Kuwait Times

Qatar to introduce minimum wage as part of labor reforms

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DOHA: World Cup 2022 host Qatar has agreed to a range of labor reforms including the introducti­on of a minimum wage. Other proposed changes include job contracts being lodged with the government so they cannot be changed on arrival in Qatar, and employers no longer being able to stop staff from leaving the country. Separately, state media announced the gas-rich emirate has signed bilateral accords with 36 countries from which it draws most of its two-million-strong foreign workforce, to provide legal protection for workers.

The wide-ranging reforms have apparently been agreed between the Qatari government and various organizati­ons, including one of its fiercest critics, the Internatio­nal Trade Union Confederat­ion (ITUC). The reforms were announced on the eve of an Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on (ILO) meeting that could see the launch of a formal investigat­ion by the UN agency into Qatar’s treatment of migrant workers.

ITUC - which has been unstinting in its criticism of Qatar - said they backed the reforms. “The new guidance from Qatar signals the start of real reforms in Qatar which will bring to an end the use of modern slavery and puts the country on the pathway to meeting its internatio­nal legal obligation­s on workers’ rights,” said Sharan Burrow, its general secretary.

The minimum wage initiative and the bilateral agreements were announced by Issa Saad Al-Jafali AlNuaimi, minister of administra­tive developmen­t, labor and social affairs, during a meeting with foreign diplomats. No details were given of when the minimum wage would be introduced or at what level. However, Burrow described the wage proposal as a “genuine breakthrou­gh” and said it would “end wage-based race discrimina­tion in Qatar”.

Workers in Qatar, unions and rights groups have claimed that many have been lured to work in the Gulf for wages considerab­ly less than what they had been promised. There has also been widespread criticism that a large number of workers are not paid their salaries on time. According to the Qatar News Agency, the change to allow workers to leave the country without employers’ approval was agreed at a cabinet meeting.

In Feb 2015, Qatar introduced the Wage Protection System, designed to ensure workers receive their salaries electronic­ally, either fortnightl­y or monthly. And last December, Qatar announced the end of its muchcritic­ized “kafala” system, under which all foreign workers needed a local sponsor in order to work, maintain residency, switch jobs or leave the country. This was replaced by a contract-based system, but critics said it amounted to little more than a name change.

Rights’ expert Nicholas McGeehan said more detail was still required. “We need to see details on how and when all of this will be implemente­d,” he told AFP. “Kafala will end when workers are able to change employers and based on what we have seen today there is still no sign of that happening.”

Since controvers­ially being awarded the World Cup in 2010, Qatar has launched massive constructi­on projects and faced huge internatio­nal pressure to reform its labor laws. The ILO meeting starting today in Geneva is expected to run until Nov 9, with Qatar being discussed towards the end of the meeting. —AFP

 ??  ?? DOHA: This file photo taken on May 4, 2015 shows foreign laborers walking back to their accommodat­ion in the Al-Wakrah suburb. —AFP
DOHA: This file photo taken on May 4, 2015 shows foreign laborers walking back to their accommodat­ion in the Al-Wakrah suburb. —AFP

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