Qatar rejects compensation for dead stadium workers

Soccer World Cup
Despite thousands of deaths: Qatar rejects compensation for stadium workers

Thousands of migrants have already died on the construction sites for the soccer World Cup in Qatar. The surviving dependents will not receive any compensation for the time being (archive image)

© Hassan Ammar/AP/DPA

To date, thousands of workers have died or been injured on the construction sites of the World Cup host country Qatar. However, there will be no compensation for this. The emirate rejects a corresponding fund.

How many workers have died or been injured on the stadium construction sites for the soccer World Cup in Qatar so far can only be estimated. According to the latest information from human rights organizations, the number of people who died of heat, sudden cardiac death or overexertion alone is more than 15,000. The organizations Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have therefore asked the emirate to compensate the families of the deceased stadium workers – and only reaped a mocking comment from the Qatari Minister of Labor.

“Advertising stunt”: Claims for compensation are met with ridicule

In a statement, Amnesty and Human Rights Watch are calling for Qatar and FIFA to set up a joint compensation fund of $440 million – the same amount that FIFA is paying out to the participating teams as prize money.

The football association has always publicly emphasized that it is in “ongoing dialogue” with Qatar to set up such a fund. However, with three weeks to go before the controversial World Cup begins, the host nation’s tone seems to be getting rougher. Qatari Labor Minister Ali bin Samich Al Marri told the AFP news agency that the human rights organizations’ demands were an “advertising stunt.” The plan to introduce such a fund is not feasible, Marri continued. The Minister of Labor claims that the figures from the NGOs are not transparent. “There are no criteria for setting up these funds. Where are the victims? Do you have the names of the victims? How do you get these numbers?”

A cynical comment, because the host country of the World Cup would actually be responsible for informing the public about the situation on the construction sites and documenting accidents. Instead, the emirate has been trying to whitewash the number of victims ever since construction of the stadiums began.

Qatar actually promised the end of the kafala system

In 2018, the country actually promised to abolish the current kafala system with a view to the World Cup. The arrangement whereby foreign workers are tied to a guarantor who can effectively do with them as he pleases is often referred to as a modern form of slavery. To this day, workers in Qatar keep reporting that their passports are taken away from them upon arrival, that they have to live in run-down accommodation and that they receive their salary late or not at all.

The system, which in its original form was intended to prevent abuse of foreign workers because they were uninsured, has turned into the opposite in recent decades. At the beginning of the year, FIFA also had to admit that the World Cup construction sites violated international labor law.

Sources: tagesschau.de, ntv.de, Amnesty International with material from AFP

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