According to the Bureau of Manpower, Employment and Training (BMET), Bangladeshi workers are currently sent to 168 countries. As of November 2019, the total number of Bangladeshi workers sent abroad was 701,000 while it was 734,181 in 2018.
Expatriates’ Welfare and Overseas Employment Secretary Selim Reza told UNB that some closed labour markets will reopen in 2020. “We’ll be able to send more workers abroad compared to this year when the new markets will reopen. There’ll be greater remittance inflow, too,” he said.
Additional secretary to the Ministry of Expatriates’ Welfare and Overseas Employment MunirusSalehin said, “Regional issues, for example the localization in Saudi Arabia and Qatar, didn’t allow us to send as many workers as we had targeted. Besides, fewer workers went to Malaysia as the country closed its labour market.”
According to him, Bangladesh received US $ 18 billion remittance in 2019 while it was US $ 16.42 billion in 2018.
He said the remittance inflow marked a rise by 16.2 percent in 2019 compared to that of 2018 due to a 2 percent incentive given to migrant workers.
He further said the ‘e-management service’ will be launched this year where the list of all workers going abroad will be uploaded in software. “Financial transactions for the outgoing workers will be carried out through banks. Ensuring good governance is our main objective.”
Secretary General Bangladesh Association of International Recruiting Agencies (BAIRA) Shamim Ahmed Chowdhury told UNB that the number of workers who went abroad last year is still high though the major overseas labour markets were closed. “Fewer people were sent to the UAE and Malaysia as the labour markets there were closed.”
He said the UAE and Malaysia markets will reopen next year. “In 2017 when those markets were open, 1,011,000 workers went to those countries”.
Shamim Ahmed is hopeful of sending more workers than 2017 once the two major markets lift the prohibition on their labour import.
“Labour markets in China, Cambodia, Seychelles, Bosnia Herzegovina, Romania, Hungary and Poland were opened last year. I’m optimistic that new markets will be added to that list in 2020,” he said.
Head of Migration Programme at BracSharifulHasan said nearly 1,200 female migrant workers returned from Saudi Arabia in 2019 after suffering horrendous torture at the hands of their employers.
Besides, Shamim Ahmed, nearly 60,000 male migrant workers were deported from the Middle East and Malaysia, most of them absolutely empty-handed.
The highest number of dead bodies of Bangladeshi male and female migrant workers was sent back to Bangladesh in 2019 compared to the last 15 years. According to the Brac Migration programme, 3,838 dead bodies of migrant workers were sent back home as of November 2019.
“Almost 60,000 male migrant workers were sent back in 2019 and nearly 30,000 came back from Saudi Arabia alone. Saudi police deported many Bangladeshi workers even though they had their ‘Akama’ (permit) in order,” he said.
SharifulHasan said workers who had previously gone to Saudi Arabia on general free visas were sent back for working elsewhere leaving the designated employer. However, many migrant workers who were deported from Saudi Arabia said they had the legal ‘Akama’ with them.