Siliguri,
May. 30: A decade after the landlocked Himalayan kingdom opened
its doors to the world, it has issued a royal notification
barring `foreign` workers in 16 different occupations.
Come June 1 (Tuesday), the royal decree
will bar foreigners from working in service-related sectors.
The ban, through a royal notification, was passed by the Bhutan
National Assembly resolution in January this year. Bhutan,
for years, has been employing more than 50,000 foreigners,
particularly Indian nationals, as accountants, clerks, office
assistants, receptionists, typists, computer and telephone
operators, drivers, contract labourers, daily wagers and regular
job employee
Though senior Bhutan bureaucrats are in
favour of the `son-of-the-soil` policy, in private, they admit
that restriction of foreign workers in some of the service
related sectors might hinder the country's march towards modernity,
an apprehension that is shared by a large number of private
entrepreneurs. Some senior bureaucrats also pointed out that
the ban was also a way to keep undesirable and subversive
elements - the Ulfa-NDBF-KLO - off limits to the kingdom.
Speaking over phone from Thimphu,
secretary of the labour and human resources ministry Pem L.
Dorji said: `Foreigners were given the jobs because they werebetter
qualification academically and more skilled than Bhutan nationals.
The kingdom, with a population of less than 6 lakh, has a
working population of 2,27,698. Of them, over 50,000 are foreign
nationals. There are 4,522 unemployed educated youths in the
age group of 15-24 years at present. His Majesty Jigme Singye
Wangchuk's vision is that every man and women graduating from
the various technical and non-technical institutions should
be given appropriate jobs.`
Private entrepreneurs are not too happy
about the ban. So are multi-national companies which have
opened shop in Bhutan.
A senior executive (who did not want to
be named) of the Tashi Group of Companies, one of the largest
private corporate houses, said over phone from Phuentsholing:
`The policy is good for the kingdom. But the people of Bhutan
look down upon manual labour. With no economic pressure and
a large section of affluent Drukpas, being well placed in
administrative posts, who will do the clerical job? Bhutanese
educated youths shun service sector jobs like that of a receptionist
and computer/ telephone operators or for that matter, drivers.`
Courtesy
The Telegraph |