Read more- Kuwait might open doors for Bangladeshi professionals
Wednesday’s KT report also says, quoting interior ministry sources, that the Bangladeshi population in Kuwait reached the 200,000 threshold at the end of the first week of September. During a three-day state-level visit to Dhaka by Kuwaiti Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber al-Mubarak al-Hamad al-Sabah in May this year, a senior official at the Bangladesh Embassy in Kuwait, seeking anonymity, told the Dhaka Tribune that the gulf country was expected to start importing white collar professionals from Bangladesh following the visit. [youtube id="0xLveFNw3A8"] Kuwait’s job market had been closed to Bangladeshis for around seven years until January 2014, when the country started taking in Bangladeshi blue collar workers in the agriculture, cleaning and driving sectors. According to the Bangladesh Bureau of Manpower, Employment and Training, as of August 31 a total 20,025 Bangladeshis have gone to Kuwait to work this year. Last year the total was 17,472. Some 520,247 Bangladeshis have travelled to Kuwait to work between 1976 and September this year, according to data compiled by the Bureau of Manpower Employment and Training (BMET). Bangladeshi expatriates in Kuwait remitted $254.85m in the first three months of this year. Remittances for the entire 2015 was $1,052.55m. According to media reports, the Gulf Cooperation Council-member country has stepped up deportations of expatriate workers this year. A newspaper in the Gulf state reported in May that most of those deported were expelled for overstaying their residency permits, but others were sent home for committing traffic offences. In the first four months of the year, authorities deported 14,400 expatriates, compared to 26,600 for the whole of 2015, Al Anba newspaper reported. Expatriates make up some 70% of Kuwait’s 4.3m population. In May, a number of Bangladeshi expatriates living in Kuwait told the Dhaka Tribune over phone that they had not been affected by the deportations.