Amnesty International criticism returns Qatar to square one (JMD on Play the Game)
Photo:
Special KRB/Flickr
31.03.2016
A new report from Amnesty
International slams Qatar for not living up to promises to improve workers’
rights and adds to a growing international criticism of Qatar’s inability to
properly implement adopted policies.
World Cup host Qatar and FIFA are in
public diplomacy terms back to square one with a just published Amnesty
International report that takes the Gulf state to task for failing to implement
lofty promises to significantly improve workers’ working and living conditions
and the world soccer body for not ensuring that Qatar lives up to international
standards.
The
report, The Ugly Side of the Beautiful
Game, provides a damning assessment of the state of affairs five
years after FIFA awarded the 2022 World Cup to Qatar. Amnesty interviewed more
than 200 labourers working on the refurbishment of the Khalifa International
Stadium, one of eight planned facilities for the World Cup, and the Aspire Zone
sports complex, a pillar of Qatar’s sports infrastructure, who all complained
about various violations of their human rights.
The report was published days after the
International Labour Organization (ILO) put Qatar on notice that it no longer
can delay acting on promises made in the wake of its successful bid to host the
2022 World Cup.
In
a rare move, the ILO threatened to
establish a Commission of Inquiry if Qatar fails to act in the coming year.
Such commissions are among the ILO’s most powerful tools to ensure compliance
with international treaties. The UN body has only established 13 such
commissions in its century-long history. The last such commission was created
in 2010 to force Zimbabwe to live up to its obligations.
Earned
goodwill could vanish
The report and the ILO warning are all the more embarrassing for Qatar given that its main competitor, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), has already adopted many of the adjustments of the kafala or sponsorship system that puts workers at the mercy of their employers demanded by activists and is stepping up efforts to become the region’s prime sports hub.
The report and the warning further
threaten to erase considerable goodwill that Qatar built in the wake of its
2010 successful World Cup bid by breaking with the mould of Gulf states’
refusal to engage with their critics, and holding out the promise of a more
constructive relationship with international human rights groups and trade
unions, and significant labour reform. Qatar became the only Gulf state to work
with its critics rather than imprison them or bar them entry to the country as
most of the region’s other countries continue to do.
The Amnesty report constitutes however
the first documentation of abuse on a World Cup-related site and punches holes
into the assertion by the Supreme Committee for Delivery & Legacy, the
World Cup’s organizer which is chaired by Qatar emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al
Thani, that its standards for the living and working conditions of migrant
labour guard against abuse on construction sites related to the tournament.
FIFA
also under fire
Amnesty takes the committee and the government to task for failing to ensure proper implementation of the standards that are written into all contracts signed by the committee since they were adopted in 2014 in consultation with Amnesty and other human rights and trade union groups.
It also charges that FIFA failed to due
proper due diligence to identify and address human rights risks in Qatar in
line with the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights.
“FIFA did not put in place any measures to ensure that the people who would
build the World Cup infrastructure in Qatar would not be subjected to human
rights abuses. None of the publically available documentation on FIFA’s award
of the 2022 World Cup to Qatar contains any reference to labour exploitation or
to ensuring that human rights of workers would be respected… Of even greater
concern is the lack of action by FIFA in the last five years, during which time
labour and human rights abuses experienced by construction workers in Qatar
have been repeatedly exposed by the media, human rights groups and trades
unions,” the report said.
The human rights violations of migrant
workers, who constitute a majority of the Qatar population, including
interest-bearing recruitment loans, deception over pay rates and job
descriptions, delayed wage payments, retention of passports, denial of rights
to travel home, squalid living arrangements, excessive surveillance, and
physical and verbal abuse by managers, amount to forced labour. The continued
abuses violate the supreme committee’s standards as well as limited legal and
administrative measures adopted by the government to counter malpractice and
reform the kafala system.
In a statement, the Supreme Committee for Delivery &
Legacy insisted that it was “committed to ensuring the health, safety and
well-being of every worker on World Cup projects.” It asserted that “the tone
of Amnesty International’s latest assertions paint a misleading picture and do
nothing to contribute to our efforts.” The committee said Amnesty had
interviewed workers of only four of the 40 companies involved in the
refurbishment of the Khalifa stadium and that “the conditions reported were not
representative of the entire work force on Khalifa.” The committee said that
issues raised by Amnesty have since been addressed and that the companies
involved had been penalized.
Qatar
caught in a Catch-22
Nonetheless, at the root of Amnesty’s criticism of Qatar is the Gulf state’s
failure to ensure implementation of its standards throughout the food chain.
The companies indicted by Amnesty were sub- rather than prime contractors, the
main committee’s main focus. The criticism however puts a finger on a
fundamental Qatari problem in ensuring proper implementation of policies its
adopts.
That failure is rooted in logistical
issues – a small, enriched population reliant on migrant labour – and political
dilemmas, first and foremost among which paralysis as a result of existential
demographic fears. With a citizenry that accounts for only 12 percent of the
population, many Qataris fear that any concession of rights to non-Qataris
could ultimately undermine the national predominance of their culture and
political control of their state and society.
As
a result, Qatar is caught in a Catch-22 between sports, foreign and other
policies designed to put the Gulf state in the international limelight and
enhance its soft power and the attention and demands that those policies
attract in terms of making good on projecting itself as a cutting-edge 21st century state.
Qatar’s inability to manage that
dilemma turns its high-profile sporting efforts into a self-defeating
enterprise. Despite billions of dollars of investment in its soft power
strategy, of which sports is an important pillar, and five years of seeking to
convince the world that it is on the right track, Qatar retains more of an
image of an energy-rich slave state than of a small country that is
successfully carving out its place as a good citizen of the international
community.
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