In controversial cases, Kuwait deported the Jordanian for protests – News2IN
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In controversial cases, Kuwait deported the Jordanian for protests

Written by news2in

Dubai: Authorities in Kuwait deport the citizens of Jordan Kuwait, Jordan to join unauthorized protests, said an official on Monday, the latest case to trigger anger over the treatment of foreign workers in the Bay Arab countries in the Gulf country.
The police arrested a Jordanian man in protest last week in Kuwait City against new government restrictions on people who were not divärcinated.
Asked on TV directly about the demonstration, the man described his anger over the decision of Kuwait to ban which was not vaccinated from public places, including restaurants and malls.
The television clip spurred on social media, squeezing thousands of views.
It came just a few days after the controversy erupted on the arrest of an Egyptian man who was raving on social media about the country’s bad weather.
Local news channels then report their deportors.
Following are the days of detention, Jordanians are deported on Sundays for their participation in prohibited protests, Tauheed Al-Kandari, a media official at the Kuwait Ministry of Interior, confirmed to the Associated Press.
In the past few days, this case has attracted intense media attention in Kuwait, exposing the error line for the situation of migrant workers in this country.
When the complaints of Jordanians who were broadcast television spread online, a number of residents had him for what they looked at him for Him for Kuwait.
Parliament members rushed to his defense, lamenting what they called the abuse of the government for foreigners and attacks on freedom of expression in a country with a long reputation for some of the most passionate politics in the region.
Like in the Persian Gulf Desert Sekohan, a low-paid foreign labor legion from the Middle East, Africa, and Southeast Asia, Kuwait’s economy and serves a small population of 1 million citizens.
Rights groups say the labor system is tilted, which connects the status of migrant residency to their work, expatriate leaves are very susceptible to catching, deportation and abuse.
On Monday, the Ministry of Home Affairs Kuwait announced the government had deported more than 7,800 foreigners in the first half of 2021 for various “violations”.
The hostility of migrants in Kuwait has burned hotter during the pandemic Coronavirus, because expatriates accused striking inequality in the distribution of the country’s vaccine and within the limits of virus induced trips.
Although vaccinated residents can come and leave, foreigners with legitimate residence permits are prohibited from entering the country for months.
The government has promised to lift a ban on vaccinated residents next month.
Last week, Jordan’s human father released a statement to Kuwait’s news media, asking for his son’s release from detention.
“Abdullah considers Kuwait as part of his own heart,” he wrote about his son, which he said was born and raised into a military family who was proud and decorated in Kuwait, with a uncle in Kuwait’s resistance during the 1990 Iraqi invasion.
He claimed his son had no intention To insult the country and only spoke in his mind about the vaccine when the reporter placed it in place.
“Apart from broken heart, I believe in what God will,” he wrote.

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