.

About 1.2 million Filipinos work in the kingdom, including skilled laborers, nurses and maids. They are part of about nine million Filipinos, or 10 percent of the population, who work in 190 countries to escape poverty and unemployment at home.

Workers abroad send back remittances amounting to 10 percent of the country’s annual gross domestic product, fueling domestic consumption and keeping the local economy afloat.

Baldoz said the government’s requirements are mandated by law, including the minimum wage, as part of measures to protect the welfare of overseas workers particularly in Arab countries, where abuse is rampant.

“They (Saudi officials) asked us to relax some of the documentary requirements for employers and we were flexible on that, but we relayed to them that salary under the reform package will remain,” she said.

The Philippines has barred deployment of workers to some Middle East countries, including Lebanon and Syria.

Baldoz said that oil-rich Gulf countries were pressuring the Philippines to relax the rules for overseas workers, citing the mediation efforts some of the Arab governments have undertaken in Mindanao.

“These countries continue to pressure us not to impose the ban, citing their political role in the peace negotiations in the southern Philippines and threats to cut oil supplies,” she said. “There is really a wide political repercussion regarding the hiring of household service workers.”

She said about 13,000 maids head to Saudi Arabia every year, of which 9,000 are newly hired and the rest are returning workers who have their contracts renewed.

Baldoz said she planned to discuss the wage dispute with her Saudi counterparts at an International Labor Organization conference in Geneva next month. – With AP

BALDOZ

IN MARCH

INTERNATIONAL LABOR ORGANIZATION

LABOR SECRETARY ROSALINDA BALDOZ

LEBANON AND SYRIA

MIDDLE EAST

PHILIPPINE OVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT ADMINISTRATION

SAUDI

SAUDI ARABIA

SAUDI FOREIGN MINISTRY

WORKERS

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