"Why do people have to die for these events?"
By Kieran Guilbert
LONDON, June 19 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Pressure to improve workers' rights and tackle forced
Trade unions and rights groups such as Human Rights Watch have documented
Young migrant men are often lured by recruiters to World Cup building sites under false
While 2022 World Cup host Qatar last year pledged sweeping
"Once the preparation is done and the event has been delivered ... there is a key period to keep on the pressure," he told a British cross-party group of politicians that studies the links between sporting events, modern slavery
"There is a need to continue improvements once an event is finished and attention has moved on to other things," said Qadri, who heads Equidem Research, a
The United Nations' International Labour Organization (ILO) in November dropped a case against Qatar after the government introduced laws to protect migrant workers and pledged further reforms as well as technical cooperation with the U.N. agency.
Qatar vowed to introduce a minimum wage, allow monitoring of
These rules are part of the gas-rich state's "kafala" sponsorship system, which rights groups say leave Qatar's mainly Asian migrant workers, numbering about 2 million, open to abuse.
While welcoming Qatar's pledges, Amnesty International's Fabien Goa said they must be enshrined in law and enforced as more migrants are set to flock to the country for construction work on an "almost unprecedented scale before a World Cup".
"We have to ask how these events (World Cups) are structured ... in terms of timelines, planning, and lack of due diligence," said John Morrison, the chief executive of Britain's Institute for Human Rights and Business (IHRB), a think tank.
"Why do people have to die for these events? That is the question," he told the meeting at Britain's parliament.
Russia's World Cup is taking place in 11 cities and runs until July 15, with Qatar the next host in four years time.
(Reporting By Kieran Guilbert, Editing by Katy Migiro. (Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience. Visit http://news.trust.org))
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