KNOWING EXACTLY HOW MANY PEOPLE HAVE DIED FROM WORK-RELATED CAUSES AND WHO THEY WERE IS DIFFICULT TO DETERMINE BECAUSE OF
QATAR’S PERSISTENT FAILURE TO UPHOLD ITS DUTY TO PROTECT THE RIGHT TO LIFE BY ADEQUATELY INVESTIGATING AND CERTIFYING THOUSANDS OF DEATHS OF MIGRANT WORKERS However, leading experts in environmental health and heat stress have told Amnesty International that much more needs to be done. As one such expert noted, the legislation is “an improvement that falls far short of what is necessary for the protection of labourers who are subject to heat stress exposures of all types.”144 In addition to enhanced enforcement, they stressed the difficulty faced by workers to “self-pace” given the extremely unequal relationships between employer and worker in Qatar.145 They recommended that break times should be determined through the use of recognized activity modification guidelines that outline rest times based on the climatic conditions and the nature of the work performed.
FAILURE TO INVESTIGATE AND CERTIFY DEATHS Knowing exactly how many people have died from work-related causes and who they were is difficult to determine because of Qatar’s persistent failure to uphold its duty to protect the right to life by adequately investigating and certifying thousands of deaths of migrant workers. Data on the deaths of migrant workers in Qatar have, until recently, been scarce, though Qatar’s Planning and Statistics Authority (PSA) has published figures showing that a total of 15,021 non-Qataris – of all ages, occupations and causes – have died in Qatar in the past 10 years. However, the manner in which they have been collected and presented allows only very broad and tentative conclusions to be drawn. In particular, the lack of meaningful investigations into the deaths makes the data on the cause of death unreliable. In addition, the fact that the cause of a significant number of deaths is categorized as “cardiovascular disease” in official statistics – especially since 2016 – may be obscuring a high number of deaths that remain, in reality, unexplained. For example, the proportion of deaths of working age non-Qatari men categorized as due to “cardiovascular disease” or “unknown causes” is significantly higher than for Qatari men of the same age, and should be investigated further.146 Similar problems are even evident in relation to World Cup projects overseen by the Supreme Committee for Delivery and Legacy (Supreme Committee), which are subject to higher safety standards and more rigorous processes. Of the 33 fatalities recorded in the Supreme Committee for Delivery and Legacy’s five Annual Workers’ Welfare Progress Reports to date, 18 cases included no reference to an underlying cause of death, instead using phrases such as “natural causes”, “cardiac arrest” or “acute respiratory failure”. Ten of these cases involved men in their twenties or thirties. Likewise, the death certificates of 15 out of the 18 cases reviewed by Amnesty International provided no information about the underlying causes of death, attributing the cause to “acute cardio respiratory failure due to natural causes”, “acute heart failure natural causes”, “heart failure unspecified” and “acute respiratory failure due to natural causes”.147
144 Professor David Wegman, Emeritus Professor of Work Environment at UMass Lowell and Adjunct Professor at Harvard School of Public Health who is also an expert on health and safety in the construction industry, memo to Amnesty International on 2 June 2021. 145 For more information, please see Amnesty International In the Prime of their lives, p. 28. 146 Amnesty International, In the Prime of their lives: Qatar’s failure to investigate, remedy and prevent migrant workers’ deaths, p:45. 147 Amnesty International, In the Prime of their lives: Qatar’s failure to investigate, remedy and prevent migrant workers’ deaths, p:38.
REALITY CHECK 2021: A YEAR TO THE 2022 WORLD CUP THE STATE OF MIGRANT WORKERS’ RIGHTS IN QATAR Amnesty International
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