Qatar Is Still Using Forced Labour To Build Stadiums

Qatar Is Still Using Forced Labour To Build Stadiums

Last year, the Qatari government promised to, uh, get better about using forced labour to build the stadiums and infrastructure it needs to host the World Cup in 2020. But according to a new report from Amnesty International, nothing has changed.

Image: AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo

Yesterday, Amnesty put out an in-depth update on Qatar’s promise to improve the working conditions of the migrant laborers working on dozens of giant projects for the upcoming World Cup. These projects range from floating luxury hotels to… whatever this is, as Screamer’s Billy Haisley showed us in his absurdist rundown of the planned buildings last week. “If there’s one surefire way to make World Cup fans forget about staggering human rights atrocities, it’s giving them underwater hotel rooms,” wrote Haisley.

The title of the new report is Promising Little, Delivering Less, which really says it all.

Qatar Is Still Using Forced Labour To Build Stadiums

Qatar Is Still Using Forced Labour To Build Stadiums

Top: Lusail Stadium via Wikimedia. Bottom: Al-Gharafa Stadium via Wikimedia.

In May of 2014, Qatar promised it would improve how migrant workers on these projects are treated, from an unusually high rate of death from heart attacks to a lack of clean water or places to sleep. That included making it harder for the employer to demand the worker’s passport, as well as ending the exit system that allowed employers to stop a worker from leaving the country. How has Qatar followed through? Amnesty breaks it down:

  • Passport confiscation: “draft laws based on the proposals announced in May 2014 are still being discussed by government authorities.”

  • The sponsorship system, which ends up allowing forced labour: “the government is still discussing the draft laws based on the proposals announced in May.”

  • Protect domestic workers, too: “In Qatar, no new laws have been passed, nor has the Qatar government made any formal, public announcements regarding improvements.”

Another awful detail: Amnesty says that many Nepali workers — who comprise a large percentage of migrant workers in Qatar — haven’t even been able to get permission to go home after the 25 April earthquake, or even news about their families in some cases.

In a country where architects and engineers from all over the world are working, this is outrageous. It might not be anyone’s “responsibility” except the government to oversee how these buildings are being built, but that seems like a serious cop-out. Is the price of architecture, or soccer for that matter, really that high?

Read the full report here.


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