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Nepal Resumes Issuing Permits for Workers Headed to Middle East

KATHMANDU, April 21 (Reuters) – Nepal has ⁠resumed ⁠issuing permits for ⁠its nationals to work in the ​Middle East, an official said on Tuesday, six weeks ‌after suspending the procedure ‌because of conflict in the region.

About 75% ⁠of ⁠all Nepali workers abroad work in Middle East ​nations, mainly as labourers at building sites, and experts say remittances from workers make up more than a ​quarter of the $42-billion economy of the cash-strapped Himalayan nation.

Permit ⁠resumption “follows ⁠advice from the foreign ⁠ministry ​and high demand from workers”, Pitambar Ghimire, a labour ​ministry spokesperson, ⁠told Reuters.

Nepal requires citizens to secure a work permit from the government in order to take up jobs in a foreign country, but ⁠suspended their issue for Gulf countries on March 1, a ⁠day after the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran began.

Nepal’s youth unemployment stands at 20.6% among a population of 30 million for the highest such figure among all South and Southeast Asian countries, World Bank data shows.

At least 3 million nationals work overseas, industry officials ⁠say. Labour unions estimate that about 1,500 young people leave Nepal each day for foreign employment, driven by scarce job opportunities at ​home.

(Reporting by Gopal Sharma; Editing by YP ​Rajesh and Clarence Fernandez)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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