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Tuesday 09 December 2014 10:26 am  |  Updated:  Friday 07 June 2019 7:13 pm

Carillion embroiled in Qatar 2022 World Cup allegations

By: Jessica Morris

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Carillion, one of the UK's biggest construction firms, has been implicated in allegations surrounding the treatment of migrant workers in Qatar as it prepares to host the World Cup in 2022.

BBC news said it "uncovered worrying testimony about pay, housing conditions and safety standards from foreign workers" including some employed by subcontractors working for Wolverhampton-based Carillion.

The workers said they worked long hours for little pay while living in inhumane conditions. Their passports had been confiscated and recruiters were taking a large chunk of their wages to pay for living expenses.

Carillion has since launched in investigation into the claims which were initially aired on the BBC's flagship Newsnight programme.

The construction firm has been working on the Msheireb Downtown Doha project, which is a joint-venture costing around £400m.

It published the following statement on its website:

As a leading support services and construction company, Carillion sets best in class standards for our people’s health, safety and working conditions wherever we work.
 
Carillion is deeply concerned and surprised by the claims made by Newsnight concerning one of our subcontractors and one of their sub-suppliers in the programme broadcast on the 8th December.
 
We are conducting an immediate review of these claims to establish the position and take appropriate action.
Qatar's preparations for the World Cup, scheduled to take place in 2022, have drawn fierce criticism after a Guardian investigation revealed migrant workers were dying at a rate of almost one a day in the summer of 2013.
 
It said labourers were exploited and faced abuses that amounted to "modern day slavery", with workers routinely not given sufficient food and water.
 
This summer a report released by the Qatari government confirmed hundreds of migrants had died over the last two years, and a number of them from unexplained, sudden illnesses. It has since approved measures to improve working conditions for foreign workers.

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