These reports this week from The Guardian are stunning:
--
--
--
The key conclusion from the Guardian's reporting is basically this:
As contractors begin work on the infrastructure, stadiums, hotels and other things being built so that Qatar can host soccer's World Cup in 2022, a disturbing number of immigrant workers (most from Nepal) are dying. There were at least 44 such deaths between June 4 and Aug. 8 alone.
Workers and Nepalese officials say men aren't being paid, aren't being given adequate food, are being forced to live in horrible conditions and have been denied water even when the heat's been brutal. Many of the deaths have been from suspected heart attacks, not on-the-job accidents.
Doing a bit of extrapolation, that "more than 4000 workers risk losing their life over the next seven years as construction for World Cup facilities gets under way if no action is taken to give migrant workers' rights."
(The ILO as "the global voice of the world's working people.")
Qatari officials do not dispute that there's a problem. that they will take action.
But as the Guardian's Robert Booth told NPR on Friday, the issue confronting officials of soccer's governing body — — when they meet next week will be:
Can they "insure that the world community [and] also the football community is assuaged and is happy that the stadiums where the world's best players are going to be playing are not being built over the bodies, essentially, of workers?"
Much more from the conversation with Booth is due on Friday's All Things Considered. We'll add the as-broadcast interview to the top of this post later. to find an NPR station that broadcasts or streams the show.
Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.