Qatar 2022: Slavery, death and corruption
Migrant workers “no better than slaves” have suffered over
900 deaths on construction sites in Qatar’s 2022 World Cup city. Claims the
world’s richest country per capita won its bid due to corruption have led to
calls to rerun the vote. Join the campaign for migrant workers’ justice.
Qatar has an increasing number of its estimated 1.8 million
foreigners now working on projects related to complete major construction and
infrastructure projects before the World Cup. In 2009 Amnesty International
reported that migrant workers, who make up a large proportion of Qatar’s
workforce, were exposed to, and inadequately protected against, abuses and
exploitation by employers. Women migrant domestic workers were particularly at
risk of exploitation and abuses such as beatings, rape and other sexual
violence. Some 20,000 workers were reported to have fled from their employers
in 2007 alone due to delays in or non-payment of their wages, excessive hours
and poor working conditions.
But this didn't stop FIFA awarding the 2022 World Cup to
this Persian Gulf Emirate of majestic new high-rises, sprawling universities
and elegant museums - and blistering heat - beating the United States in a 14-8
vote in the decisive round. The appropriateness of this decision can only be measured
by calls to rerun the vote by leading former FIFA insider Alexandra Wrage,
following allegations that former vice-president Jack Warner received payments
from ex-Qatari football official Mohamed Bin Hammam. Current Executive
Committee member Theo Zwanziger has also described it as a "blatant
mistake."
Warner and Mohamed Bin Hammam's Fifa careers ended in
disgrace after they were caught up in a corruption scandal surrounding Bin
Hammam's campaign for the presidency of the world governing body in 2011.
A Conservative MP who is campaigning for reform of the world
governing body said Fifa should rerun the bid for the 2022 World Cup if an FBI
investigation proves corrupt payments were made in connection with the vote.
Damian Collins, who used parliamentary privilege in 2011 to state allegations
that two Fifa members had been paid to vote for Qatar 2022, said: "If the
FBI investigation can prove that corrupt payments were made to Fifa executives
in connection to the decision to award that country the World Cup, they should
lose the right to host the tournament and the competition to stage World Cup
2022 should be rerun."




