Neom: A human rights and environmental impact assessment
要約
Date Reported: 2024年12月28日
場所: サウジアラビア
企業
China Comservice - Client , NEOM Co. - Clientその他
Not Reported ( 建設 ) - Employer関連
Total individuals affected: 1
移住者・移民労働者: ( 1 - パキスタン , エンジニアリング , Men , Unknown migration status )課題
Occupational Health & Safety , Personal Health , 情報へのアクセス , Access to Non-Judicial Remedy , Access to Justice & Legal Protection , 死 , Excessive production targets , Work & Conditions回答
Response sought: Yes, by Journalist; Resource Centre
Story containing response: (Find out more)
External link to response: (Find out more)
取られた措置: Employed by a subcontractor of China Comservice, Abdul Wali's family allege neither company nor the Saudi authorities adequately investigated his death or repatriated his body. A small amount of compensation was provided to the Pakistani embassy directly, without the family's agreement, and they could not access it. Business & Human Rights Resource Centre invited China Comservice to respond to the allegations; it did not respond. A Neom spokesperson said protecting welfare is a top priority.
情報源のタイプ: News outlet
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Business and human rights: Your role in Neom
Neom should be seen as an overambitious vanity project that presents both human rights and environmental challenges. A number of senior staff working on Neom have resigned over unrealistic specifications and the absence of the expertise and transparency required to bring the project to life. If a business does wish to participate in Neom, however, it has significant potential leverage to call out human rights abuses, as completion of the project will not be possible without foreign investment and support.
As well as avoiding actual complicity in human rights abuses, businesses have a responsibility, laid down in the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPs), to prevent any adverse human rights impacts linked to their operations through their business relationships. This includes respecting the rights of indigenous peoples, ethnic minorities and migrant workers, all of which are being violated by the Neom project. The UNGPs further emphasise businesses’ responsibility to address adverse impacts where they occur by taking “adequate measures for their prevention, mitigation and, where appropriate, remediation”.
In light of the human rights abuses already being committed in the preliminary phases of Neom’s construction, as well as the adverse environmental impacts that its full realisation would entail, investors and contractors involved in the project are urged to use all leverage at their disposal to call for the cessation of human rights abuses related to Neom, and specifically to call for the release of members of the Huwaitat tribe who have been wrongfully imprisoned.