World Cup hotel shields England team from fans – and Qatar’s labour abuses
Özet
Date Reported: 21 Eyl 2022
Lokasyon: Katar
Diğer
Not Reported ( Güvenlik şirketleri ) - EmployerEtkilenenler
Total individuals affected: Sayı bilinmiyor
Göçmen ve göçmen işçiler: ( Sayı bilinmiyor - Pakistan , Güvenlik şirketleri , Gender not reported ) , Göçmen ve göçmen işçiler: ( Sayı bilinmiyor - Kenya , Güvenlik şirketleri , Gender not reported ) , Göçmen ve göçmen işçiler: ( Sayı bilinmiyor - Nepal , Güvenlik şirketleri , Gender not reported , Unknown migration status )Meseleler
Gözdağı verme ve tehditler , Hareket özgürlüğünün reddedilmesi , İşe Alım ÜcretleriYanıt
Response sought: Yes, by BHRRC
Story containing response: (Find out more)
Action taken: Responses were provided by the English FA and the Hotel's brand Minor International but the employer of the security guards was not identified and so could not be contacted.
Source type: News outlet
"World Cup hotel shields England team from fans - and Qatar's labour abuses," 21 Sep 2022
Far from the glittering towers of Doha, off a road lined with scruffy fast-food outlets and down a narrow, bumpy lane that leads to a beach, stands the hotel that will host England at the World Cup...
... the staff appear excited at the prospect of hosting top footballers...
However, while the England team may be able to escape the frenzy of fans in their beach-side hideaway, they will not be able to avoid the shadow of labour abuses that will fall on this World Cup...
In the souk outside and along the beachfront promenade, security guards from places including Kenya, Nepal and Pakistan endure 12-hour shifts for just over £1 an hour. They say they work 30 days a month. “If I take a day off, they cut my salary,” says one.
They say they have all been forced to pay extortionate fees – of up to £1,360 – to agents in their home countries to secure their jobs, meaning they have to work for months just to repay the costs...
“The company will not give us permission to leave. They tell us we have to cancel our visas, go home and then apply for another job,” says one.