RNA - A total of 405 Pakistanis owed wages by once-mighty Saudi Oger will fly home from Wednesday courtesy of the Saudi government, said Abdul Shakoor Shaikh, the Pakistani embassy's community welfare attache, Daily Star reported.
They are among more than 6,500 Pakistanis who, he said, have not been paid by the construction giant for that past eight or nine months.
Large contingents of Filipinos and Indians have also gone months without pay from Saudi Oger, which is led by Lebanon's billionaire former premier Saad Hariri.
In all, more than 30,000 Saudi Oger workers are affected.
Employees of Oger and other construction companies, which are dependent on state contracts, have suffered because of delayed receipts from a Saudi government whose oil revenues have collapsed over the past two years.
Shaikh said 275 Pakistanis have already flown home under an aid plan announced last month by authorities.
The embassy is authorized to receive the back wages for most of the workers and, when it arrives, will forward the money to those who return home, officials at the mission said.
"But the problem persists. We cannot say that Saudi Oger has started paying the salaries," Shaikh said.
Exit visas for more than 2,000 of the Pakistanis have been completed, and the rest must decide whether to also go home.
A relatively small number, more than 70, have transferred to other companies in Saudi Arabia but Shaikh said other sectors do not pay as much as construction.
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