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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, May 2, 2016
Sacked workers in Saudi Arabia set fire to buses in protest over unpaid salaries
50,000 foreign labourers have been sacked by the Binladin Group and some have not been paid salaries in at least four months
Seven buses were set ablaze in Mecca on Saturday by workers over unpaid salaries (Twitter)
Rori Donaghy-Sunday 1 May 2016
Workers at one of Saudi Arabia’s largest employers set fire to buses on Saturday amid protests at being laid off and told to leave the kingdom without being paid for several months work.
50,000 foreign labourers have been sacked by the Binladin Group and some have not been paid salaries in at least four months
Seven buses were set ablaze in Mecca on Saturday by workers over unpaid salaries (Twitter)
Rori Donaghy-Sunday 1 May 2016Workers at one of Saudi Arabia’s largest employers set fire to buses on Saturday amid protests at being laid off and told to leave the kingdom without being paid for several months work.
Footage uploaded to YouTube showed employees of the Binladin Group
protesting outside the construction company’s offices in Mecca province,
and setting fire to several buses.
Saudi daily Okaz reported that
fires on seven buses in Mecca had been extinguished without any
fatalities, adding that local authorities had launched an investigation
into the incident.
However, the newspaper did not mention the cause of the fire, which was by angry former Binladin employees.
The protesting workers are among 50,000 foreign labourers who have been
sacked by the private company as the kingdom’s revenues have declined
due to low oil prices, which have forced government spending cuts.
Saudi daily al-Watan reported on Friday that Binladin had given the
sacked foreign workers a permanent exit visa to leave the country but
many of them do not want to leave because they claim not to have been
paid properly.
Watan said some of the workers had not been paid in at least four
months, and that they are now holding daily protests in front of the
company’s offices.
The mass sacking by Binladin constitutes a 25 percent reduction of its total 200,000 workforce, according to its LinkedIn page.
The company, which was established in 1931 by the father of the late
al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden, is one of Saudi Arabia’s largest
employers and it has been responsible for large construction projects
including building towers in the capital Riyadh, and universities and
airports in the western port city of Jeddah.
But the company has reportedly been
suffering from debts of up to $30bn and it has been engaged in a series
of pay disputes with workers, which in March led to protests outside
their offices in Riyadh.
Binladin may also be feeling the pinch because of a catastrophe at one
of its projects last year, when a crane in the holy city of Mecca collapsed and killed 107 people.
The incident prompted the government to suspend the company from future
contracts, and led to an investigation by the finance ministry into its
existing state projects.
Saudi Arabia has been forced to cut its government spending as oil
prices, which account for the majority of the kingdom’s income, have
plummeted by up to 70 percent in two years.
The Binladin group has not issued a statement about the reported sacking and the pay dispute with workers.
