Published on 12:09 AM, November 19, 2013

Amnesty urges Qatar to end abuse of World Cup workers

Amnesty International urged Qatar to end abuse of migrants working on football World Cup infrastructure, as it issued a report Monday citing cases in which they were referred to as "animals".
The 169-page report called on world football governing body FIFA to press the Gulf state to improve the conditions of foreign labourers, alleging "alarming" levels of exploitation against the workers mostly from South or Southeast Asia.
Doha, which rejects claims of slavery-style conditions on its construction sites in the world's wealthiest nation per capita, said it would investigate the report's findings.
Amnesty said its researchers had heard one construction firm manager use the term "animals" to describe migrant workers.
And a worker told the watchdog that "Nepalis are treated like cattle".
Amnesty secretary general Salil Shetty said the findings indicated "an alarming level of exploitation" in Qatar, and called the abuses "widespread" and "not isolated".
"FIFA has a duty to send a strong public message that it will not tolerate human rights abuses on construction projects related to the World Cup."
After meeting Qatar's emir and prime minister on November 9 in Doha, FIFA chief Sepp Blatter said the issue of working conditions was being addressed.
Shetty said Amnesty had met officials who were "very willing to recognise that there is a problem and... strongly oriented to find solutions".
After embarking on a multi-billion-dollar plan to host the 2022 World Cup, Qatar has come under the spotlight as migrant workers pour into the tiny gas-rich nation.
The plight of migrant workers remains an issue across the oil-rich Gulf.
Amnesty's report documented several abuses, including "non-payment of wages, harsh and dangerous working conditions, and shocking standards of accommodation".
Its team "found migrant workers living in squalid, overcrowded accommodation with no air conditioning, exposed to overflowing sewage or uncovered septic tanks."
The London-based watchdog said "dozens" of them have been trapped inside Qatar, which demands foreigners obtain an exit permit to leave.
In response, Qatar said it would ensure the report was included in an inquiry it has already launched into the alleged abuses.
The authorities had "asked international law firm DLA Piper to include the Amnesty report... in the independent review it is carrying out concerning the conditions of foreign labour," said a foreign ministry source quoted by the official QNA news agency.
"The state of Qatar gives huge importance to the protection and upholding of human rights by enacting the relevant laws and establishing the bodies tasked with protecting and reinforcing those rights," the source added.
In the report, Amnesty said "the onus is on the government of Qatar to make the necessary changes to its legislation and to enforce worker protections".
Amnesty said abuses were systematic under a sponsorship system that "affords unscrupulous employers powers to exploit their employees, not least of which is the ability to prevent workers leaving the country."
Shetty said his team in Doha on Friday met "a group of 70 workers" from Nepal, Sri Lanka and other nationalities who said they "have not been paid for nine to 10 months".
"It is simply inexcusable in one of the richest countries in the world that so many migrant workers are being ruthlessly exploited, deprived of their pay and left struggling to survive."
Many workers have also reported poor health and safety standards, said Amnesty.
It cited an unnamed Doha hospital representative as saying that "more than 1,000 people were admitted to the trauma unit in 2012 (after) having fallen from height at work".
Some 10 percent became disabled and "the mortality rate was 'significant'."
A September report in Britain's Guardian newspaper said 44 Nepalis have died working in Qatar this year. Amnesty did not confirm the figure.
Some abused labourers worked for subcontractors employed by global firms, Amnesty alleged.