Majority of fans want FIFA to compensate Qatar's migrant workers -
Amnesty
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[September 15, 2022] (Reuters)
- A majority of football fans from 15
countries would support FIFA compensating migrant workers in Qatar
for human rights violations during the country's preparations for
the 2022 World Cup, Amnesty International said on Thursday.
A YouGov survey of more than 17,000 fans from 15 countries -- 10 of
them European -- commissioned by Amnesty showed that 73% of
respondents would support the proposal and 10% opposed it.
More than two-thirds of respondents (67%) also said their national
Football Associations should speak out publicly about the human
rights issues surrounding the World Cup in Qatar as well as call for
compensation for migrant workers.
"Across the globe, people are united in their desire to see FIFA
step up and make amends for the suffering endured by migrant workers
in Qatar," said Steve Cockburn, Amnesty International's Head of
Economic and Social Justice.
"The past cannot be undone, but a compensation programme is a clear
and simple way that FIFA and Qatar can provide at least some measure
of redress to the hundreds of thousands of workers who made this
tournament possible."
FIFA said a wide range of measures had been implemented in recent
years to improve protection for workers in Qatar.
"FIFA takes note of the poll conducted on behalf of Amnesty
International, featuring respondents from 10 countries in Europe and
five countries from the rest of the world," the governing body said
in a statement.
"Respondents may not be fully aware of the measures implemented in
recent years by FIFA and its partners in Qatar to protect workers
involved in the delivery of the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022."
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Workers walk towards the construction site of the Lusail stadium
which will be build for the upcoming 2022 Fifa soccer World Cup
during a stadium tour in Doha, Qatar, December 20, 2019. REUTERS/Kai
Pfaffenbach
In May, Amnesty and other rights groups called on FIFA to set aside
$440 million to compensate migrant workers in Qatar for human rights
abuses.
FIFA had said in May it was assessing Amnesty's proposition and had
already compensated a number of workers, who had received $22.6
million as of December, 2021.
The government of Qatar has said that its labour system is still a
work in progress, but denied a 2021 Amnesty report that thousands of
migrant workers were still being exploited.
Amnesty also called on FIFA and Qatar to establish a remediation
programme to reimburse unpaid wages, recruitment fees paid by
hundreds of thousands of workers and compensation for injuries and
deaths.
"The programme should be established, and an initial meeting held
between key stakeholders, before the tournament kicks off on 20
November 2022," Amnesty said, adding that workers and trade unions
should be involved in the programme.
"The programme should also support initiatives to protect workers'
rights in the future."
(Reporting by Hritika Sharma in Bengaluru, editing by Ed Osmond)
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