A job center on Sunday opened in Jordan’s second-largest camp for Syrian refugees, the latest sign of an EU-backed policy shift meant to improve the lives of the displaced in regional host countries and discourage them from migrating onward.
Dozens of refugees crowded around long tables in a community center in the Azraq camp to register with potential employers for jobs in factories and on farms.
“Any work is okay for me,” said Sumaya Mohammed Jidaa, a 39-year-old widow and mother of six inquiring about a sewing job. “Just give us money to take care of our children.”
Under the so-called Jordan Compact, a deal struck with donor countries in 2016, the kingdom promised to provide 200,000 work permits for Syrians over three years, in exchange for several billion US dollars in development assistance and reduced tariff barriers on Jordanian exports to Europe.
Implementation has been slow because of Jordan’s economic downturn, high unemployment and the slow pace of regulatory change.
About 90,000 Syrians have obtained work permits so far and only two factories are exporting goods to Europe under the new rules, officials said.
“You cannot expect the private sector to simply make use of a trade agreement if the proper support is not being provided,” said Patrick Daru, country coordinator of the International Labour Organization (ILO).
The job center is a project of the ILO, the UN refugee agency and the Jordanian Ministry of Labor.
Jordan has been struggling with the fallout from prolonged conflict in neighboring Syria and Iraq, leading to unemployment of about 18 percent, with twice that rate among the young.
At the same time, the kingdom has more than 300,000 registered foreign workers and up to 1 million unregistered ones, the ministry said.
Most are Egyptian and South Asian migrants in low-skilled jobs like domestic care, construction and agriculture.
The government has attempted labor reform, but many Jordanians disparage the manual labor traditionally performed by migrant workers, leaving a gap that Syrian refugees might now partially fill.
Job creation is Jordan’s central problem, Daru said.
“It’s a problem of investment. It’s a problem of getting European companies to source from Jordan and this is the main game-changer,” he said.
At the job fair, Emad Hussein offered jobs for up to 100 refugees, hoping that by hiring them his textiles company would become eligible for reduced European tariffs.
Hussein said he employs 700 Jordanians, 1,700 South Asians and two refugees.
“It’s less expensive to hire Syrians, because we don’t have to pay meals and accommodations for them,” he said. “Even if there’s no European customers, we still need Syrians. We have to help people because of humanity and we know they have experience.”
The job center, supported in part by the Dutch embassy, contributes to the goal of keeping refugees as close to home as possible, said Dutch Ambassador to Jordan Barbara Jozaisse.
“At least people now can apply for a job and earn their own income, so you have some dignity, you have pride, you have income, you can continue building your life and developing yourself and your family,” she said.
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