Qatar: 'Legacy of suffering' allegedly left for migrant workers after FIFA World Cup; incl. co comment
Riepilogo
Date Reported: 29 Feb 2024
Location: Qatar
Companies
FIFA - Other Value Chain EntityOther
Not Reported ( Construction ) - EmployerAffected
Total individuals affected: Number unknown
Migrant & immigrant workers: ( 1 - Africa , Construction , Men , Unknown migration status )Issues
Precarious/Unsuitable Living Conditions , Contract Substitution , Access to Non-Judicial Remedy , Access to Justice & Legal Protection , Wage Theft , Reasonable Working Hours & Leisure Time , Denial of leave , Recruitment Fees , Retention of identity documentsResponse
Response sought: Yes, by Journalists
External link to response: (Find out more)
Action taken: A FIFA spokesperson said: “According to the International Labour Organisation, Qatar’s labour reforms have been significant and benefitted hundreds of thousands of workers with the World Cup being an important catalyst for these reforms. It is undeniable that significant progress has taken place, and it is equally clear that the enforcement of such transformative reforms takes time and that heightened efforts are needed to ensure the reforms benefit all workers in the country.”
Source type: News outlet
“For Migrant Workers Qatar World Cup Leaves Behind Legacy Of Suffering”
….“The agent promised me a good salary, health insurance, food, and proper accommodation, but when I arrived in Doha it was very different,” Amos told me. “I reached the room of my friend but it was full, so I slept on the streets. My sponsor had no job, so they took me to construction. I worked for six months without a salary…
He never met his sponsor and says that his employer seized his passport. Amos and a group of fellow workers endured work shifts of twelve hours, working at times at a site that had served as accommodation for World Cup fans…
Such labor abuses should belong to the past. Qatar, local World Cup organizers, and soccer’s global governing body FIFA have trumpeted far-reaching labor reforms…but the reality on the ground remains stark as Amos’s story and that of countless other migrant workers illustrate…
A FIFA spokesperson said: “According to the International Labour Organisation, Qatar’s labour reforms have been significant and benefitted hundreds of thousands of workers with the World Cup being an important catalyst for these reforms. It is undeniable that significant progress has taken place, and it is equally clear that the enforcement of such transformative reforms takes time…