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Vinci Denies Charges of World Cup Forced Labor

  • Published on
    November 22, 2018
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    Forced Labor
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French construction company Vinci is denying new allegations that it violated the rights of migrant workers building stadiums in preparation for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

Human rights group Sherpa said it lodged a fresh complaint with French prosecutors, including witness statements testifying to conditions of forced labor. Sherpa previously filed a complaint against Vinci back in 2015, but it was thrown out.

Sherpa alleges that managers deliberately endangered people’s lives, workers were subjected to forced labor, and the company failed to provide first aid assistance to workers.

Vinci is still pursuing Sherpa for libel over the 2015 complaint and said that it “refuted, back then and now, all the allegations made by Sherpa.”

Reuters reports:

Vinci, which counts the wealthy Arab state as its second-biggest shareholder, has several major projects in Qatar linked to the soccer tournament, including a metro line in Doha and a highway.

The French company denied that some migrant workers had seen their passports confiscated and said employees could access their documents stored in safes at any time.

It also said that no serious accidents had been recorded at its construction sites due to high temperatures, and that it had doctors on hand. Sherpa said witnesses had described workers vomiting and suffering from weakness in excessive heat.

“Vinci has always worked towards improving working conditions in Qatar,” the group said.

The new Sherpa complaint is being lodged together with NGO CCEM (Committee against modern slavery) and six former Vinci workers from India and Nepal.

The complaint names Vinci’s Construction Grand Projets division and its QDVC unit, which is 51 percent owned by Qatari Diar, the property arm of Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund.

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magnusfl
magnusfl
5 years ago

Holding passports is not an uncommon thing in eastern Europe but people vomiting is pushing thing to far so yes it forced labor as that should be handled long before it

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