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Visa woes: Singapore blocks visas to Indian IT professionals (ache din agaye hain:)

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Visa woes: Singapore blocks visas to Indian IT professionals (ache din agaye hain:)


Visa woes: Singapore blocks visas to Indian IT professionals

While the focus has been on US visa woes for India, Singapore has also taken several steps to block Indian IT professionals from working in the island-nation.


Click here to view the original image of 960x562px.
h-1b-visas_c9356810-1846-11e7-b8c3-4f9f853ee33e.jpg


Singapore has not issued any visas to Indian IT professionals since January 2016.(HT Archive)

These are tough times for Indian IT professionals, after trouble with H-1B visas in the US, Singapore is the latest to join the list of countries not eager to accept them.

The trouble with Singapore visas began in January 2016 with no new visas being issues. The thrust from the city-state has been to hire locally, which Indian IT firms will find difficult to follow. Most of India’s top IT companies from TCS, Infosys, Wipro to Cognizant have offices in Singapore.

“No new visas mean that existing ones will not be renewed and that will make it difficult to maintain existing levels of workfore,” said Nasscom president, R Chandrashekhar. He added that the hire locally diktat from Singapore is not possible to meet, as a workforce with the required level of expertise is not found there.

Sources say that Singapore has imposed several conditions making it difficult for companies to hire resources from India. This is a violation of the Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA), say sources, and has led India to put on hold a review of this trade pact.

In recent years, many countries have adopted a protectionist outlook while making stringent provisions to reduce foreign professionals from working. Apart from Singapore and US, India is also facing similar visa problems from UK.

“UK is another area where active discussions are going on. You have to remember that the US visa problems are nothing new. There have always been critics and efforts to reduce the number of H-1B visas since the last 3-4 years,” said Chandrashekhar.

The US grants 65,000 H-1B visas annually to foreign workers hired abroad and an additional 20,000 to foreign students enrolled in the country’s colleges and universities. Critics of the programme have argued that it is used by American companies to replace local workers with foreigners on lower wages.

New Delhi, which has argued it is a trade issue and helps American companies remain competitive, has been following these discussions in the Trump administration very closely because Indian companies such as Infosys, TCS and Wipro use the programme widely for their businesses in the US.

Source
 
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Visa woes: Singapore blocks visas to Indian IT professionals (ache din agaye hain:)


Visa woes: Singapore blocks visas to Indian IT professionals

While the focus has been on US visa woes for India, Singapore has also taken several steps to block Indian IT professionals from working in the island-nation.


Click here to view the original image of 960x562px.
h-1b-visas_c9356810-1846-11e7-b8c3-4f9f853ee33e.jpg


Singapore has not issued any visas to Indian IT professionals since January 2016.(HT Archive)

These are tough times for Indian IT professionals, after trouble with H-1B visas in the US, Singapore is the latest to join the list of countries not eager to accept them.

The trouble with Singapore visas began in January 2016 with no new visas being issues. The thrust from the city-state has been to hire locally, which Indian IT firms will find difficult to follow. Most of India’s top IT companies from TCS, Infosys, Wipro to Cognizant have offices in Singapore.

“No new visas mean that existing ones will not be renewed and that will make it difficult to maintain existing levels of workfore,” said Nasscom president, R Chandrashekhar. He added that the hire locally diktat from Singapore is not possible to meet, as a workforce with the required level of expertise is not found there.

Sources say that Singapore has imposed several conditions making it difficult for companies to hire resources from India. This is a violation of the Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA), say sources, and has led India to put on hold a review of this trade pact.

In recent years, many countries have adopted a protectionist outlook while making stringent provisions to reduce foreign professionals from working. Apart from Singapore and US, India is also facing similar visa problems from UK.

“UK is another area where active discussions are going on. You have to remember that the US visa problems are nothing new. There have always been critics and efforts to reduce the number of H-1B visas since the last 3-4 years,” said Chandrashekhar.

The US grants 65,000 H-1B visas annually to foreign workers hired abroad and an additional 20,000 to foreign students enrolled in the country’s colleges and universities. Critics of the programme have argued that it is used by American companies to replace local workers with foreigners on lower wages.

New Delhi, which has argued it is a trade issue and helps American companies remain competitive, has been following these discussions in the Trump administration very closely because Indian companies such as Infosys, TCS and Wipro use the programme widely for their businesses in the US.

Source

most of Singapore's IT is for MNC which will move work & offices to India
 
. . .
Singapore paid the (Little India) bill that time.
Now India is paying 1000 times over.
Singapore knows how to skin a cat:


temdhdhf.png
 
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Visa woes: Singapore blocks visas to Indian IT professionals (ache din agaye hain:)


Visa woes: Singapore blocks visas to Indian IT professionals

While the focus has been on US visa woes for India, Singapore has also taken several steps to block Indian IT professionals from working in the island-nation.


Click here to view the original image of 960x562px.

Singapore has not issued any visas to Indian IT professionals since January 2016.(HT Archive)

These are tough times for Indian IT professionals, after trouble with H-1B visas in the US, Singapore is the latest to join the list of countries not eager to accept them.

The trouble with Singapore visas began in January 2016 with no new visas being issues. The thrust from the city-state has been to hire locally, which Indian IT firms will find difficult to follow. Most of India’s top IT companies from TCS, Infosys, Wipro to Cognizant have offices in Singapore.

“No new visas mean that existing ones will not be renewed and that will make it difficult to maintain existing levels of workfore,” said Nasscom president, R Chandrashekhar. He added that the hire locally diktat from Singapore is not possible to meet, as a workforce with the required level of expertise is not found there.

Sources say that Singapore has imposed several conditions making it difficult for companies to hire resources from India. This is a violation of the Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA), say sources, and has led India to put on hold a review of this trade pact.

In recent years, many countries have adopted a protectionist outlook while making stringent provisions to reduce foreign professionals from working. Apart from Singapore and US, India is also facing similar visa problems from UK.

“UK is another area where active discussions are going on. You have to remember that the US visa problems are nothing new. There have always been critics and efforts to reduce the number of H-1B visas since the last 3-4 years,” said Chandrashekhar.

The US grants 65,000 H-1B visas annually to foreign workers hired abroad and an additional 20,000 to foreign students enrolled in the country’s colleges and universities. Critics of the programme have argued that it is used by American companies to replace local workers with foreigners on lower wages.

New Delhi, which has argued it is a trade issue and helps American companies remain competitive, has been following these discussions in the Trump administration very closely because Indian companies such as Infosys, TCS and Wipro use the programme widely for their businesses in the US.

Source
Very Good.
Singapore don't need more smell pollution.
We are happy with 2% or 3% GDP growth.
No need to suffer from people with "High Threshold for Tolerating Stench".

Our Government lost a lot of votes because of its foreign workers policy.
There was a lot of resentment especially against the Indians(India).
With the clampdown on intake of Indian foreign workers, PAP has regained power winning votes by an increase of more than 10% in the most recent elections.
This shows how resentful Singaporeans are of Indian foreign invasion of Singapore.
Good Riddance.
.
 
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Very Good.
Singapore don't need more smell pollution.
We are happy with 2% or 3% GDP growth.
No need to suffer from people with "High Threshold for Tolerating Stench".

Our Government lost a lot of votes because of its foreign workers policy.
There was a lot of resentment especially against the Indians(India).
With the clampdown on intake of Indian foreign workers, PAP has regained power winning votes by an increase of more than 10% in the most recent elections.
This shows how resentful Singaporeans are of Indian foreign invasion of Singapore.
Good Riddance.
.
With the number of Indians in the world, The thing is you cannot run away from it. So first of all get used to the stench.

Second your companies cannot compete with the competition if not for Indians. Indians dont get visa any more for being cheap labor we get it because you guys are incompetent.

In another news, let me refrain from naming the organization, 1 multi billion dollar organization has just started operations in your country and unfortunately is being managed wholesome from India only. Now cry me a river
 
. . .
With the number of Indians in the world, The thing is you cannot run away from it. So first of all get used to the stench.

Second your companies cannot compete with the competition if not for Indians. Indians dont get visa any more for being cheap labor we get it because you guys are incompetent.

In another news, let me refrain from naming the organization, 1 multi billion dollar organization has just started operations in your country and unfortunately is being managed wholesome from India only. Now cry me a river

:haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::haha::haha:
:sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic:
 
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Singapore only hire Tamils from India
 
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Singapore only hire Tamils from India
Not really, Tamils are mostly in Engineering and Public works.
I am OK with Tamils and from Kerala.
You know they are Tamils if they watch Sun TV channel at home.
They brag less and work more.
Shouldn't group Tamils with Indians.
But too much of foreigners is never a good thing.
My Singaporean Tamil friends share the same view.

Those companies that depends on foreign workers to stay in Singapore are welcomed to leave.
Its never worth it to have our country full of bragging smelly foreigners clogging our transport system and overcrowding our open spaces for economic growth.
.

With the number of Indians in the world, The thing is you cannot run away from it. So first of all get used to the stench.

Second your companies cannot compete with the competition if not for Indians. Indians dont get visa any more for being cheap labor we get it because you guys are incompetent.

In another news, let me refrain from naming the organization, 1 multi billion dollar organization has just started operations in your country and unfortunately is being managed wholesome from India only. Now cry me a river
You are right, hordes of Indians polluting wherever they go.
They pollute Wikipedia, they pollute Youtube, public places and public transport.
They are such a nuisance that countries like Singapore and US are realizing lately that they have to stop the inflow of these invading hordes from this population dividend explosion 3rd world country that is India.
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