Skip to main content
Work with the NEU
Fifa urged to right the wrongs experienced by World Cup migrant workers in Qatar
People gather around the official countdown clock showing remaining time until the kick-off of the World Cup 2022, in Doha, Qatar, Friday, Nov. 11, 2022.

FIFA is facing fresh calls to take “urgent and concrete action” to remedy abuse suffered by World Cup migrant workers in Qatar.

Football’s world governing body has been urged by human rights group Amnesty International to publish a review it began in March of whether existing remedies were sufficient.

A workers’ representative quoted in a new Amnesty report, A Legacy In Jeopardy, said: “Fifa talked a lot before the World Cup about workers’ welfare, but now, a year after, nothing has happened — it was all talk.”

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
Lunar House in Croydon, south London which houses the headquarters of UK Visas and Immigration, a division of the Home Office
Voices of Scotland / 30 October 2025
30 October 2025

The visa system traps workers with abusive employers, creating a vulnerable workforce scared to complain for fear of deportation — that is why we’re campaigning for a ‘common sponsorship’ model instead, writes FAVOUR DAVIDKING

Smoke rises from an explosion, after an Israeli strike, in Doha, Qatar, September 9, 2025
Middle East / 12 September 2025
12 September 2025
FLAG OF CONVENIENCE: Container ship Nord Independence under the flag of Panama / Pic: Saberwyn/CC
TUC 2025 / 9 September 2025
9 September 2025

MARTYN GRAY asks TUC congress to endorse measures that would help stop the present exploitation of seafarers

NHS workers on the picket line outside St Thomas' Hospital, London, ahead of a march from the hospital to Trafalgar Square, May 1, 2023
Features / 19 July 2025
19 July 2025

The Bill addresses some exploitation but leaves trade unions heavily regulated, most workers without collective bargaining coverage, and fails to tackle the balance of power that enables constant mutation of bad practice, write KEITH EWING and LORD JOHN HENDY KC