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the message board for Dubai English speaking community
Bora Bora wrote:Improving on the good points? Are there any?
Part of it may have to do with the fact that there would be many government agencies that would no longer be needed, hence a rise in unemployment amongst the local population.
Bahrain equated the sponsorship to slavery. And what would the UAE be without slaves??
Speedhump wrote:uaekid I would look at it the other way round and say 'what is good about it' (why does it need to exist?).
The law certainly is used by some employers to prevent workers from leaving their employment and moving freely to other employers. It's illegal for an employer to refuse to issue a no objection letter for a worker to change companies, if there are no good reasons, but it happens, especially to workers who don't have much power. Same as the employers who take employees passports away 'for their own security, in case they lose them, blah blah'.
That's my understanding.
desertdudeshj wrote:You guys are useless at reading between the lines
“There is absolutely no need to abolish the sponsorship system because so many government departments and external organisations are tied to it,” Khazraji was quoted as saying by the newspaper.
Means what about all the sleeping partners who own 51% stake in everything and charge huge amounts of money just to sign a paper once in year which yto get ou have to chase after them for months on end because he won't pick up the phone or is in bangkok for some "bussiness" and dunno when hes comming back etc etc.
How many of you actually have to deal with your forced emarati bussiness "partner" ?
“There is no plan or talk of applying that here at the moment as there are enough initiatives to work through,” the unnamed official was quoted as saying
desertdudeshj wrote:You guys are useless at reading between the lines
“There is absolutely no need to abolish the sponsorship system because so many government departments and external organisations are tied to it,” Khazraji was quoted as saying by the newspaper.
Means what about all the sleeping partners who own 51% stake in everything and charge huge amounts of money just to sign a paper once in year which yto get ou have to chase after them for months on end because he won't pick up the phone or is in bangkok for some "bussiness" and dunno when hes comming back etc etc.
How many of you actually have to deal with your forced emarati bussiness "partner" ?
desertdudeshj wrote:You guys are useless at reading between the lines
“There is absolutely no need to abolish the sponsorship system because so many government departments and external organisations are tied to it,” Khazraji was quoted as saying by the newspaper.
Means what about all the sleeping partners who own 51% stake in everything and charge huge amounts of money just to sign a paper once in year which yto get ou have to chase after them for months on end because he won't pick up the phone or is in bangkok for some "bussiness" and dunno when hes comming back etc etc.
How many of you actually have to deal with your forced emarati bussiness "partner" ?
Bora Bora wrote:If I recall, you claimed to have worked in the US. Since you were not a US citizen or holding a green card, surely you were required to obtain some documentation to allow you to work. Having worked there surely you know the difference between there and here. In spite of your status in the US, I am sure that if you wanted to seek employment elsewhere you would have been free to do so without penalty.
Red Chief wrote:Bora Bora wrote:If I recall, you claimed to have worked in the US. Since you were not a US citizen or holding a green card, surely you were required to obtain some documentation to allow you to work. Having worked there surely you know the difference between there and here. In spite of your status in the US, I am sure that if you wanted to seek employment elsewhere you would have been free to do so without penalty.
Probably there are different kind of contracts/visa for foreigners in the US and Canada. 20 years ago my uncle and a few my former university mates signed some contracts with some US universities. State College, PA was one of them. They worked as lecturers for next to nothing (~1500 bucks per month plus flat). They was able to change their job only inside the university.
As I remember they didn't have green cards.
Surprisingly their wives were granted normal visas with permission to work outside university. As a rule they earned even more money although their qualification were much lower than the one of university-slaves.
Bora Bora wrote:And to say they were "university-slaves". Like the UAE, I am sure that no one held a gun to their head and there was always the choice to leave. The difference could be is that expats that come to the UAE are not chasing the passport, whereas they may have been.
worldguy wrote:UAE needs to think about offering citizenship to people that are highly qualified or over a certain networth. This will help the country on the whole as talented people and entrepreneurs will be committed to the development of UAE. The UAE Nationals should be pushed in the government jobs to ensure that they stay competitive. This will help them in moving to private sector and working their way up.
A lot of UAE Nationals benefit for this and take undue advantage of benefits being offered.
I do believe though that companies should be allowed to seek compensation, if the employee changed jobs, but should not be restricted. This will ensure that nobody is exploited and employer's do not take advantage of the employees. This will also bring parity to the salaries.
The rule for 51% controlling stake should also be relooked at, as lot of business might not find this feasible and are currently avoiding UAE. UAE has a window for another 5-10 years, before the world moves to using alternative fuels as against oil. Carbon credits are gaining in prominence and will ensure that people reduce their dependance on fuels that impact the environment. Oil might last for 100 years, but demand whill shift.
uaekid wrote:worldguy wrote:UAE needs to think about offering citizenship to people that are highly qualified or over a certain networth. This will help the country on the whole as talented people and entrepreneurs will be committed to the development of UAE. The UAE Nationals should be pushed in the government jobs to ensure that they stay competitive. This will help them in moving to private sector and working their way up.
A lot of UAE Nationals benefit for this and take undue advantage of benefits being offered.
I do believe though that companies should be allowed to seek compensation, if the employee changed jobs, but should not be restricted. This will ensure that nobody is exploited and employer's do not take advantage of the employees. This will also bring parity to the salaries.
The rule for 51% controlling stake should also be relooked at, as lot of business might not find this feasible and are currently avoiding UAE. UAE has a window for another 5-10 years, before the world moves to using alternative fuels as against oil. Carbon credits are gaining in prominence and will ensure that people reduce their dependance on fuels that impact the environment. Oil might last for 100 years, but demand whill shift.
Can’t agree more about the citizenship. And for the 51% I really thought it's just something on papers not more than that and from what I encountered, locals are mostly the ones financing the businesses, but of course this does not apples on all cases. Moreover, it's just a law on paper! I didn't hear much dispute in courts, at least not in a big scale and I think you can always overpass these law ones you establish an internal laws inside your company somehow to be in the actual investor side other wise I can’t see how thousands of companies are doing well in the UAE and there are always the free zones in almost every city.
Speedhump wrote:As I said above provided that the company gets a legally binding signed agreement (it is done) from the 51 pct shareholder not to interfere in any way with the running of the company, uaekid would seem to be quite correct.