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The head of a labour consultancy investigating the incident said the detentions cast new doubt on Qatar’s pledges to improve the treatment of workers. Nick Potts/P

Qatar detains dozens of workers who protested over late pay as World Cup approaches

The country has faced intense international scrutiny over its labour practices ahead of the tournament.

QATAR RECENTLY ARRESTED at least 60 foreign workers who protested after going months without pay, and deported some of them, an advocacy group has said three months before Doha hosts the 2022 World Cup.

Qatar faces intense international scrutiny over its labour practices ahead of the tournament. Like other Gulf Arab nations, Qatar heavily relies on foreign labour, and the workers’ protest a week ago — and Qatar’s reaction to it — could further fuel the concern.

The head of a labour consultancy investigating the incident said the detentions cast new doubt on Qatar’s pledges to improve the treatment of workers. “Is this really the reality coming out?” asked Mustafa Qadri, executive director of Equidem Research.

In a statement to the Associated Press last night, Qatar’s government acknowledged that “a number of protesters were detained for breaching public safety laws”. It declined to offer any information about the arrests or any deportations.

Video footage posted online showed 60 workers protesting on 14 August outside the Doha offices of Al Bandary International Group, a conglomerate that includes construction, property, hotels, food service and other ventures.

Some of those demonstrating had not received salaries for as many as seven months, Equidem said.

The protesters blocked an intersection on Doha’s C Ring Road in front of the Al Shoumoukh Tower. The footage matched known details of the street, including several massive portraits of Qatar’s ruling emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani.

Under investigation

The Qatari government acknowledged that Al Bandary International Group had not paid salaries and that its Labour Ministry would pay “all delayed salaries and benefits” to those affected.

“The company was already under investigation by the authorities for non-payment of wages before the incident, and now further action is being taken after a deadline to settle outstanding salary payments was missed,” the government said.

Qadri said police later arrested the protesters and held them in a detention centre where some described being in stifling heat without air conditioning. Doha’s temperature this week reached around 41 degrees Celsius.

He said police told the detainees that if they could strike in hot weather, they could sleep without air conditioning.

One detained worker who called Equidem from the detention centre described as many as 300 of his colleagues there from Bangladesh, Egypt, India, Nepal and the Philippines. He said some had been paid salaries after the protest while others had not.

Employment practices

Qatar, like other Gulf Arab nations, has in the past deported demonstrating foreign workers, and tied residency visas to employment. The right to form unions remains tightly controlled and available only to Qataris, as is the country’s limited right to assembly, according to Washington-based advocacy group Freedom House.

The small, energy-rich nation on the Arabian Peninsula, is home to the state-funded Al Jazeera satellite news network.

However, expression in the country remains tightly controlled. Last year, Qatar detained and later deported a Kenyan security guard who wrote and spoke publicly about the woes of the country’s migrant labour force.

Since Fifa awarded the tournament to Qatar in 2010, the country has taken some steps to overhaul the country’s employment practices, including eliminating its so-called kafala employment system, which tied workers to employers, who had say over whether they could leave their jobs or even the country.

Qatar also has adopted a minimum monthly wage of 1,000 Qatari riyals (£232) for workers and required food and housing allowances for employees not receiving that directly from their employers.

Activists like Qadri have called on Doha to do more, particularly when it comes to ensuring workers receive their salaries on time and are protected from abusive employers.

“Have we all been duped by Qatar over the last several years?” he asked, suggesting that recent reforms might have been “a cover” for authorities allowing prevailing labour practices to continue.

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    Mute Ando Winters
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    Jun 7th 2011, 9:29 AM

    what a joke the HSE is! paying you sick pay will you work? children’s allowance for kids overage? makes my stomach turn. I know of a community welfare officer (who deals with rent allowance) rents a house out without reg with prtb or the tax man. of course I reported her ass to relevant authorities! just indicative of the system, rife with double standards and misuse of public funds??!! all this on top of the fact people dying on hospital beds, those responsible should be sacked straight away, no pussy around. I said it before you need someone from a business background to run the HSE, Michael smurfit or fergal Quinn

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    Mute Ando Winters
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    Jun 7th 2011, 9:32 AM

    ” The figures come at a time when the taxpayer is still paying 100,000 every week on the failed Personnel, Payroll and Related Systems software.” disgraceful.

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    Mute Conor Hickey
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    Jun 7th 2011, 9:04 AM

    Good news about DELL and 100 new jobs. It will only take 37 years to get the rest of ex DELL employees back to work.

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    Mute Christine Klein
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    Jun 7th 2011, 3:43 PM

    what leaves me totally astonished that it is so obvious that some people can not make ends meet and they pay these sums to people who dont even deserve it…. NO EMPATHY at all, for gods sake where have we landed? Money is evil it makes us so dependent on it!!! Thats whats the crisis is for!!!

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