Workers Locked into Qatar Labor Camps While Coronavirus Spreads Within

The Qatari government has reportedly sealed off the country’s migrant worker camps after hundreds of workers contracted COVID-19, trapping them inside.

Qatar “labor camps” are being locked down by authorities and workers with coronavirus concentrated inside them are in conditions that deny them basic human rights. According to a report at The Guardian, hundreds of construction workers now have the virus amid the global pandemic and Qatar’s policies of concentrating the people together in “squalid,over-crowded camps” enables the virus to “spread rapidly.”

The workers are some of the thousands slaving away on the FIFA World Cup infrastructure projects. “Inside the quarantined camps, workers describe an atmosphere of fear and uncertainty,” the report notes. Workers are being put on unpaid leave and it is getting worse by the day. Labor camps where the coronavirus sufferers are concentrated are given numbers within Qatar’s expansive gulag of workers camps. “Workers from camp 1 to camp 32 are in lockdown,” one man from Bangladesh said to The Guardian.

The dystopian universe of Qatar’s work camps is often far from view amid the lavish parties for expats, the armies of lobbyists the kingdom pay abroad and its investment in major media and sports, universities and brokering peace talks for Washington and the Taliban. However the reports like that at The Guardian every once in a while shed light on the hellish conditions. Underpaid men live crammed into containers.

The industrial area in Qatar is “home to hundreds of thousands of men, most of whom live in cramped dormitories, often packed eight to 10 to a room, making it extremely difficult to stop the transmission of the virus.” The workers lack hand sanitizers and other basic needs. There are concerns now about workers getting paid on time and other challenges. Many Gulf countries have stopped flights so people can’t even go home and Nepal has even banned its own people from coming home from the Gulf, according to the report.

Reports emerged on March 20 of the lockdowns in the labor camps. According to Amnesty International the camps are “notoriously overcrowded” and lack adequate water and sanitation. Workers cannot socially distance either, in line with WHO guidelines. “The Qatari government must ensure that human rights remain central to all attempts to prevention and containment of the COVID-19 virus,” Amnesty says. It demands that the people have access to health care without discrimination.

Relief will likely not be coming for the workers as must countries become inward looking and close borders. No one wants to help the poorest and most vulnerable in work camps in the Gulf when they can barely help their own workers in the UK or advanced western countries. Similarly wealthy Gulf countries want to stem the spread of the virus and locking up workers is collateral damage compared to enabling the virus to reach the elite. The virus may run its course through several work camps. It remains unclear how Qatar and other countries in the Gulf that rely on foreign labor will provide the medical requirements many western countries forecast are needed to fight the infection, such as ventilators and hospital beds.

Seth Frantzman, a Middle East Forum writing fellow, is the author of After ISIS: America, Iran and the Struggle for the Middle East (2019), op-ed editor of The Jerusalem Post, and founder of the Middle East Center for Reporting & Analysis.

A journalist and analyst concentrating on the Middle East, Seth J. Frantzman has a PhD from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem and was an assistant professor at Al-Quds University. He is the Oped Editor and an analyst on Middle East Affairs at The Jerusalem Post and his work has appeared at The National Interest, The Spectator, The Hill, National Review, The Moscow Times, and Rudaw. He is a frequent guest on radio and TV programs in the region and internationally, speaking on current developments in Syria, Iraq and elsewhere. As a correspondent and researcher has covered the war on ISIS in Iraq and security in Turkey, Egypt, the Palestinian Authority, Jordan, the UAE and eastern Europe.
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I recently witnessed something I haven’t seen in a long time. On Friday, August 16, 2024, a group of pro-Hamas activists packed up their signs and went home in the face of spirited and non-violent opposition from a coalition of pro-American Iranians and American Jews. The last time I saw anything like that happen was in 2006 or 2007, when I led a crowd of Israel supporters in chants in order to silence a heckler standing on the sidewalk near the town common in Amherst, Massachusetts. The ridicule was enough to prompt him and his fellow anti-Israel activists to walk away, as we cheered their departure. It was glorious.