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Kenya: State Seeks Jobs for Kenyans Abroad


Kisumu — The Ministry of Labour and Social Protection has signed bilateral labour agreements with seven countries to assist qualified unemployed Kenyans to secure jobs abroad.

Labour Cabinet Secretary (CS) Florence Bore said so far, seven agreements have been signed adding that the initiative would benefit thousands of Kenyans in different cadres as the government moves to address rising unemployment in the country.

Among the agreements signed, she said, was between Kenya and Saudi Arabia where about 130, 000 opportunities have been identified for qualified Kenyans to tap into.

Kenya, she added, was looking beyond the gulf countries which have traditionally absorbed Kenyan workers to ensure that as many Kenyans as possible benefit from the programme.

She disclosed that negotiations were at an advanced stage with Canada, South Korea and Germany to secure more job opportunities.

“Germany will be here next week. They have assured us that they have about seven million jobs. This is huge and we want our people to benefit,” she said.

To make the programme a success, the CS said the ministry was working on packaging job seekers to ready them for the available opportunities abroad.

“What we have as a country is the human resource. People have graduated with various degrees and courses but do not have jobs. We want to sell this out there and be able to secure opportunities for them,” she said.

She added that the ministry was in the process of reviewing existing bilateral labour relations with different countries to safeguard Kenyans working outside the country.

This comes against the backdrop of Kenyans being tortured and mistreated abroad with the CS assuring that they were reviewing targets to address teething problems affecting the programme.

Through the initiative, the government aims to ensure that all Kenyans who secure jobs abroad are put in the right cadres, get the right salaries and work in a conducive environment.

Bore added that the government was equally developing a National Labour Policy and a National Labour Management Bill to regulate and control recruitment.

This, she disclosed, has seen the number of registered recruitment agencies reduced from 900 to 500 adding that vetting would continue to ensure that only agencies that meet the set standards are allowed to operate.

.Speaking at Tom Mboya Labour College in Kisumu during the World Day for Safety and Health celebrations, Bore asked all unemployed Kenyans to register with the National Employment Authority to benefit from the opportunities being sought abroad and within the country.