Kuwaiti Lawmakers Getting Serious Over Slashing Expat Numbers

Published:  14 Jun at 6 PM
Want to get involved?

Become a

Featured Expat

and take our interview.

Become a

Local Expert

and contribute articles.

Get in

touch

today!

Kuwaiti lawmakers are upgrading their attack on the expatriate community with a proposal for a dedicated national committee to regulate expat numbers.

Four members of the Kuwaiti parliament have put together a proposal to form a national committee with the brief of administrating and regulating the demography of the emirate. Unsurprisingly entitled the ‘National Committee to Regulate and Administer Kuwait’s Demography’, the committee’s brief would be to prevent an ‘excessive number of expatriates’ from threatening the state’s identity. According to sources preferring to remain anonymous at the present time, the committee’s brief would be to set special policies to change the emirate’s current demographic status.

The proposal states the committee’s responsibility as studying the state’s demography, security, developmental requirements and economy with the goal a reduction in expat numbers to a maximum of 60 per cent over the next decade. At the present time, expats dominate the population, making up 70 per cent of all residents. In addition, the committee should set new, ongoing limits for expats every five years, with a 40 per cent limit considered most suitable.

If the proposal is passed, the appointed committee would contain senior representatives from all government offices, headed up by the Minister of State for Economic Affairs. Other members would be drawn from the ministries of education, health, manpower, planning and development, justice and commerce and industry as well as from the Civil Service Commission, the Statistics Bureau and the private sector. Expats living and working in Kuwait are used to such parliamentary calls for slashing their numbers, but the frequency of such bills is increasing and is causing concern within the international community.

Comments » No published comments just yet for this article...

Feel free to have your say on this item. Go on... be the first!

Tell us Your Thoughts On This Piece:

RECENT NEWS

Would You Sleep On Ice? Inside The Winter Hotels That Melt Away Each Spring

Rates typically start from €400 for a night in an ice hotel, where guests often sleep on beds made from frozen river w... Read more

Christmas Travel Chaos: All The European Airport Strikes To Expect In December

Airport workers are walking out in protest of the 'Grinch-style behaviour’ of low-paying employers. Read more

Spain Fines Airbnb €65 Million: Why The Government Is Cracking Down On Illegal Rentals

The fine is equal to six times the profits Airbnb made while the properties were still listed despite being in breach of... Read more

Arriving In My Ancestral Town Offered Me Closure: Inside The Rise Of Roots Tourism In Italy

Americans are tracing their Italian ancestry with the help of genealogy experts, DNA testing, and a rise in roots touris... Read more

Budget Airlines Rarely Offer Their Lowest Advertised Cabin Bag Fees, Consumer Watchdog Says

Major UK consumer watchdog Which? has slammed European budget airlines for almost never actually offering cabin bag fare... Read more

Ryanair Threatens To Axe 20 Routes From Belgian Airports In Ongoing Feud Against Aviation Tax Hikes

Ryanair has slammed the increasing aviation tax in Belgium, pledging to drastically reduce its services. Read more