Women in Qatar: Insult, marginalization, and foreign workers doomed to rape
 
 
In a report on the situation of domestic workers in Qatar
released in October, the human rights organization Amnesty International
revealed that foreign domestic workers were subjected to ill-treatment,
including physical abuse, as well as sexual exploitation.
After interviewing 105 women, the report said that about 85%
of them said that they regularly work more than 14 hours a day, rarely or never
get days off, and that employers withhold their passports. Some women also
mentioned that they were victims of sexual assault crimes.
Insulted, slapped and spat on
Amnesty International clarified that in 2017 Qatar issued
what was known as the Domestic Workers Law, which stipulated limits on working
hours, mandatory daily rest times, a weekly day off, and paid leave, but this
law was not implemented or applied.
Some workers reported that they were not being paid
regularly, while 40 women described being insulted, slapped, or spat on.
Steve Cockburn, head of the Economic and Social Justice
Program at Amnesty International, said, “The introduction of the Domestic
Workers Law of 2017 has been seen as a positive step for protecting workers'
rights in Qatar. Unfortunately, women's stories make clear that these reforms
were not implemented or applied.”
The organization explained that there are about 173,000
foreign domestic workers in Qatar, noting that some of the women it interviewed
are still holding their jobs, while some of them have left work but are still
in Qatar, and others have returned to their home countries.
Starving employment
Other women said they were afraid of being rejected by their
employers' endless requests, even when they needed a break, while at least 23
women said they did not get enough food and felt hungry while working in Qatar.
Some women described sleeping in narrow rooms, in some cases
on the floor or without air conditioning, and the organization emphasized that
this highlights the failure of the Qatari authorities to conduct inspections of
workplaces.
Regarding physical and sexual violence, five women said that
they had been sexually abused by their employers or visiting relatives, and
that sexual abuse ranged from harassment to rape. Most women felt unable to
file a police complaint for fear of retaliation from their employers.
The organization stated that Qatar has failed to hold
abusive employers accountable, which means there is little deterrent to future
violations, and no automatic investigations are conducted into practices such
as passport confiscation and non-payment of wages, which indicates forced
labor.
Qatari women are suffering
In February 2020, Qatari women launched a hashtag on Twitter
through which they talked about crimes committed against Qatari women and
claimed their rights, chief among them the enactment of a law criminalizing
domestic abuse, as it is a felony, and the establishment of institutions to
protect women and children from abuse to contribute to their rehabilitation and
stability, as well as the right of women to financial independence and the
right of movement and travel without restrictions, just like men. 
Among the rights that Qatari women demanded also include
ending arbitrariness in matters of completing legal and governmental procedures
without a guardian, as well as canceling permission to work on the part of the
husband in some governmental and non-governmental agencies, and her sharing
with her husband in guardianship over her children.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


