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El Salvador urges Qatar to employ nationals facing US deportation

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El Salvador wants some of its 200,000 nationals facing potential deportation from the United States to be recruited by Qatar, the central American country's foreign minister said on Tuesday.

Speaking on a visit to the Gulf state -- one of the world's richest countries which is set to host the 2022 World Cup -- Hugo Martinez said El Salvador had "very, very skilled" workers to offer Qatar.

Martinez said he was in negotiations with Qatari business leaders and officials about securing temporary employment for Salvadorans.

"We are having negotiations about temporary workers, very, very skilled people, engineering people who work in aircraft maintenance and mechanics," Martinez told reporters on the sidelines of a local ceremony.

"Very qualified people and we are negotiating that and we hope that we will achieve agreement."

The two countries are also in talks to launch direct flights from Qatar to El Salvador, according to Martinez.

Gas-rich Qatar, which is spending some $500 million a week on World Cup projects, has recruited a huge immigrant workforce to help develop the country.

Some 90 per cent of the almost 2.7 million people living in Qatar are from overseas, though currently there are only thought to be around 100 from El Salvador.

Washington this week announced the end of a special protected status for around 200,000 Salvadoran immigrants in the United States, straining ties between the two countries.

The move threatens the affected Salvadorans with deportation when the current status runs out in 18 months' time, with the risk of breaking up well-established families and separating Salvadoran parents from their US-born children.

El Salvador wants some of its 200,000 nationals facing potential deportation from the United States to be recruited by Qatar, the central American country’s foreign minister said on Tuesday.

Speaking on a visit to the Gulf state — one of the world’s richest countries which is set to host the 2022 World Cup — Hugo Martinez said El Salvador had “very, very skilled” workers to offer Qatar.

Martinez said he was in negotiations with Qatari business leaders and officials about securing temporary employment for Salvadorans.

“We are having negotiations about temporary workers, very, very skilled people, engineering people who work in aircraft maintenance and mechanics,” Martinez told reporters on the sidelines of a local ceremony.

“Very qualified people and we are negotiating that and we hope that we will achieve agreement.”

The two countries are also in talks to launch direct flights from Qatar to El Salvador, according to Martinez.

Gas-rich Qatar, which is spending some $500 million a week on World Cup projects, has recruited a huge immigrant workforce to help develop the country.

Some 90 per cent of the almost 2.7 million people living in Qatar are from overseas, though currently there are only thought to be around 100 from El Salvador.

Washington this week announced the end of a special protected status for around 200,000 Salvadoran immigrants in the United States, straining ties between the two countries.

The move threatens the affected Salvadorans with deportation when the current status runs out in 18 months’ time, with the risk of breaking up well-established families and separating Salvadoran parents from their US-born children.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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