10,000 Indian Workers Face 'Food Crisis' in Saudi Arabia


10,000 Indian Workers Face 'Food Crisis' in Saudi Arabia

TEHRAN (Tasnim) – India is rushing aid to 10,000 of its citizens in Saudi Arabia who are running short of food after losing their jobs.

The Indian consulate in Jeddah said it distributed 15,475 kilograms (34,100 pounds) of food including eggs, spices and salt over the weekend. It said it was trying to reach all affected Indians "to help them overcome this crisis."

Sushma Swaraj, India's Minister of External Affairs, said that a large number Indians in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait had lost their jobs, and were owed wages by their employers. Many are now stuck in camps for migrant workers.

"I assure you that no Indian worker rendered unemployed in Saudi Arabia will go without food," Swaraj said on Twitter. She said more than 10,000 Indians in the country were facing a "food crisis" and dispatched one of her deputies to the country.

There are roughly 3 million Indians employed in Saudi Arabia, which depends on foreign workers to fill jobs in its services, manufacturing and construction sectors.

Low oil prices have slashed economic growth and forced the Saudi government to cut spending. In April, the government announced an ambitious plan to break its dependence on oil but that won't happen for years.

India's representative in Jeddah, Muhammad Noor Rahman Sheikh, said 2,500 of the affected workers had been employed by Saudi Oger Company, a construction firm. Their situation had become dire in recent days, he said.

Workers at one of the camps told CNNMoney that their bosses at Oger stopped showing up to work about seven months ago, and they had heard nothing from the company since. They cannot leave Saudi Arabia because the company holds their passports.

Conditions at the camp are bleak: Trash collection has stopped, and there's no electricity. The workers get water from the mosque across the street. Police are stationed outside after protests erupted in recent weeks.

A source familiar with the circumstances said some of the abandoned construction projects were Saudi government contracts.

Oger representatives were not immediately available for comment. Saudi government officials contacted by CNNMoney said they would look into questions about the situation, but had no immediate response.

Falling oil revenue has also put pressure on the country's biggest businesses.

Earlier this year, labor protests erupted after the Binladin Group, a massive construction company founded by the father of the late al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, reportedly laid off at least 50,000 employees.

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