Business

Saudi Binladin Group lays off 77,000 foreign workers

Saudi Binladin Group lays off 77,000 foreign workers

By Agence France Presse

Riyadh, May 2 One of Saudi Arabia’s most powerful firms, the Saudi Binladin Group, has laid off 77,000 foreign workers, a Saudi daily reported today, citing an anonymous company official. Saudi Binladin Group confirmed to AFP that some staff have been let go, but gave no numbers. The report in the Al-Watan newspaper is the latest alleging tens of thousands of layoffs, unpaid salaries and unrest by employees of the firm which built some of the Gulf country’s landmarks. Sources in March told AFP that delayed receipts from the government, whose oil revenues collapsed over the past two years, have left employees of the kingdom’s construction giants struggling to survive while they await their salaries. However, Saudi Binladin Group was also sanctioned by the government after a deadly crane accident in Mecca last September. “The size of our workforce is always appropriate to the nature and size of projects and the timeframe they are to be carried out by the group,” Yaseen Alattas, a Saudi Binladin Group spokesman, told AFP. He said workforce changes would be normal ‘especially when some projects have ended or are about to end’. Most of jobs eliminated ‘are on specified term contracts’ for particular projects, Alattas said. “We understand that the reduction of the workforce isn’t easy on everyone. But the Group will continue to implement its obligations towards everyone, including the employees it has let go of.” ‘They have received their full dues’ under the law, said Alattas. The unnamed company official cited by Al-Watan said as of Sunday 77,000 Binladin Group workers had received exit visas. He added that they were among 200,000 expatriates employed by the company, one of the largest builders in the world. In addition, 12,000 out of the 17,000 Saudis working for the firm as engineers, administrators and inspectors were expected to be let go, the source said. On Friday, Al-Watan reported that 50,000 of the group’s staff were refusing to leave the country while their salaries remained unpaid after more than four months.