I will let Vox prefÂace the video above:
Ever since Qatar won the rights to host the FIFA World Cup in 2010, its treatÂment of migrant workÂers has made interÂnaÂtionÂal headÂlines. News stoÂries and human rights orgaÂniÂzaÂtions revealed migrant workÂers who built the staÂdiÂums, hotels, and all the new infraÂstrucÂture required for the World Cup were being forced to work, not getÂting paid, unable to leave, and in some casÂes, dying.
At the heart of the abuse faced by migrant workÂers is the kafala sysÂtem. A sysÂtem prevaÂlent in Gulf states that ties workÂers to their sponÂsors, it often gives sponÂsors almost total conÂtrol of migrant workÂers’ employÂment and immiÂgraÂtion staÂtus.
Due to all the scrutiÂny Qatar has been under, some reforms have been put in place, but the kafala sysÂtem is more than a law — it’s a pracÂtice. And while these reforms exist on paper, human rights orgaÂniÂzaÂtions say there’s still a long way to go.
To underÂstand how hunÂdreds of thouÂsands of migrant workÂers were stuck in an exploitaÂtive sysÂtem while buildÂing the staÂdiÂums for the World Cup, watch our 10-minute video above.
To delve deepÂer, it’s also worth lisÂtenÂing to the New York Times’ recent podÂcast, Qatar’s Big Bet on the World Cup and read The Guardian artiÂcle, 6,500 migrant workÂers have died in Qatar since World Cup awardÂed.
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IslamÂoÂphobe!