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UCL failing to stamp out Qatar campus 'slavery'

LEADING London university UCL was named and shamed yesterday for failing to take action tostop “modern-day slavery” conditions at its international campus in Qatar.

UCL is under pressure to act on human rights violations at Doha’s Education City uncovered by an International Trades Union Congress (ITUC) probe.

The ITUC raised the conditions with bosses of UCL and seven other global universities that operate at the campus in a private letter.

But universities union UCU has revealed UCL bosses’ “passive approach” by publishing correspondence on the issue.

Migrant workers at Education City told ITUC investigators how agency bosses charged them huge recruitment fees, took away their passports, forced them to sign contract extensions and paid them less than first promised.

Cleaners, cooks and secretaries are paid less than £180 a month for 12 to 15-hour shifts, the ITUC letter showed.

But UCL’s human resources director Nigel Waugh brushed aside the evidence, saying that the university was not responsible as the workers were employed by sub-contractors.

Mr Waugh would only commit the university to raising the issues “with the relevant authorities as the opportunity to do so arrises.”

ITUC legal adviser Jeffrey Vogt said that “does not discharge UCL’s responsibilities” under international labour laws in a response to Mr Waugh.

And UCL is now under pressure from both lecturers and students to go further.

UCU general secretary Sally Hunt made clear yesterday that “hiding behind sub-contractors is indefensible.”

She said: “Our universities have a duty to ensure that people working on their foreign campuses have access to the same rights as they would be afforded in the UK.

“UCL should be using its influence to end this type of modern-day slavery and challenge practices that risk curtailing important academic freedoms.”

UCL Students Union external affairs officer Omar Raii also labelled the university’s position “unacceptable.”

He told the Star: “If UCL says or does nothing, it is at the very least legitimising the practice of modern-day slavery in Qatar.

“UCL should do much more than it has done already.”

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