HRW: Qatar failing to protect workers’ rights ahead of World Cup

HRW said it interviewed more than 93 migrant workers working for more than 60 companies or employers and reviewed legal documents as part of its investigation. (File/AFP)
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Updated 25 August 2020
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HRW: Qatar failing to protect workers’ rights ahead of World Cup

  • Despite reform pledges, abuse is rife and migrants continue to suffer

LONDON: Qatar’s efforts to protect migrant workers’ rights to accurate and timely wages have largely failed, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in a report.

Employee rights had been frequently ignored by over 60 major employers in the country, and its pledges in 2017 to the International Labour Organization to protect migrant workers from wage abuses and to abolish the kafala visa system had not been fulfilled, according to the report titled “How Can We Work Without Wages: Salary Abuses Facing Migrant Workers Ahead of Qatar’s FIFA World Cup 2022.”

HRW said it found multiple examples of wage abuse against people in all manner of roles, from security staff to cleaners and construction workers.

 

 

“Ten years since Qatar won the right to host the FIFA World Cup 2022, migrant workers are still facing delayed, unpaid, and deducted wages,” said Michael Page, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at HRW.

“We have heard of workers starving due to delayed wages, indebted workers toiling in Qatar only to get underpaid wages, and workers trapped in abusive working conditions due to fear of retaliation,” he added.

“Qatar has two years left before players kick the first ball at the World Cup. The clock is running out and Qatar needs to show that it will live up to its promise to abolish the ‘kafala’ system, improve its salary monitoring systems, speed up its redress mechanisms, and adopt additional measures to tackle wage abuse.”

Qatar depends on a migrant workforce of over 2 million to help build its World Cup infrastructure.

However, many migrant workers find themselves trapped in debt and left completely at the mercy of unscrupulous employers.

The onset of the coronavirus pandemic has worsened conditions, with some employers using it as an excuse to withhold wages and forcibly repatriate those owed outstanding sums.

HRW said the kafala system, which ties worker visas to employers and that Qatar has promised to do away with, facilitated abuse.

Some workers had also been required to pay as much as $2,600 upfront to secure jobs in Qatar, only to arrive in debt and with worse wages than promised. Late payment is also an issue.

In 2015, Qatar implemented the Wage Protection System, followed by Labour Dispute Resolution Committees in 2017, and the Workers’ Support and Insurance Fund in 2018.

It also announced reforms that would put in place a minimum wage for all migrant workers in Qatar and allow them to leave their jobs without employer consent.

But HRW said these changes could be easily circumvented by employers, and taking large companies to court was often costly and ineffective for individuals, who risked retaliation for doing so. 

World football governing body FIFA said it “has a zero-tolerance policy to any form of discrimination and to wage abuse.”

It added: “FIFA is aware of the importance of wage protection measures in (Qatar) and this is why FIFA and the other tournament organizers have put in place robust systems to prevent and mitigate wage abuse on FIFA World Cup sites, as well as mechanisms for workers to raise potential grievances and practices to provide for remediation where companies fail to live up to our standards.”


The French village where Ayatollah Khomeini fomented Iran’s revolution

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The French village where Ayatollah Khomeini fomented Iran’s revolution

NEAUPHLE-LE-CHATEAU: It has been nearly 50 years since the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini recorded speeches calling for an Islamic revolution from a country home in an affluent village west of Paris.
But the inhabitants of Neauphle-le-Chateau have still not got over their famous guest, as the US-Israeli war against Iran puts the spotlight back on the ayatollah’s legacy.
Khomeini, the original spiritual guide of Iran’s modern theocracy, spent barely 120 days ensconced in a villa in the village 40 kilometers (25 miles) west of the French capital, before returning in a blaze of publicity to complete the ousting of the Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, in the Iranian Revolution in early 1979.
Andre, an 86-year-old neighbor of the house that was briefly Khomeini’s headquarters, recalled the sudden storm that hit sleepy Neauphle-le-Chateau in the Yvelines department.
“One evening on the television, they announced that an ayatollah had set up home in a comfortable district in the Yvelines,” said the retired engineer, who declined to give his family name but has lived in the village since 1974.
“From the Saturday morning, there was an invasion of journalists. They were parked everywhere.”
Neauphle-le-Chateau, which is just 20 kilometers (12 miles) from Versailles palace, soon became a major draw. “The number of people that the ayatollah would receive, especially the young Iranians who studied in Germany,” said Andre.
“It was incredible. He organized the whole Iranian revolution from Neauphle-le-Château.”
Revolutionary exile
Khomeini, then 76, needed a new bolthole after being expelled from his exiled base in the Iraqi city of Najaf by the country’s dictator Saddam Hussein.
“The only place an Iranian could go to without a visa was France,” said Bernard Hourcade, a specialist on Iran at the CNRS, France’s main research institute.
Abolhassan Banisadr, a future president of the Islamic Republic, at first offered accommodation at Cachan, southeast of Paris. But then a friend offered the house west of the capital and Neauphle-le-Chateau became internationally famous.
The ayatollah arrived on October 6, 1978 and left France again on February 1, 1979. He died in Iran in 1989.
According to Hourcade, one of Khomeini’s main activities at the house was to record speeches condemning the shah and calling for revolution, which were recorded on cassettes and secreted into Iran.
Michel, an 87-year-old resident, who also did not want to give his family name, recalled the “police checks” and “blocked roads” during the ayatollah’s stay.
“We weren’t bothered by his presence, but the neighbors on Chevreuse road (where the ayatollah lived) were quite inconvenienced.”
Some, like former resident Alain Simonneau, 80, played down the ayatollah’s role in the history of the village. “It was a minor event for Neauphle-le-Chateau, even if it’s part of our collective memory, whether we like it or not.”
But Lydie Kadiri, who arrived in 1999, said it is a part of history that everyone remembers. “When we say we come from Neauphle-le-Château, everyone immediately remembers the ayatollah!” she said.
The destiny of the house where the ayatollah stayed is another mystery.
The home was destroyed in an explosion in February 1980, a few months after the ayatollah’s death. Other buildings have since been erected.
“One evening, I heard an explosion and suddenly, everything burst into flames. The house shook from the blast. Some glass was cracked in my hall,” recalled Andre.
For some years, a signboard stood on the land where the house had been, signalling the link between Iran’s original spiritual guide and the village. This was vandalized in 2023.
Now pilgrimages are held each year to mark his return to Iran on February 1, 1979.
Khomeini’s successor, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed in the US-Israeli air strikes on Iran.
A Neauphle-le-Chateau resident, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that between 150 and 200 people came each year with Iran’s ambassador “to celebrate the anniversary” of Khomeini’s return to Iran.
In Tehran, a road is named after Neauphle-le-Chateau. The French embassy is located on the street.