Saudi Arabia’s World Cup bid gathers pace – but at what cost to human life?
Resumo
Data informada: 28 Out 2024
Localização: Arábia Saudita
Outros
Not Reported ( Setor não informado/aplicável ) - EmployerAfetados
Total de pessoas afetadas: Número desconhecido
Trabalhadores migrantes e imigrantes: ( Número desconhecido - Nepal - Setor desconhecido , Men , Unknown migration status )Temas
Mortes , Acesso a medicamentosResposta
Response sought: Não
Tipo de fonte: News outlet
Resumo
Data informada: 28 Out 2024
Localização: Arábia Saudita
Outros
Not Reported ( Setor não informado/aplicável ) - Employer , Not Reported ( Imobiliário: Geral ) - Other Value Chain EntityAfetados
Total de pessoas afetadas: Número desconhecido
Trabalhadores migrantes e imigrantes: ( Número desconhecido - Localização desconhecida - Setor desconhecido , Gender not reported , Unknown migration status )Temas
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Tipo de fonte: News outlet
…Here is another number: 21,000. It is the total of Nepali, Bangladeshi and Indian workers reported to have died in Saudi Arabia since its Vision 2030 plan was launched in April 2016. That was just one revelation from an ITV documentary, undertaken amid extreme risk, screened on Sunday night. Kingdom Uncovered: Inside Saudi Arabia showed snapshots of a world those reimagining the vast desert state would rather you did not see; images Fifa might prefer you believe are merely a trick of the light. Six and a half weeks before the Saudis’ 2034 World Cup bid goes through on the nod, we really are back here.
It is easy to scoff at some of the stadium designs revealed in the Saudis’ official bid submission three months ago. …
Saudi Arabia has already made a mockery of anyone doubting whether, when something needs doing, it will be made to happen at all costs. Take the example of Neom, on which the ITV programme dwells at particular and appropriate length. It detailed how much of the land earmarked for the project was inhabited by the Huwaitat tribe…
… “We are treated like beggars,” one anonymous worker tells ITV’s undercover reporter, explaining that he regularly works 16-hour days and goes two weeks without a day off. …