is going to be limited to 6-9 year.
The Ministry of Interior, as part of changes to residency laws expected by year-end, may put a cap on the unbroken length for which a resident may stay in the United Arab Emirates.
A senior ministry official said on Wednesday that the ministry is considering a number of proposals in this regard. Therefore, it is early to say what the permissible period of unbroken stay might be. Further, the cap might not be the same for every class of professional.
The acting Director-General of Naturalization and Residency, Brigadier Nasser Al Menhali, said the cap would take into account the expatriates’ profession: for instance, the highly skilled and in-demand professionals might be granted a longer stay.
“A ceiling of years will be worked out. Reaching that ceiling, the foreigner will not have his residency renewed. He should cancel it and leave the country,” Al Menhali said. “The ministry is studying a number of proposals and has not yet set the residency visa term.”
Al Menhali added, “He can (however) return to the country on a new visa without calculating the years of his former stay into the new one.”
A residency cap for expatriate workers was first proposed among Gulf Cooperation Council countries in 2007. It was suggested that unskilled workers be restricted to a stay of six years to curb a population imbalance.
While the council decided against the cap, the UAE has pressed ahead with a committee formed to investigate whether a residency cap could solve the issue of national demographics.
‘’The MoI is considering several proposals in a bid to arrive at the final amendments to the immigration law which fit the higher interest of the state,’’ Al Menhali told Khaleej Times.
The Federal National Council’s Committee of Interior and Defence Affairs, which includes Ministry of Interior officials, has developed a number of proposals, including one that says the residency period workers be made renewable every six years.
Ahmed Shabibb Al Dhaheri, Deputy Speaker of the FNC, in a Khaleej Times report of May 2008, said the recommendations would require the expatriate to leave the country after the period and return again with a new contract and residency visa.
In recent days, ministry officials have told Khaleej Times that another proposal sets the cap at 10 years.
http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArti ... heuae&col=