After Qatari
authorities rounded up and expelled dozens of migrant workers after telling
them they were being taken to be tested for Covid-19, Amnesty International (AI)
has called on to ensure that any worker detained and threatened with expulsion
is informed of the reasons and allowed to challenge them. “Qatar should also
ensure effective remedy and reparation for any worker, whose rights have been
violated,” the AI press note recommends, adding that the Qatari authorities
must also ensure all migrant workers’ right to health is fully protected during
the Covid-19 crisis.
The AI interviewed
20 men from Nepal, who were apprehended by Qatari police, alongside hundreds of
others, in March, the press note reads, adding that the police told most of the
men that they were going to be tested for Covid-19 and will be returned to
their accommodation afterwards. “Instead, they were taken to detention centres
and held in appalling conditions for several days, before being sent to Nepal.”
“None of
the men we spoke to had received any explanation for why they were treated this
way, nor were they able to challenge their detention or expulsion,” Amnesty
International’s (AI) deputy director of Global Issues Steve Cockburn said,
adding that after spending days in inhumane detention conditions, many were not
even given the chance to collect their belongings before they were put on
planes to Nepal. “It is disturbing that the Qatari authorities appear to have
used the pandemic as a smokescreen for further abuses against migrant workers,
many of whom feel police misled them by saying that they were to be ‘tested’.”
Covid-19
is no excuse for arbitrarily rounding people up, he added.
“The authorities
must provide reparations for the way that these men have been treated, and
consider allowing those who have been expelled to return to Qatar if they so
wish,” he said, “The men’s employers must also urgently pay the salary and
employment benefits they are owed.”
On March 12-13,
hundreds of migrant workers were rounded up and detained by police in parts of
Doha including the Industrial Area, Barwa City, and Labour City, the TI press
note reads, adding that they were apprehended whilst away from their accommodation,
carrying out errands or shopping for groceries.
Some
workers said the police specifically told them that they were being taken to be
tested for Covid-19, and would be brought back to their accommodation later.
Other workers said the police spoke to them in Arabic and the only word they
could understand was ‘Corona’.
One man
told Amnesty International, “We were asked to stop to test for the virus.
Police told us that the doctor would come and check the virus. But they lied to
us.”
The men
were then crammed on to buses, and taken to a detention facility in the
Industrial Area, where their documents and mobile phones were confiscated,
before having their photographs and fingerprints taken, the AI press note
further reads, adding that the workers were detained in inhumane conditions
alongside scores of other people from various countries. “They were held in
overcrowded cells without beds or bedding, and not given enough food or water.”
One Nepali
man told AI: “The jail was full of people. We were given one piece of bread
each day, which was not enough. All the people were fed in a group, with food
lying on plastic on the floor. Some were not able to snatch the food because of
the crowd.”
Out of the
20 interviewed, only three said they had their temperature checked while they
were in the detention facility.
While they
were in detention, the men Amnesty International interviewed were told they
were being expelled, with some only learning about it while being taken to the
airport. Some were expelled on March 15, and others on March 19. None were able
to challenge their detention or expulsion.
Some were
given just a few minutes to pack their belongings, while others were not given
the chance to collect anything at all. One man said, “I was handcuffed and
treated like a criminal. I was taken to my camp to collect belongings, but how
could I collect and pack the luggage since my hands were chained?”
Most
workers said they had their temperatures taken at Hamad International Airport
before boarding their flights, and again upon landing in Kathmandu.
Some said
the police threatened to bring criminal charges against them and keep them in
the detention facility longer if they complained or tried to challenge the
situation, the press note reads.
Of the 20
people interviewed, only two said they have been contacted by the companies
they worked for, offering to pay their salaries. One man said he was given cash
by his company whilst in detention, but a police officer took it for
‘safekeeping’ and failed to return it. The other man said his company asked him
to open a bank account to send him his wages.
All of the
workers left Qatar without receiving their owed salary and end-of-service
benefits, a particular concern as many will have spent huge sums on securing
jobs in Qatar and may well be paying back high-interest loans.
One man
said, “It is difficult now. My children do not have clothes, it is tough to
feed them.” Another said he was being threatened by a moneylender and was
struggling to support his five children.
In
response to Amnesty International’s evidence, the Qatari government said that
while inspecting the Industrial Area as part of the Covid-19 response,
“officials uncovered individuals engaged in illegal and illicit activity. This
included the manufacture and sale of banned and prohibited substances, along
with the sale of dangerous food goods that could seriously threaten the health
of people if consumed”.
However,
18 of those interviewed by AI said they were not aware of any charges or accusations
brought against them. Two others said that a fellow detainee who spoke Arabic
told them that they were accused of supplying alcohol. Neither the police nor
any officials informed them of such charges, which they strongly denied to AI.
AI reviewed
documents in Arabic that were given to the men, which do not suggest they were
charged with any criminal offence. In any event, none of the men interviewed
were allowed to challenge the legality of their detention and eventual
expulsion, as required under international human rights law.
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