Qatar Issues New Law to Nationalize Jobs in Private Sector

A general view of Doha, Qatar. (QNA)
A general view of Doha, Qatar. (QNA)
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Qatar Issues New Law to Nationalize Jobs in Private Sector

A general view of Doha, Qatar. (QNA)
A general view of Doha, Qatar. (QNA)

Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani issued on Sunday a new law to nationalize jobs in the private sector.

The law will be effective six months after it is published in the official gazette.

This legislation aligns with Qatar National Vision 2030 and will facilitate strategic investments and create opportunities for employment and training for Qatari citizens, the Ministry of Labor said in a statement.

The law supports the Third National Development Strategy, which aims to effect a fundamental transformation towards a more productive labor market, focusing on high-skill jobs.

The Ministry said this transformation will be achieved by leveraging a highly skilled Qatari talent pool while also attracting foreign talents with advanced skills.

It noted that the law seeks to significantly increase the effective participation of the national workforce in private sector institutions and companies, opening up new employment and career opportunities for Qataris, thereby maximizing the utilization of qualified national competencies.

The law aims to encourage Qatari participation in the private sector, ensure job stability for national cadres, develop the professional skills of the national workforce, meet the labor markets demand for qualified personnel, and incentivize private sector companies and establishments to increase the participation of the national workforce, it added.

The entities subject to nationalization under the law include employers who are natural persons managing private establishments registered in the commercial register, commercial companies operating in the state, whether state-owned, state-participated, or privately owned, and private non-profit institutions, sports institutions, associations, and similar entities, it explained.

The new law also grants many benefits, facilities and privileges to those covered by the integration plan, it added.

More than 2.5 million foreigners live and work in Qatar, with about two million working in the private sector.



Africa Faces Steep Costs as Temperatures Soar, Says WMO 

A general view of flood water in South Tokar, Red Sea State, Sudan, August 28, 2024. (Reuters)
A general view of flood water in South Tokar, Red Sea State, Sudan, August 28, 2024. (Reuters)
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Africa Faces Steep Costs as Temperatures Soar, Says WMO 

A general view of flood water in South Tokar, Red Sea State, Sudan, August 28, 2024. (Reuters)
A general view of flood water in South Tokar, Red Sea State, Sudan, August 28, 2024. (Reuters)

Africa faces an increasingly heavy toll from climate change with many countries having to spend up to 9% of their budgets battling climate extremes, a World Meteorological Organization (WMO) report said on Monday.

Despite producing far lower greenhouse gas emissions than other continents, Africa's temperatures have risen more rapidly than the global average.

African countries are now losing on average 2%–5% of gross domestic product responding to deadly heatwaves, heavy rains, floods, cyclones, and prolonged droughts, said the WMO's State of the Climate in Africa 2023 report.

For sub-Saharan Africa, adapting to the changing climate will cost an estimated $30-50 billion per year over the next decade, it said, urging countries to invest in state meteorological and hydrological services and to speed up the implementation of early warning systems to save lives.

The warning comes as African countries mull how to use this year's UN COP meetings to secure a bigger share of global climate financing.

The 54-nation continent has been attracting more funds for climate mitigation and adaptation projects in recent years, but it still gets less than 1% of annual global climate financing, government officials said earlier in August.