The World Cup is Ending, but the Migrant Labor
Economy Grinds On
· An estimated 2,000 migrant workers
continue to depart from Kathmandu airport every day. Despite the gruelling
working conditions, like extreme heat
in the Gulf, many feel they have no alternative to foreign
employment
· A quarter of the country’s gross
domestic product is earned abroad
As the World Cup
comes to a close, what will happen to the workers who helped Qatar make it
possible?
The small nation of
Nepal has sent more workers to Qatar per capita than any other country.
In the fall of 2022,
The New York Times spoke to nearly three dozen Nepalis — current and former
construction workers in Qatar and members of their families — to learn what
their lives are like now and what is next for them. Most had worked on
construction projects related to the World Cup, including stadiums and other
infrastructure that supported Qatar’s development boom.
After enduring at
times exploitative or dangerous conditions, many workers said they remained
stuck in poverty and debt, with no choice but to continue to work abroad, whatever the risks.
“Working in a foreign
country is not a choice,” said one worker, Ganga Bahadur Sunuwar.
“We are compelled to do it.” Mr. Sunuwar, 44, is now
back home in Kathmandu after years of working in a steel factory in Qatar,
where doctors say he developed severe occupational asthma.
Mr. Sunuwar knows that working abroad — which would mean taking
on more debt to secure a job and then having limited say over his working
conditions — could be a risk to his health. But despite these concerns, he is
seriously considering it.
Times reporters
witnessed a near daily scene at Nepal’s main international airport in
Kathmandu: the arrival of coffins, primarily from the Gulf and Malaysia,
carrying the bodies of migrant workers. Since 2010, when the World Cup was
awarded to Qatar, 2,100 Nepalis have died there of all causes, according to
Nepal’s Labor Ministry.
An estimated 2,000
migrant workers continue to depart from Kathmandu airport every day. Despite
the gruelling working conditions, like extreme heat in the
Gulf,
many feel they have no alternative to foreign employment. As a result, young
men are absent from many homes, and families spend years apart. About a quarter
of the country’s gross domestic product is earned abroad, one of the highest
percentages of any country.