Friday, February 6, 2026

New law allows legal employment for refugees and asylum seekers

By Eyasu Zekarias

Ethiopia has taken a significant step towards improving the livelihoods of refugees and asylum seekers by passing a new directive that allows them to work legally in the country. The directive, known as Directive No. 1019/2024, focuses on the “Right to Work of Recognized Refuges and Asylum Seekers” and aims to address the challenges faced by refuges seeking legal employment opportunities.

On August 20, 2024, the Refugee and Returnees Service, in collaboration with the UN Refugee Agency, reported that Ethiopia hosts over one million refugees and asylum seekers, making it the third-largest refugee-hosting country in Africa. Many of these individuals have been displaced by civil conflict and crises in neighboring countries such as South Sudan, Somalia, Eritrea, and Sudan.

Historically, refugees in Ethiopia have faced restrictions on their movement and employment, often confined to refugee camps due to a lack of legal work opportunities. Solomon Soka, the State Minister for Labor and Skills, announced the approval of the new directive, emphasizing the government’s commitment to providing jobs for refugees. “We are committed to providing jobs as a country, just as our citizens are given jobs when they migrate abroad,” he stated.

The implementation of this directive will be overseen primarily by the Federal Refuges and Returnees Service, in collaboration with the Ministry of Labor and Skills, the Investment Commission, the Ministry of Trade and Regional Integration, and the Ministry of Revenue. 

Ethiopia’s previous Refugee Proclamation 1110/2019 granted the right to work for refugees and asylum seekers, but for five years, there was no detailed procedure in place to facilitate this right. The new directive aims to transition recognized refugees and asylum seekers from reliance on welfare to becoming productive and independent members of society, ultimately benefiting the local economy.

Hot this week

Production up, but the ‘cost’ variable weighs heavily

Production is up in 2021 for the Italian agricultural...

Luminos Fund’s catch-up education programs in Ethiopia recognized

The Luminos Fund has been named a top 10...

Well-planned cities essential for a resilient future in Africa concludes the World Urban Forum

The World Urban Forum (WUF) concluded today with a...

Private sector deemed key to unlocking AfCFTA potential

The private sector’s role is vital to fully unlock...

ዮሐንስ አያሌው (ዶ/ር) የፀደይ ባንክ ፕሬዝዳንት ለመሆን ከስምምነት መድረሳቸው ተገለጸ

የአማራ ባንክ ዋና ሥራ አስፈጻሚ በመሆን ሲያገለግሉ የቆዩት ዮሐንስ...

በአንድ ሳምንት ልዩነት የዶላር ዋጋ ጭማሪ አሳየ፤ ከፍተኛው መግዣ 155.05 ብር ደረሰ

የኢትዮጵያ ብሔራዊ ባንክ በሕገ-ወጥ የውጭ ምንዛሬ ገበያ ላይ የታየውን...

መንግሥት በነዳጅ ላይ ሲያደርግ የነበረውን ድጎማ እስከ መጪው የካቲት ወር ሙሉ በሙሉ ሊያነሳ ነው

መንግሥት ላለፉት አራት ዓመታት በነዳጅ ምርቶች ላይ ሲያደርግ የነበረውን...

Six African cities take stock of fiscal reforms in drive toward sustainable urban finance

City leaders and finance officials from across the continent...

KOICA strengthens WFP’s efforts to prevent malnutrition in Ethiopia

The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) has welcomed a...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img