But the DW article confirmed that more than 15,000 workers did die in Qatar over a 10 year period (the actual number is almost certainly higher). Just because they didn't die working specifically on the World Cup project doesn't make it ok that so many died due to the working conditions there. And certainly doesn't absolve Qatar from blame for a lot of those deaths.
Excuse me sir. We have multiple times explained that this number is natural to the size of the population and not out of proportion at all. How many times do we need to explain that this number is being misused. You should criticize their human rights records and rightly so. But to to throw numbers being misused by the media is not right at all.
The guardian 6500 number is from workers from India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka that is 1.8m person, that is 56% of the total population of Qatar. That number is the total number of deaths from these nationalities who died in the past 10 years, i,e 650/ year of 1.8m.
That means the death rate per 100k of these nationalities is ~36
Even if you take the number reported by amnesty int, the 15021, from the total 2,7m non qatari population that is about 550 deaths per 100k in 10 years, which make it ~55 per 100k/ year
Compared to the UK in the aprox the same age group (20-50) and sex (mainly males) is ~100 deaths per100k/year. Double the numbers of deaths in Qatar.
These numbers are not at all out of proportions, the opposite their numbers in Qatar are much better than countries like the UK. Even if we take all sexes in the UK data, still the number is around 80 per 100K/ year and higher than Qatar.
My question to you, why are the number of deaths of migrant workers in Qatar is much lower than the number of deaths of people in the same age group and sex in the UK?
Should amnesty international open an investigation in the UK to investigate the cause?
all numbers are taken from official statistical website including the WHO.
https://www.who.int/data/gho/data/t...-health-estimates/ghe-leading-causes-of-death