Society | Oct 29

Japan's aid agency to launch support body for foreign workers

Oct 29 (Kyodo) - The Japan International Cooperation Agency said Wednesday it will launch an organization next month to provide comprehensive support for foreign workers in Japan to improve their working and living environments.

The organization will be established on Nov. 16 jointly with the Global Alliance for Sustainable Supply Chain -- a nongovernmental body that focuses on human rights issues -- to address issues faced by foreign workers, JICA said in an online press briefing.

The body, called the Japan Platform for Migrant Workers toward Responsible and Inclusive Society, will seek to make Japan a more attractive choice for foreigners amid the country's acute labor shortage by strengthening communication, proposing initiatives for reform, and conveying information within Japan and abroad.

Toyota Motor Corp. and Ajinomoto Co. are among the companies which have also joined the body.

Japan created a new visa system on April 1, 2019, in an effort to attract more blue-collar workers from abroad, marking a major policy shift from its traditionally strict immigration rules.

The number of foreign residents of Japan holding the new skilled worker visa totaled 1,621 as of Dec. 31, up more than sevenfold from the end of September but short of 47,550 the government had expected in the first year, according to the immigration agency.


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