Available overseas jobs for OFWs affected by Kuwait deployment ban


A Philippine labor official on Friday urged Filipino workers affected by the total deployment ban in Kuwait to try their luck in other countries, noting the number of job orders from Japan, Australia, New Zealand and the United States, among others.
"There is life after Kuwait kasi meron tayong alternative market at ang advantage na nila ay ang kanilang experience sa Kuwait," said Jocelyn Sanchez, deputy administrator of the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA), in a report by GMA News' JP Soriano on State of the Nation.
According to the Coalition of Licensed Agencies for Domestic and Service Workers (CLADS), the deployment ban in Kuwait has affected 10,000 skilled workers.
Citing POEA database, the report said the following countries are in need of the following workers:
Welders 
  • Japan - 5,125
  • US - 3,632
  • Australia - 1,487
  • Singapore - 1,300
  • New Zealand - 900
  • Canada - 530
Engineers
  • Japan - 7,024
  • US - 3,383
  • South Korea - 3,172
  • Algeria - 1,184
  • New Zealand - 754
Assemblers
  • Japan - 3,671
  • Taiwan - 665
  • New Zealand - 62
Laborers
  • Taiwan - 657
  • Brunei - 350
  • New Zealand - 90
  • Czech Republic - 25
Cook
  • Brunei - 856
  • Australia - 803
  • Macau - 627
  • Cyprus - 214
  • Singapore - 186
Drivers
  • New Zealand - 229
  • Brunei - 86
  • Diego Garcia - 54
  • Australia - 40
Nurses
  • United Kingdom - 16,086
  • Singapore - 5,645
  • Ireland - 4,169
  • Germany - 1,595
  • New Zealand - 750
Household service workers
  • Hong Kong - 154,511
  • Singapore - 30,699
  • Cyprus - 11,325
  • Brunei - 6,619
  • Macau - 3,308
OFWs affected by the deployment ban were also encouraged to enroll in Technical Education and Skills Development Authority for their retraining.
Interested applicants, meanwhile, were warned of illegal recruiters. —KBK, GMA News

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