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Foreign construction workers qleave a construction site in Doha, Qatar, 19 November 2013. The previous day, football’s ruling body FIFA said it will continue to put pressure on 2022 World Cup hosts Qatar over the conditions of migrant workers in the country’s construction sector, but issued no deadline for improvement. Britain-based rights group Amnesty International said 17 November that workers in the oil- and gas-rich Gulf state suffered difficulties including ‘non-payment of wages, harsh and dangerous working conditions, and shocking standards of accommodation.’ Image Credit: EPA

London: The organising committee for the Qatar 2022 World Cup has promised that contractors who build its stadiums will be held to high standards on the welfare of migrant workers, in the wake of trenchant and sustained criticism.

But the promises, made in response to demands for a progress update from Fifa, stop short of addressing wider concerns about workers engaged in the £137bn (Dh828 billion) construction boom underpinning World Cup infrastructure.

Faced with a public meeting on the issue in the European parliament on Thursday, the renamed Qatar 2022 Supreme Committee for Delivery and Legacy has insisted it is making “tangible progress” toward reform.

Qatari authorities have been heavily criticised by human rights groups and trade unions in the wake of a Guardian investigation that revealed the scale of the abuse of migrant workers from Nepal, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and elsewhere who are the backbone of the World Cup construction and the country’s wider “Qatar Vision 2030” building project.

Last month, the Guardian revealed that at least 185 Nepalese workers died in Qatar in 2013, many from heart failure or workplace accidents. Official figures revealing the death tolls among workers from other countries have yet to emerge.

The fresh commitments have been published in a 50-page document that sets out detailed standards on payment of wages, accommodation and welfare and promises to introduce a tough new inspection regime. It says that it addresses “some of the most critical concerns highlighted in recent reports about working and living conditions of workers in Qatar’s construction centre”.

It is essentially an updated version of the worker’s charter published in March last year, designed to underline the extent to which the World Cup organising committee is taking the issue seriously.

However, it only deals with the construction of the stadiums, which is due to begin in earnest this year. Early work has begun on Al Wakrah stadium and four other stadiums will be in various stages of construction throughout the year.

Just 38 workers, of the hundreds of thousands engaged on infrastructure projects, are currently working specifically on World Cup stadiums.

The charter does not deal with the wider issue of holding to account the myriad contractors and subcontractors working on the infrastructure that will underpin the World Cup, and the so-called Vision 2030 to position the country for the future.

“The Supreme Committee firmly believes that all workers engaged on its projects, and those of the other infrastructure developers in Qatar, have a right to be treated in a manner that ensures at all times their well-being, health, safety and security,” said the document’s introduction.

Human rights groups have called for more fundamental reform of the kafala (sponsorship) system that ties workers to their employer and forbids them from leaving the country without permission. It has led to situations that have been compared to modern day slavery, where unscrupulous middlemen charge large sums to find employment for workers in Qatar and other Gulf states but leave them working long days in unsafe and unsanitary conditions and, in some cases, without pay.

Hassan Al Thawadi, the secretary general of the organising committee, has consistently argued that hosting the World Cup can help raise standards.

“We have always believed that Qatar’s hosting of the Fifa World Cup would be a catalyst to accelerate positive initiatives already being undertaken by Qatar, which will leave a legacy of enhanced, sustainable and meaningful progress in regards to worker welfare across the country,” he said.

“We already see this progress taking place across Qatar on a daily basis, and will continue to work hard to make our vision become the ever-present reality on the ground.”

The ministry of labour and social affairs (Molsa) says it has increased the number of trained labour inspectors by 30 per cent and carried out 11,500 “spot checks” in the past three months.

Dr Abdullah Saleh Mubarak Al Khulaifi, the labour minister, insisted it was determined to apply existing labour laws. “Qatar is a young, developing nation experiencing a period of economic growth unprecedented in history, anywhere in the world. We cannot achieve these plans without the help of migrant workers,” he said.

“Molsa will continue to support in enforcing these standards, and Qatar’s existing labour laws, and to work with other government bodies in Qatar in holding accountable employers who fail to uphold these laws.”

Critics have continually argued that not enough is being done to hold subcontractors to existing labour laws. Fifa first promised to hold Qatar to higher standards on workers’ rights in 2011 and has been criticised for not doing more to force change.

Last month, it wrote to the Qatari organisers demanding a “detailed report on the improvement of working conditions” in the months since president Sepp Blatter visited the emir in November.

Fifa executive committee member Theo Zwanziger has been tasked with working with the International Trade Union Confederation to resolve concerns about Qatar. “What we need are clear rules and steps that will build trust and ensure that the situation, which is unacceptable at the moment, improves in a sustainable manner,” he said last month.

The European parliament’s human rights subcommittee will hold a public hearing on Thursday to address the issues surrounding migrant workers in the run up to the 2022 World Cup, followed by a press conference.

A report from DLA Piper into the deaths of migrant workers is also due to be completed in the coming weeks.