World Cup workers face deportation from Qatar
摘要
日期: 2023年1月24日
地點: 卡塔爾
企業
Festival Global Management - Other Value Chain Entity , Stark Security - Employer , FIFA - Client項目
Qatar World Cup 2022 Unspecified Projects - Client其他
Government ( 公共實體 ) - Government受影響的
受影響的總人數: 1000
移民和移民工人: ( 數字未知 - 中東與北非 , 安保公司 , Gender not reported ) , 移民和移民工人: ( 數字未知 - 東南亞 , 安保公司 , Men , Unknown migration status ) , 移民和移民工人: ( 數字未知 - 非洲 , 安保公司 , Gender not reported )議題
恐嚇和威脅 , 剝奪言論自由 , Precarious/Unsuitable Living Conditions , Dismissal , Wage Theft , Strikes and other work stoppages , Freedom of Assembly , Access to Non-Judicial Remedy , Access to Justice & Legal Protection , Internet Access , Restricted mobility回應
已邀請回應:是,由Journalist & BHRRC
載有回應的故事: (查看更多)
後續行動: Stark Security, Festival Global and World Cup organisers the Supreme Committee for Delivery & Legacy did not respond to request for comment. Business & Human Rights Resource Centre invited FIFA to respond to the allegations; their response can be read in full. In May 2023, the Telegraph reported that three workers remained in detention following their arrest for participating in the protests.
資訊來源: News outlet
Hundreds of migrant workers in Qatar employed as security guards during the World Cup at Fifa’s main media centre and other key sites face deportation after launching an unprecedented street protest in Doha on Sunday against mass sackings that followed the tournament.
The protest was the culmination of a long-running labour dispute involving workers sacked before the end of their six-month contracts to work at the World Cup. They were left without salary, bonuses and a place to live – forcing them to occupy their company accommodation.
Telegraph Sport has been told that around 400 workers formerly employed by Stark Security Services and Festival Global Management, which are based in Doha, hired buses to take them to protest at the offices of the latter in the West Bay area of the capital city. Police were summoned and arrests were made. Eye-witnesses have reported the workers being escorted to their accommodation to collect their belongings ahead of the deportation process.
The men from south-east Asia, Africa and the Middle East were recruited to work for Stark Security, chiefly guarding the Qatar National Convention Centre which housed Fifa’s media hub…
Stark Security were contacted on more than one occasion to comment but did not respond. The Supreme Organising Committee for the 2022 World Cup did not respond to requests to comment. A senior executive at Festival Global did not respond to messages.
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