
Indonesia set to allow domestic helpers in Saudi Arabia after 10-year ban
Advertisement
A memorandum of understanding to facilitate the legal placement of migrant workers was scheduled to be signed by ministers from Indonesia and Saudi Arabia later this month in Jeddah, said Migrant Workers Protection Minister Abdul Kadir Karding in Jakarta.
'After ensuring that Saudi Arabia's labour protection system has improved sufficiently, we will reopen the programme,' Karding told reporters last week, noting that the decision to lift the ban followed a meeting between him and Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto.
The Indonesian government would likely send around 600,000 workers to Saudi Arabia as early as June, Karding said. This would include 400,000 domestic helpers and 200,000 skilled labourers, he added, without specifying what sectors would hire the latter group.
The government was projecting potential foreign exchange earnings of 31 trillion rupiah [US$1.89 billion] a year if 600,000 workers were sent to Saudi Arabia, the minister said.
Advertisement
He added that there was promise of more improved and advanced protections in place for workers in Saudi Arabia.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


HKFP
4 hours ago
- HKFP
Tycoon Jimmy Lai's foreign ties showed his ‘unwavering intent' to draw int'l sanctions, prosecutors tells court
Jimmy Lai 's international connections were testament to his 'unwavering intent' to attract foreign sanctions on China and Hong Kong, prosecutors have said, as the jailed media tycoon's high-profile national security trial entered its final stages. The court on Monday began hearing closing arguments in the long-running trial after proceedings were twice delayed last week, first owing to bad weather and then to health concerns relating to the 77-year-old tycoon's heart. Prosecutor Anthony Chau told the court on Monday that Lai had been given a portable heart monitoring device and related medication, and that the tycoon had 'no complaints' about his health. Lai's lawyer, Robert Pang, told the court last week that the media mogul had experienced heart 'palpitations' while in jail and episodes where he felt like 'collapsing.' But Lai was 'physically and mentally fit' for attending court proceedings, according to a memo prepared by an in-prison medical officer, which was read out by Judge Esther Toh on Monday. Toh said the tycoon could request a break from the hearings at any time, if necessary. 'Long term and persistent' Lai stands accused of two conspiracy charges of foreign collusion under the Beijing-imposed national security law and a third count of conspiring to publish seditious materials under colonial-era legislation. He faces life behind bars if convicted. At the centre of the case are Lai's ties with foreign officials and politicians, which prosecutors allege he used to lobby for countries to impose 'Sanctions, Blockades, or Hostile activity' (SBHA) against authorities in mainland China and Hong Kong. 'We submit that all these foreign connections and foreign collaborations show [Lai's] unwavering intent to solicit SBHA from foreign countries,' Chau told the court. 'These collaborations are long-term and persistent.' Prosecutors named retired US army general Jack Keane, ex-US deputy secretary of defence Paul Wolfowitz, and Mary Kissel, an advisor to then US secretary of state Mike Pompeo, as Lai's foreign connections, among others. Chau also attacked the defence's closing arguments regarding human rights issues in the case, which have yet to be delivered orally in court. 'Absurd' analogy According to Chau, the defence will seek to liken Lai's international advocacy to the collaboration between prosecutors in Hong Kong with the International Association of Prosecutors, a global UN-backed NGO. 'We find it absurd' for the defence to draw the analogy, Chau told the court. He also argued that the Beijing-imposed security law does not criminalise 'normal international exchange,' but it outlaws foreign collusion, such as requesting foreign sanctions to be imposed on China and Hong Kong. 'It is surprising to see that [Lai] raised freedoms of thought and association as his shield,' prosecutors said in their written submission to the court. Chau also set out the prosecution's arguments on a number of legal issues, including how to interpret the foreign collusion and the sedition offences. He will continue his oral submission of the prosecution's closing arguments on Tuesday. The Lai case does not involve a jury – instead, arguments are heard by judges hand-picked by the city's leader John Lee. Lai effectively barred from hiring a British lawyer of his choice. Beijing inserted national security legislation directly into Hong Kong's mini-constitution in June 2020 following a year of pro-democracy protests and unrest. It criminalised subversion, secession, collusion with foreign forces and terrorist acts – broadly defined to include disruption to transport and other infrastructure. The move gave police sweeping new powers and led to hundreds of arrests amid new legal precedents, while dozens of civil society groups disappeared. The authorities say it restored stability and peace to the city, rejecting criticism from trade partners, the UN and NGOs.


South China Morning Post
6 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
How is the EV industry driving China's ‘going global' strategy?
The electric vehicle (EV) industry, formerly one of China's most inward-focused industrial sectors, is now leading a push overseas, carrying the government's hopes of forging an offshore economic empire to sidestep cutthroat competition at home. Advertisement Last year, for the first time, Chinese EV companies invested more overseas than they did at home, despite higher costs, delays and risks abroad, according to a report published by Rhodium Group on Monday. That marked a historic shift after years of directing around 80 per cent of investment to the domestic market, the research group said. The shift was made despite a hostile external climate, with the European Union and the United States tightening restrictions and stepping up scrutiny of China's 'going global' strategy. However, Chinese companies are contending with sagging demand and excess capacity at home, with an enervating price war eroding profit margins and leaving them little choice but to look abroad in search of growth. Overseas investment lagged far behind domestic spending before 2022, as policy support propelled China's annual EV supply chain investment to an average of US$92 billion in 2021 and 2022, the report said. The gap then began to close, and by 2024, foreign investment had edged past domestic outlays, which had fallen to just US$15 billion. Advertisement At home, factories assembling EVs were operating at just 49 per cent capacity in 2023 and battery factories at 36.5 per cent, the report said.


South China Morning Post
7 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
US negotiators face tough task to secure trade deal with China
With the tariff truce extended to November 10, US and Chinese negotiators can now focus on shaping a trade deal in the lead-up to a possible summit between US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping this autumn. While engagement has occurred at senior levels since the first meeting in Geneva, Switzerland, several months ago, it appears that much of the discussion since then has centred around ensuring the smooth flow of Chinese critical minerals and magnets to the United States. Advertisement Now, negotiators need to pick up the pace and take a detailed look at other issues that could be part of a future agreement while recognising that there are no easy solutions. The positive news is that both sides, to varying degrees, seem to want a deal that helps to stabilise the bilateral relationship. Quick tariff escalations that occurred earlier made both sides realise that tensions had gone off the rails. Officials point to the phase one agreement concluded during Trump's first term as evidence that bilateral deals are possible, even in an environment where strategic competition prevails. But Beijing has learned important lessons from those earlier negotiations, which relatively favoured Washington's interests. Since then, China has taken steps to avoid a repeat. Beijing is thus likely to insist on a more balanced agreement this time, meaning it will request concessions from Washington in areas such as the relaxation of export controls and the lowering of tariffs. Second, China has successfully reduced its dependence on the US as an export market since 2017, with exports to the US in 2024 only accounting for 14.7 per cent of its total, down from slightly over 19 per cent in 2018. It has turned to other partners to help fill its import needs, including Brazil , now its largest soybean supplier. Advertisement