Ethiopia Bans Citizens From Travelling Abroad For Work
Ethiopia's government has temporarily banned its citizens from
travelling abroad to look for work, the state-run Erta news agency
reports
The foreign ministry
was quoted as saying countless Ethiopians had lost their lives or
undergone untold physical and psychological trauma because of illegal
human trafficking.
The decision was meant to "safeguard the well-being of citizens", it added.
The travel ban will remain in place until a "lasting solution" is found.
The
ministry said the government had taken various measures to limit the
suffering of its citizens, including setting up a national council and a
taskforce to educate them.
But those measures had not been able to address the problem sufficiently, it added.
Employment agencies will also be barred from facilitating travel abroad.
The
scarcity of work opportunities is a major factor fuelling emigration
from Ethiopia, which has Africa's second largest population. Youth
unemployment is officially estimated at more than 50%.
Human
rights activists also say a significant number of those classified as
economic migrants flee the country because of political and economic
oppression or ethnic discrimination by the state.
Many Ethiopians
try to reach Saudi Arabia, travelling via Yemen by sea and entering the
kingdom illegally. Thousands of others head for South Africa, Israel
and Europe.
They often end up being smuggled, trafficked or
subjected to mental and physical torture. And once they reach their
destinations, many require humanitarian assistance or face a wide range
of abuses from employers.
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