Shortly after the above events, my colleague and I were invited to give a demo lesson for BAE at a Saudi Air Force military base. We were cautioned to be at the visitors’ entrance promptly
at 7am as there was only a 15-minute window for us to be admitted to the base. Accordingly, we took an early taxi and arrived at around 0640. We stood around for a couple of hours and were eventually collected at the gate at around 0915 and taken to the school, about 5 km from the gate. We gave our lessons and in due course we returned to our accommodation.
Several days later we were informed that we had been accepted by BAE and that we would commence teaching on the following Sunday. There were forms to be completed and photos to be provided to obtain a base pass. I completed the forms and submitted edited photos which I had on my laptop. A few days later I was informed that the photos were not acceptable
and that I needed to get proper visa photos.
The next day I consulted Google Maps which informed me that
there was a photography studio, Studio Al-Sahafa, about 2km from my
accommodation. I took a walk to the given location of the studio, and after wandering around for
about an hour I concluded that the studio either did not exist or had moved. I
looked at the next place on Google Maps and found Digital Photo Studio. I
decided to Uber to this one as by now I was tired of walking in the hot sun. Happily,
this place existed, and I was able to quickly get the photos done. The photos
were given to the base and I then awaited feedback.
At this time the recruiter (a Jordanian) informed me that he
needed to travel to Jordan for a week to attend to an emergency, but when he returned,
we would sort out all the paperwork, including the transfer of my iqama. Soon
after he left, KSA entered lockdown again and all borders were closed. A few
days after the commencement of the new lockdown, he messaged us that we should
go to his office to sign the contracts for our application to proceed and for
the iqamas to be renewed. All his colleagues, he assured us, were in the loop and
would deal with our affairs speedily. Accordingly, the next day we took a taxi
to his office. We spoke to three of his colleagues, none of whom had the
faintest idea of who we were, what we were doing there and what they were
supposed to do with us. Eventually I told them that, in the circumstances, we
would return when the recruiter was back from Jordan, which he had told us he
would be that weekend.
As it turned out, the lockdown continued for three weeks,
and when the recruiter returned, we had just one week before we were due to
start teaching at BAE. That is when things turned even more pear shaped. After
assuring me that things were well in hand, a day later he told me that he could
not transfer my iqama due to my expired exit visa on my file. Since Al Jazeera
had applied for the exit visa, only they could get it cancelled.
I phoned Al Jazeera HR and asked if they would please cancel my final exit. No problem, they assured me, just come in and sign some papers. So I Ubered to Al Jazeera Head Office and
Firstly, I had to write a request for this expensive and illegal service. I was not given a copy of my document, but I was able to take a photo of it. Then I was coerced into signing a printed "contract" where I agreed to pay Al Jazeera 25,000 SAR. I also took a photo of this
document. I was assured that the matter would be finalized by close of business that day.To cut a long story short, my iqama was not renewed that day
and as a result I lost the job I had been offered with BAE. Al Jazeera was in
no way concerned about this and made zero effort to expedite matters despite
the large sum of money which they had extorted from me. The process will take
two weeks, the tin-pot dictator told me when I followed up, reveling in his
power over me. He has since ignored my attempts to communicate with him, apart
from one email “instructing” me to come to the office to meet someone. I was
ignored when I asked who the someone was and why I needed to meet them. Most
frustrating is that there is no one to whom I can escalate this toxic
situation. The owner of the company has another office and another business to
which he devotes all his time, and the COO is in Egypt for an unknown length of
time.
So once again, I grit my teeth and hurry-up and wait.
Hi Gregory, I'm a colleague of yours from GPT a few years back. I'm at KFUPM now - not a bad employer, drop me a line if you'd like to know more
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