Home Industry Hospitality Saudi to ban recruitment of expats in several hospitality jobs The kingdom has implemented a strict Saudisation policy in several sectors by Aarti Nagraj July 29, 2019 Saudi Arabia has announced plans to soon ban expatriates from working in several hospitality jobs as it seeks to create more opportunities for its citizens. The decision, announced by the ministry of Labour and Social Development, covers hotels classified as three-star and above, resorts, as well as hotel apartments rated four-star and above. The Saudisation policy will be implemented starting from December this year, the ministry said. Jobs in areas including reservation, purchases, marketing and front desk will be restricted to Saudi men and women. Exceptions include bellboy, parking valet, driver and doorman. Some of the other positions which will be restricted to Saudi nationals include hotel deputy manager, director and assistant director of sales, fitness club supervisor, restaurant or café waiter, tourism enquiry clerk, executive secretary and administrative coordinator. Meanwhile establishments must have at least one Saudi employed in the supervisor roles across food and beverages, room service, events and laundry. The decision bans the recruitment of expatriate workers, the transfer of their services, or assigning work to them for the jobs mentioned – directly or indirectly. The ministry has stressed that any firm that violates the decision will be penalised according to the applicable regulation. The kingdom has already nationalised several sectors as it seeks to reduce the unemployment rate among its citizens – which stood at 13 per cent last year. The Saudisation rules – such as those recently implemented in the wholesale and retail sector – have seen hundreds of thousands of legal foreign workers leave the country in recent years. Read: Several shops shut down in Saudisation drive after illegal expat practices exposed Tags ban expat workers Expats Saudi Arabia Saudi Saudi Arabia Saudi ban Saudisation 0 Comments You might also like Saudi Arabia’s Mawani signs four contracts worth SAR1bn GCC region M&A blazes trail as global deals decline Top marks for GCC nations in digital connectivity index Saudi Arabia studies graphite, rare earths trading platform