Pressure grows on Fifa as reports warn of serious risk to workers amid Saudi World Cup building boom

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Thousands of migrant workers are likely to die in Saudi Arabia as a result of a building boom fuelled by the 2034 World Cup and other major construction projects, human rights groups have warned.

The Gulf kingdom has seen a surge in demand for cheap migrant labour, with a significant increase in foreign workers since 2021, as it starts preparations for hosting the World Cup and drives forward projects including the futurist megacity Neom.

In two reports released today, human rights groups said workers face severe risks to life and have criticised the lack of transparency surrounding the deaths of migrant workers.

“Hundreds of thousands of young men … are being pitched into a labour system that poses a serious risk to their lives,” said James Lynch, a co-director of FairSquare, which has written a report on the risks faced by workers.

“While Fifa praises Saudi Arabia to the rafters,” he said, “children in places like Nepal grow up without their fathers and never even learn how they died.”

In a separate report on migrant worker deaths in Saudi Arabia, Human Rights Watch (HRW) accused Fifa of “knowingly risking yet another tournament that will unnecessarily come at a grave human cost”.

Earlier this year the Guardian revealed a worker from Pakistan fell to his death while constructing a stadium for the World Cup in the eastern city of Al Khobar.

The HRW report documented a catalogue of deaths caused by “gruesome yet avoidable workplace-related accidents” in Saudi Arabia, including by decapitation, electrocution and falls from height, leaving the families of victims devastated and impoverished.

Under Saudi law, when a worker dies in the course of their job their family members should receive compensation from a government insurance scheme or directly from the employer. However, HRW called the process “long and burdensome” and recorded numerous cases where families received little or no compensation.

A man in a uniform vacuums a purple carpet in the courtyard of a white building. A man wearing a keffiyeh and white robe is in the foreground
A worker cleans a carpet ahead of the arrival of the US president, Donald Trump, at the Royal Court in Riyadh on 13 May 2025. Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

The Saudi authorities have claimed that the rates of work-related injuries and deaths have fallen significantly.

But rights groups such as FairSquare have raised concerns about, “serious shortcomings in the manner in which the authorities in Saudi Arabia investigate and certify migrant worker deaths”. Many deaths may be misclassified as “natural” when it is likely they are linked directly or indirectly to the working and living conditions faced by workers.

The term “natural” provides no meaningful explanation for the underlying cause of death, said FairSquare, whose report stated: “It appears that the Saudi authorities are using it as a shorthand for any deaths that did not result from workplace accidents, road traffic accidents or other violent deaths.”

That view is supported by a 2019 study by a Saudi pathologist, who examined all death certificates from a hospital in Riyadh between 1997 and 2016 and found that in every case the cause of death was “either incorrect or absent” and that in 75% of cases there was no cause of death provided at all.

In response to the Guardian’s request for comment, Fifa shared a letter it had sent to HRW in which it stated: “Fifa seeks to play its part in ensuring strong protections for workers employed by third parties in the construction of Fifa World Cup sites. This work involves a close collaboration with its Saudi counterparts and engagements with relevant international labour organisations … we are convinced that measures implemented … can set a new standard for worker protection.”

The Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development in Saudi Arabia was approached for comment.

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