Qatar promises better welfare for World Cup workers

By Amena Bakr DOHA (Reuters) - Qatar's 2022 World Cup organisers have said they will penalise contractors who violate the welfare of construction workers after the Gulf country was widely criticised over its labour rights record. But the measures, which included detailed standards unveiled by the Qatar 2022 Supreme Committee, did not deal with the sponsorship system for migrant workers that a U.N. official said in November was a source of labour abuse. Pressure on Qatar increased after a report in the UK newspaper The Guardian in September which found that dozens of Nepali workers had died during the summer in Qatar and that labourers were not given enough food and water. Officials from Qatar and Nepal denied the report. Amnesty International and the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC), who have also criticised the treatment of migrant labourers in Qatar, gave Tuesday's announcement a lukewarm reception. Faced with the challenge of completing big construction and infrastructure projects before the World Cup, Qatar has an increasing number of its estimated 1.8 million foreigners working on projects related to soccer's showcase event. The Workers' Welfare Standards states that all contractors and sub-contractors engaged in the delivery of its projects must comply with principles set out in the charter and relevant Qatari laws. The new commitments, laid down in a 50-page document on Tuesday, set out standards on wages and workers' accommodation and include tougher inspections. "The committee reserves the right to penalise contractors who are non-compliant or, in extreme cases, terminate its contract with a company that is continually in breach of them," the World Cup organising committee said in a statement. "Progress reports based on the audits are to be made public in order to track progress," it said. The Supreme Committee said it had worked closely with the International Labour Organisation (ILO) on the charter. However, the ILO said the Committee had only taken a few of their recommendations but disregarded others. "Comments, in particular concerning fundamental principles and rights at work, including freedom of association and collective bargaining, as well as the adoption of a minimum wage or a living wage, are not reflected in the current text," the ILO said in a statement later on Tuesday. EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT REPORT Many sponsors, often labour supply firms or wealthy Qataris who provide workers to businesses for profit, confiscate the passports of guest workers for the duration of their contracts. There was no mention of the kafala, or sponsorship system, in the committee's statement and it is still unclear if the government is working to abolish the system. The committee said the labour ministry had also increased the number of trained labour inspectors by 30 percent over the past six months to monitor contractors' compliance. Qatar had been given two weeks in late January to provide a report to soccer's world governing body FIFA on how it has improved conditions for labourers. The report will be presented by FIFA executive committee member Theo Zwanziger to a hearing at the European Parliament in Brussels on Thursday. STARTING POINT The minister for labour and social affairs said Qatar could not achieve its ambitions without the help of migrant workers. "Qatar is a young, developing nation experiencing a period of economic growth unprecedented in history... We cannot achieve these plans without the help of migrant workers," Abdullah Saleh Mubarak Al Khulaifi said in the statement by the 2022 committee. ITUC general secretary Sharan Burrow said the new standards merely reinforced the kafala system. "This charter is a sham for workers," she said in a statement. "If FIFA are serious about Qatar continuing to host the World Cup in 2022, they will demand freedom of association such that workers can be represented by those they choose," said Burrow, adding the world soccer body must also demand steps to end kafala and give workers the right to negotiate wages. Amnesty also said the measures needed to go further and questioned whether they could be enforced. "While this may be a good starting point, the charter will only address the concerns of a relatively small proportion of migrant workers in Qatar; those involved in the construction of stadiums and training grounds," said James Lynch, Amnesty International's researcher on migrants' rights in the Gulf. (Additional reporting by Brian Homewood in Berne; Editing by Yara Bayoumy/Rex Gowar/Ken Ferris/John O'Brien)