Nepal: Young Nepalis are leaving the country for foreign employment in record numbers, statistics show.
Migrant worker Narayan Nepali of Dhading is least bothered about
casting his vote in the upcoming elections.
“I don’t think it matters much whether I vote or not,” the
28-year-old migrant worker told the Post before boarding his flight at
Nepali, who formerly worked in
While the country is preparing for the vote and political
leaders are going door-to-door with their pledges, a whole section of the
Nepali population has something else on their minds, oblivious to the commotion
on the campaign front.
Young Nepalis are leaving the country for foreign employment in
record numbers, government statistics show. The push factors are strong.
“Obviously, it’s a compulsion for them,” said Rameshwar Nepal,
executive director of Equidem Research Nepal, a human rights and labour rights
research organisation.
“This is an unfortunate situation. The majority of migrant
workers are not able to exercise their rights. They are able to neither
celebrate the festivals nor cast their precious votes.”
According to the Department of Foreign Employment, a robust
63,039 labour permits were issued in the first month (mid-July to mid-August)
of the current fiscal year.
The number swelled to a monthly record of 76,403 during the
period mid-August to mid-September.
Nearly 46,700 individuals received labour permits during the
period mid-September to October 10. Government officials say that the figure
may rise as the country’s economy is not showing signs of improvement.
The Asian Development Bank has downgraded
The Manila-based bank says
Labour experts say that monthly departures of Nepali migrant
workers reached a high even though it was Dashain, the country's biggest
festival, and the elections were approaching, which shows that people are least
bothered about casting their votes or celebrating festivals.
“What opportunities do we have in
“Here, you don’t get financial assistance for starting a
business. Investing in
For Tamang too, who is flying to
Nepali migrant workers sent home Rs1 trillion in the last fiscal
year ended mid-July, a record-high money transfer to Nepal since Nepalis
started going for overseas employment more than two decades ago.
The number of Nepali workers taking approval for foreign
employment increased significantly to 354,660 in the last fiscal year,
according to the central bank.
Similarly, the number of Nepali workers renewing entry permits
for foreign employment doubled to 282,453 in the review period.
The total figure of 637,113—new and re-entry—is the
second-highest number in history.
The highest number of labour approvals was 642,859 in the fiscal
year 2016-17, according to the Department of Foreign Employment statistics.
Nepalis are travelling abroad en masse due to limited job
opportunities at home caused by prolonged political instability.
According to the
Department of Foreign employment, the number of Nepalis working
abroad started to increase after 2000 when the Maoist insurgency that started
in 1996 reached a peak.
Nepali workers have sought foreign employment as both
agricultural and non-agricultural sectors struggle to generate new jobs.
With limited arable land, landlessness is pervasive, and the
number of landless households has steadily increased in the agricultural
sector.
In the non-agricultural sector, a slowdown in growth, especially
since 2000-01 due to the Maoist insurgency which killed more than 17,000
people, further retarded the pace of employment creation, the report said.
Political unrest in the country adversely affected economic
growth. According to the central bank, for most of the past decade, the growth
rate hovered around a mere 3-4 percent. It peaked at 6 percent in 2007-08
following the Comprehensive Peace Accord between the then rebel Maoists and the
government in 2006.
Then followed a period when Nepalis were forced to live in
darkness due to rolling blackouts. Between 2007 and 2017, the country went
through a massive electricity supply shortage that caused up to 18 hours of
daily power outages.
“That youths are leaving the country in droves even during
election time exhibits their frustration towards politics,” said former
government secretary Purna Chandra Bhattarai who once led the Department of
Foreign Employment.
“The importance of job opportunities is bigger than the
elections. They do not want to lose the opportunities at any cost.” The trend
also shows that the federal and provincial elections have failed to draw
youths.
Even though almost every successive government has announced
plans to allow absentee ballots, they have never materialised.
Permitting migrant workers to vote from abroad, according to
Bhattarai, is nothing but political propaganda. “There has never been any
serious work to grant voting rights to Nepali migrant workers,” he said.
Kul Prasad Karki, chairperson of the Pravasi Nepali Coordination
Committee, a non-governmental organisation working for the protection and
promotion of Nepali migrant workers’ rights, argues that the government and the
concerned authorities must ensure voting rights, at least in proportional
representation, to migrant workers.
“But it has never been a priority. Migrant workers have been
denied their right to cast their votes. The migrant workers’ agenda needs to be
an election agenda, but it has not been the case,” Karki said.
"After paying service fees to get foreign jobs, migrant
workers cannot put off their departure come festivals or elections," said
Karki.
“It doesn't matter who gets elected,” said Ramesh Subedi, a
local of Chitwan, who was flying to
According to Subedi, there is no prospect of earning a decent
income in
“Inflation is high, there are few employment opportunities, and
the salaries are extremely low. The cost of living is high,” said Subedi.
“To fulfil all your family needs, you need to go abroad. Who
cares about elections? All that matters for us is our job.”
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