A/HRC/38/41/Add.1
Association for Regional Cooperation, of which Nepal is a member, was set up in
Kathmandu on 17 January 1987.
13.
The Special Rapporteur notes the increased engagement of Nepal in international
forums, including its role as Chair of the Colombo Process, where it made relevant
contributions to the negotiations on the global compact for safe, orderly and regular
migration promoting, inter alia, ethical recruitment practices, access to information and
remittance cost reductions. He encourages Nepal to continue engaging in the negotiations
on the global compact, the Colombo Process, the Abu Dhabi Dialogue and the South Asian
Association for Regional Cooperation, supporting the transition to an ethical recruitment
system. He notes that its enhanced engagement in regional cooperation with other Asian
migrant-sending countries would allow a common agenda to be developed, which should
include minimum standards for labour migrants and labour conditions, a collective ban on
recruitment fees, the adoption of a standard contract and social protection and insurance
provisions, to ensure that concerns about international competitiveness do not impact the
transition to an ethical recruitment system.
C.
1.
National legal and institutional framework
National legislation and policies
14.
The 2015 Constitution of Nepal contains two mentions of foreign employment in the
section on policies regarding labour and employment under part 4 “Directive Principles,
Policies and Obligations of the State”, where it refers to the management and regulation of
foreign employment in order to make it safe from exploitation, free and well-managed to
guarantee labourers’ rights and employment and refers to the use of the capital, skills,
technology and experience gained in foreign employment in the productive sectors of the
country. Article 29 of the Constitution also makes reference to exploitation, including
forced labour, trafficking, slavery or servitude.
15.
The Civil Code (1963) is a combination of a civil and penal code. The recently
adopted Criminal Code (2017) and Criminal Procedure Code (2017), which will come into
effect in August 2018, include a much wider range of offences.
16.
The principal law pertaining to labour migration is the Foreign Employment Act of
2007, supported by the foreign employment rules of 2008. The act is going to be amended.
It sets out provisions to regulate labour migration, including through identifying the
functions and provisions of various government agencies and private parties. It defines the
administrative requirements for recruitment agencies and sets out provisions for an
oversight and monitoring system by defining the requirements for licensing recruitment
agencies. It provides for a complaints mechanism (sec. 35) and defines the circumstances
for the revocation of a licence (sec. 13), crimes under the Foreign Employment Act and the
punishments that can be imposed (ch. 9). It further gives the Government the authority to
specify the upper limit of the amount an institution can collect from each worker, including
a service fee and promotional costs (sec. 24). The Act also includes provisions aimed at
better protection of the rights of migrants, including by protecting potential migrant
workers from confiscation of their personal documents (sec. 18); from delayed departure;
from deception regarding their contracts (secs. 15, 19 and 20); from deception over the jobs
in question (sec. 36); against abuse at the hands of an unlicensed agent or agency (secs. 43
and 44); from overcharging for visas, service fees etc. (sec. 53); from lower remuneration
or different tasks than those stipulated in the contract (sec. 55); by setting out the right to a
contract in Nepali (sec. 25); by granting the right to insurance provided through the
recruitment agency (sec. 26); and by granting the right to information through a mandatory
pre-departure orientation session (sec. 27). Under the Act, the government is also required
to set up a labour desk at the international airport and other places, as necessary (sec. 73)
and the deployment of labour attachés to countries where 5,000 or more workers have been
sent for foreign employment is defined (sec. 68). In addition, under the foreign employment
rules of 2008, the appointment of a women labour attaché in destination countries where
1,000 or more Nepalese migrant women are employed is required.
5