[By the end of this year, several hundred thousand extra
migrant workers from some of the world's poorest countries are scheduled to
have travelled to Qatar to build World Cup
facilities and infrastructure. The acceleration in the building programme comes
amid international concern over a rising death toll among migrant workers and
the use of forced labour.]
By Robert Booth and
Pete Pattisson
Exclusive Migrant workers who built luxury offices used
by Qatar's 2022 football World Cup organisers
have told the Guardian they have not been paid for more than a year and are now
working illegally from cockroach-infested lodgings.
Officials in Qatar's Supreme Committee for Delivery and
Legacy have been using offices on the 38th and 39th floors of Doha's landmark
al-Bidda skyscraper – known as the Tower of Football – which were fitted out by
men from Nepal, Sri Lanka and India who say they have not been paid for up to
13 months' work.
The project, a Guardian investigation shows, was directly
commissioned by the Qatar government and the
workers' plight is set to raise fresh doubts over the autocratic emirate's
commitment to labour rights as construction starts this year on five new
stadiums for the World Cup.
The offices, which cost £2.5m to fit, feature expensive
etched glass, handmade Italian furniture, and even a heated executive toilet,
project sources said. Yet some of the workers have not been paid, despite
complaining to the Qatari authorities months ago and being owed wages as modest
as £6 a day.
By the end of this year, several hundred thousand extra
migrant workers from some of the world's poorest countries are scheduled to
have travelled to Qatar to build World Cup
facilities and infrastructure. The acceleration in the building programme comes
amid international concern over a rising death toll among migrant workers and
the use of forced labour.
"We don't know how much they are spending on the
World Cup, but we just need our salary," said one worker who had lost a
year's pay on the project. "We were working, but not getting the salary.
The government, the company: just provide the money."
The migrants are squeezed seven to a room, sleeping on
thin, dirty mattresses on the floor and on bunk beds, in breach of Qatar 's own labour
standards. They live in constant fear of imprisonment because they have been
left without paperwork after the contractor on the project, Lee Trading and
Contracting, collapsed. They say they are now being exploited on wages as low
as 50p an hour.
Their case was raised with Qatar 's prime minister by
Amnesty International last November, but the workers have said 13 of them
remain stranded in Qatar . Despite having done
nothing wrong, five have even been arrested and imprisoned by Qatari police
because they did not have ID papers. Legal claims lodged against the former
employer at the labour court in November have proved fruitless. They are so
poor they can no longer afford the taxi to court to pursue their cases, they
say.
A 35-year-old Nepalese worker and father of three who
ssaid he too had lost a year's pay: "If I had money to buy a ticket, I
would go home."
Jim Murphy, the shadow international development
secretary, said the revelation added to the pressure on the World Cup
organising committeeafter . "They work out of this building, but so far
they can't even deliver justice for the men who toiled at their own HQ,"
he said.
Sharan Burrow, secretary general of the International
Trade Union Confederation, said the workers' treatment was criminal. "It
is an appalling abuse of fundamental rights, yet there is no concern from the Qatar government unless
they are found out," she said. "In any other country you could
prosecute this behaviour."
Contracts show the project was
commissioned by Katara Projects, a Qatar government
organisation under the auspices of the office of the then heir apparent, Sheikh
Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, who is now the emir. He also heads the supreme
committee, the World Cup organising body. The committee is spending at least
£4bn building new stadiums for the tournament, which has become mired in
allegations of bribery, while there is disbelief at the prospect of playing the
tournament in Qatar 's 50C summer heat.
Katara said it
terminated its agreement with Lee Trading when it discovered the mistreatment
of workers and non-payment of wages, and made efforts to repatriate those
affected or find them new jobs. It said several workers had been compensated
after court settlements. "If there are employees who were not repatriated,
did not find employment or did not receive compensation, we
would be happy to engage in any effort with the ministry of labour and ministry
of interior to rectify the situation," a spokesman said.
The problems at the Tower of Football workers are not
isolated, despite Qatar 's pledges to monitor
salary payments and abolish the kafala sponsorship system, which stops migrant
workers changing job or leaving Qatar without their
employer's consent. In 2012 and 2013, 70 labourers from India , Nepal and Sri Lanka died from falls or
strikes by objects, 144 died in traffic accidents and 56 killed themselves, the
government's own figures show. Dozens more young migrant workers die
mysteriously in their sleep from suspected heart attacks every summer.
The Guardian discovered more projects where salaries had
not been paid. They included a desert camp of 65 workers who had not been paid
for several months, were sleeping eight to a room, and were living with dirty
drinking water, filthy, unplumbed toilets and no showers.