Kuwait’s Cabinet has approved a new foreign residency draft law that proposes sweeping penalties against visa traders and expatriates working illegally in the country, Kuwait Times reported.
The new law aims to clamp down on illegal practices surrounding the employment of expat workers, such as employing workers tied to a different sponsor or illicitly purchasing residency permits for workers.
It increases fines and jail time for those who overstay their visa or enter the country illegally, according to the report.
Visa traders who facilitate the entry of illegal expats and renew residencies or employ expats illegally will be fined between 5,000 KD ($1,6334) and 10,000 KD ($32,668) and jailed for three years, Kuwait Times reported.
The fine will be charged for every illegal expat, and the punishment will be doubled if the violator is a civil servant or if they repeat the crime within five years.
Expat workers who pay to get a work permit or renew their residencies will be jailed for one year and fined 1,000 KD ($3,267), Kuwait Times said.
Employers who do not pay their workers’ wages will be jailed for two years and fined between 5,000 KD ($16,334) and 10,000 KD ($32,668).
The same penalty applies for working illegally with other employers, according to the new draft law.
Employers must inform authorities if their expat employees leave them or if their residency is canceled and they do not leave the country, the new law stipulates.
Those in violation will be fined between 600 KD ($1960) and 2,000 KD ($6,533).
A ten-year residency should be granted to foreign investors, foreigners who own real estate, foreign women divorced from their Kuwaiti husbands and have children, and husbands and children of Kuwaiti women, according to Kuwait Times.