The working conditions of security guards in Qatar, "including in projects linked to the 2022 Football World Cup", are comparable to "forced labor", denounces the NGO Amnesty International in a report Thursday, and this while thousands of agents must be recruited by the start of the World Cup.

Thirty-four current and former employees of eight private security companies, migrant workers mainly from Kenya and Uganda, describe working days of more than 12 hours, 7 days a week (equivalent to 84 hours a week), sometimes no shade or drinking water in the warmer months.

Yet Qatari law provides for a maximum of 60 hours of work per week and one day off, the minimum set by the International Labor Organization.

“Overcrowded and unsanitary” housing

Workers who take this leave or sick leave “risk (…) arbitrary deductions from their wages”, continues Amnesty International, which also notes insufficiently paid overtime, with no opportunity to be defended by a union.

"You can't complain, otherwise you'll be fired and expelled," said one of the employees interviewed between April 2021 and February 2022.

Working conditions and salaries vary according to their origin, with workers from sub-Saharan Africa being the most mistreated, assure these employees.

A large number of them add that they have lived in “overcrowded and unsanitary” housing.

These migrants have notably worked for three companies involved in FIFA tournaments in Qatar (Club World Cup and Arab Cup).

Insufficient reforms according to the NGO

The governing body of world football and the Supreme Organizing Committee of the 2022 World Cup have not renewed their contracts with two of them and have reported them to the Qatari Ministry of Labor, indicates the NGO.

But she believes that this did not happen “in a timely manner”.

Some companies will always try to “work around the system,” the Supreme Committee, which pledges to rectify abuses, told Amnesty International.

“Qatar has taken immediate action to address specific cases of wrongdoing,” assured the Ministry of Labor, according to which “the prevalence of companies that break the rules has and will continue to decrease”.

Criticized since being awarded the first football World Cup in an Arab country in 2010, Qatar has carried out major reforms, abolishing the sponsorship system, making employees quasi-properties of their employer and establishing a salary hourly minimum.

Yet in a recent report, In a recent report, the human rights organization notes that despite “nascent reforms”, living and working conditions for “many migrant workers in Qatar remain difficult”.

Sport

World Cup 2022: Amnesty International hangs a banner at the headquarters of the FFF to protest against the World Cup in Qatar

Sport

World Cup 2022: Amnesty calls on Qatar to (seriously) investigate the death of migrant workers

  • Soccer

  • Qatar

  • World Cup 2022

  • Labor law

  • Sport

  • 20 minute video