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If modern slavery is visible to the British media in Qatar, it should highlight its presence in the UK too.
Qatar's human rights abuses are many, but its treatment of the migrant workers who build stadiums makes this World Cup a travesty, writes Alex Shultz.
Aside from using slave labor, Qatar promotes antisemitism in school textbooks and punishes public worship by non-Muslims with up to 10 years in prison.
Despite the 1807 abolition of slavery in the British Empire, slavery was permitted to continue in Qatar for nearly four decades after the region became a British Protectorate in 1916.
Fox said they weren't going to cover off-pitch Qatar issues, leaving that to ESPN and Real Sports. Both of those entities stepped up.
President Donald Trump threatened to sue ABC News – yet again – after the news station critiqued the $400 million jumbo jet gifted to him by Qatar’s royal family.
Global sports put Qatar’s human rights record in the spotlight. That’s likely to continue — and may have prompted changes in the country.
John Oliver Shreds ‘Cartel-Like’ FIFA for Giving World Cup to Qatar: Stadiums Were Built ‘Through Modern-Day Slavery’ (Video) “I won’t say that Qatar definitely got the World Cup ...
Last week, Qatar’s labor minister rejected proposals for a sweeping compensation fund for the families of migrant workers who have died or been injured while working at World Cup sites as ...
Vinod Kumar of India and Anish Adhikari of Nepal are among the many migrant workers who helped build the stadiums. Adhikari says he was misled about working conditions. Kumar died on the job.
Despite the 1807 abolition of slavery in the British Empire, slavery was permitted to continue in Qatar for nearly four decades after the region became a British Protectorate in 1916.
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