Doha lacks knowledge of the value of human rights
At a time when the world celebrates International Human
Rights Day, Qatar is practicing its habit of violating everything related to
human rights, and in this it does not differentiate between anyone, whatever
his nationality, color or religion, for everyone in Doha is under the
guillotine as long as he is alien to the people of Qatar, and in many cases the
injustice of the Qataris themselves is prolonged.
Failed regime
The political regime governing Doha does not hesitate to use
all means to cover up its failure to manage the country's crises, the latest of
which is the outbreak of the corona virus, which prompted it to resort to
illegal methods to escape from its international obligations, especially
towards foreign workers and their financial and human rights.
The spread of the corona pandemic in Qatar revealed many
losses and violations committed by the regime, especially in their dealings
with workers and their intransigence to continue their work, which confirms
that Doha will continue to work to finish preparing for the 2022 World Cup
without considering the losses that may affect workers due to direct contact,
continuous gatherings, and offering them as sacrifices to corona, despite
repeated warnings by the World Health Organization to reduce it as much as
possible to fend off the spreading global pandemic.
In this context, a report by Equidem, a human rights
organization, revealed that companies in Qatar have not paid "hundreds of
millions of dollars" in salaries and benefits to low-wage workers since
the outbreak of the corona virus, increasing their suffering in one of the
richest countries in the world.
Equidem reported that thousands of workers were dismissed
without prior notice, given reduced wages or unpaid leave, deprived of due salary
and end-of-service payments, or forced to bear the costs of flights to return
to their countries.
The findings of the report amount to the level of "wage
theft" on an unprecedented scale, which made workers destitute and suffer
a shortage of food, and they were unable to send money to their families in
their homelands during the pandemic, according to the Guardian.
The newspaper cited separate research by the Business and
Human Rights Resource Center, which found that in 87% of the “worker abuse”
cases that affected nearly 12,000 workers since 2016, they were related to
unpaid or late wages.
About 2 million foreign workers are employed in Qatar, most
of them from South Asia, and many of them work on construction projects related
to the 2022 World Cup.
Employment crisis in Qatar
Amnesty International revealed at the end of March that
hundreds of workers were infected with the corona virus in Doha’s industrial
zone, as the organization confirmed that Doha closed parts of the industrial
zone after hundreds of cases were recorded in the country, demanding that they
not discriminate in health care for people with corona.
As the world struggles to contain the spread of the corona virus,
migrant workers trapped in camps such as those in Qatar are at greater risk of the
pandemic spreading among them, given that the labor camps in Qatar are very
crowded and lack adequate water and sanitation.
The Qatari emirate had secretly paid $400 million to
representatives in the International Federation of Football Association (FIFA)
just 21 days before announcing its winning to host the 2022 World Cup, in
addition to executives from the Qatari Al-Jazeera channel signing a television
contract to buy the rights to broadcast the World Cup matches, which is the
largest among the offers presented to FIFA.



